

“For the most part” really doesn’t cut it in an industry like this.
Basically a deer with a human face. Despite probably being some sort of magical nature spirit, his interests are primarily in technology and politics and science fiction.
Spent many years on Reddit before joining the Threadiverse as well.
“For the most part” really doesn’t cut it in an industry like this.
In short, Bybit was abysmally sloppy with their security.
Interesting. My understanding was that bill C-6 in 2017 removed all of these except for the “fraudulent application” reasons for revoking citizenship, and fraudulent application wouldn’t apply here since Musk’s Canadian by birth.
Still, “lots of people signed a petition” is not listed as a valid reason in either source.
There’s no legal path to revoking Musk’s citizenship.
Trump wanted to revoke the citizenship of people he didn’t like too, why is this any better?
Alright, that’s not what the statement was about.
That’s not what the question was about.
Depends which exchange you’re using.
It’s a common misconception that a “cold wallet” is offline. It’s still on the blockchain like any other wallet, it’s just the keys that aren’t on any network-connected computer.
It appears that in this case hackers managed to trick Bybit employees into entering the keys into a fake UI that gave the hackers access to them.
And we also bought ourselves the perception of being the “reasonable ones”, with the US being even more blatantly painted as flagrant deal-breakers.
That will be useful as we build new alliances with the rest of the world.