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Stories from May 25, 2014
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1.Scribd and Quora considered harmful (somebits.com)
511 points by ctoth on May 25, 2014 | 136 comments
2.I Broke My Phone’s Screen, and It Was Awesome (bunniestudios.com)
279 points by suraj on May 25, 2014 | 112 comments
3.The Design Of SQLite4 (sqlite.org)
252 points by ingve on May 25, 2014 | 67 comments
4.Don’t Believe Anyone Who Tells You Learning To Code Is Easy (techcrunch.com)
209 points by sumukh1 on May 25, 2014 | 180 comments

If anyone has any questions, I'm close friends (roommates actually) with David and serve on the board of directors for The Good Project.

He just left for Costa Rica on a service learning trip, but I'm happy to answer what I can.

6.Meet the algorithm that can learn “everything about anything” (gigaom.com)
175 points by ossama on May 25, 2014 | 76 comments
7.US man finds lost mother in an isolated Amazon tribe (nypost.com)
165 points by Sambdala on May 25, 2014 | 110 comments
8.Alcohol as a social technology to check the trustworthiness of others (plus.google.com)
164 points by ivank on May 25, 2014 | 116 comments
9.So You Want to Write Your Own CSV code (tburette.github.io)
158 points by Monkeyget on May 25, 2014 | 121 comments
10.What does a neural network actually do? (moalquraishi.wordpress.com)
151 points by zercool on May 25, 2014 | 38 comments
11.End Mass Incarceration Now (nytimes.com)
160 points by alphakappa on May 25, 2014 | 82 comments
12.Fitness Crazed (nytimes.com)
142 points by mhb on May 25, 2014 | 114 comments
13.LoopBack, a new Node.js framework by StrongLoop (loopback.io)
145 points by linhmtran168 on May 25, 2014 | 65 comments
14.Unix history repository (github.com/dspinellis)
118 points by nazri1 on May 25, 2014 | 6 comments
15.Adm. McRaven Urges Graduates to Find Courage to Change the World (utexas.edu)
109 points by tqn on May 25, 2014 | 117 comments
16.VoCore: A coin-sized Linux computer with wifi (indiegogo.com)
115 points by noonespecial on May 25, 2014 | 42 comments
17.DEFCON Capture the Flag Qualification Challenge #1 (endgame.com)
109 points by drjohnson on May 25, 2014 | 16 comments
18.Mill CPU Specification [video] (millcomputing.com)
103 points by Rusky on May 25, 2014 | 32 comments
19.The Art of Unix Programming (2008) (catb.org)
103 points by fizwhiz on May 25, 2014 | 19 comments
20.Cisco CEO Predicts ‘Brutal’ IT Consolidation (enterprisetech.com)
92 points by ForHackernews on May 25, 2014 | 51 comments
21.Symbolics Genera Concepts (lispm.de)
97 points by mgunes on May 25, 2014 | 4 comments
22.Can someone :help me? (ajh17.github.io)
92 points by ackyshake on May 25, 2014 | 52 comments
23.Reverse-engineering the TL431 (righto.com)
82 points by galapago on May 25, 2014 | 10 comments
24.Using Genetic Algorithms to Break Things (westleyargentum.github.io)
86 points by Argentum01 on May 25, 2014 | 43 comments
25.The Nordic region is becoming a hothouse of entrepreneurship (2013) (economist.com)
84 points by martincmartin on May 25, 2014 | 14 comments
26.Star Trek: The Next Generation Was the Last Sci-Fi Show Hopeful About the Future (esquire.com)
80 points by fraqed on May 25, 2014 | 76 comments
27.EventHub – An open source event analytics platform (github.com/codecademy)
82 points by bobrenjc93 on May 25, 2014 | 10 comments

I want to highlight one part of my blog post no one's picked up on: "some engineer actually wrote code to deliberately break document sharing on the web." Think of all the things an engineer can do with the skill to program computers, to make amazing things on the Internet. And he or she spends that time developing new ways to make it hard to read text on a web page. Ugh.

Frankly making fun of Quora and Scribd is like shooting fish in a barrel, but sometimes it's helpful to articulate the obvious.

29.Visualization of tweets during Champions League final (cartodb.github.io)
75 points by furilo on May 25, 2014 | 16 comments

The reason I'm inclined to believe this report's implications about Karpeles is because I spent a long time in Mt. Gox's IRC support channel talking with support reps, and they were paid to lie. They didn't know they were being paid to lie, but they were instructed by management to say "don't worry, all user coins are safe" right up until the day the Mt. Gox crisis report was leaked. They could have said "we are investigating the extent of the problem," but no, Karpeles was paying them to say "nothing is wrong," even while Karpeles was crafting his crisis report to investors about how all the coins were gone.

Karpeles seems to have a history of lying. He was caught in a lie by his employer in 2004: http://newslines.org/mt-gox/joins-linux-cyberjoueurs/

From a game theory point of view, it's interesting that the price at every major exchange depends on every other major exchange. For example, when Mt. Gox was active, if its price went up, BTC-e, Bitstamp, etc would simultaneously go up. It's a natural phenomenon which has rather grim implications: if an exchange is conducting fraudulent activity, then the entire bitcoin trading ecosystem is affected. And since bitcoin is completely unregulated, there's nothing really stopping anyone from manipulating the market. For example, no one knows who's behind BTC-e, but it has a lot of trade volume. What if they're engaging in fraudulent trading as well? There's every incentive to.

The inevitable conclusion seems to be: you can try to come up with a bunch of logical reasons about why the price of bitcoin is going up or down, but you can't ever rule out "the price is due to large-scale fraudulent behavior," i.e. it's a bubble. Bad behavior from one exchange will always affect all the others.

As Karpeles has probably shown, you can become a millionaire by manipulating the market and then escape all consequences by letting your company go bankrupt.


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