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Showing posts from May, 2025

SDG`s

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SDG`s The Sustainable Development Goals are the blueprint to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all. They address the global challenges we face, including poverty, inequality, climate change, environmental degradation, peace and justice. Learn more and take action. https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/ We can break these down into three main challenges–  instability, implementation, governance . Increasing global instability, including the recent financial crisis, the political turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa and around the world, and the problems caused by changing climate conditions has brought about growing insecurity. These key challenges are: Instability, such as conflict between nations Implementation, such as ensuring programmes fit the local context Governance, such as political will to transform development programmes into sustainable long-term practices Sustainable Development: A Win-Win Situation for Every...

What else could meme coins be?

  What else could meme coins be? Ten years ago, two weeks before the Ethereum project was publicly announced, I published  this post on Bitcoin magazine arguing that issuing coins could be a new way to fund important public projects. The thinking went: society needs ways to fund valuable large-scale projects, markets and institutions (both corporations and governments) are the main techniques that we have today, and both work in some cases and fail in others. Issuing new coins seems like a third class of large-scale funding technology, and it seems different enough from both markets and institutions that it would succeed and fail in different places - and so it could fill in some important gaps. People who care about cancer research could hold, accept and trade AntiCancerCoin; people who care about saving the environment would hold and use ClimateCoin, and so forth. The coins that people choose to use would determine what causes get funded. Today in 2024, a major topic of disc...

Trust Me, I'm Verified

Trust Me, I'm Verified: How Not to Fall for Nonsense on the Internet In today’s digital landscape, where every scroll serves up a buffet of breaking news, unsolicited opinions, and cats playing the piano, separating fact from fiction feels like a full-time job. Enter the trusted source verification model—essentially your personal nonsense filter. While it may sound like a boring bureaucratic process, it’s actually a clever method for deciding whether a piece of information deserves your attention or your eye roll. At its core, the model looks at four key things: the reputation of the source, the consistency of the information, the presence of actual experts, and a history of not being terribly wrong in the past. Think of it like asking, “Would I trust this person to watch my plants while I’m away?” If the answer is no, maybe don’t trust them with your worldview either. Take, for example, a breathless headline about a groundbreaking scientific discovery-say, “Coffee Cures Time.” Bef...