Wells Fargo Investment Institute Report Compares Bitcoin to the 1850’s Gold Rush
On Monday, the U.S. bank Wells Fargo’s wholly-owned subsidiary and registered investment adviser the Wells Fargo Investment Institute published an investment strategy with a page dedicated to the crypto asset bitcoin. The institute’s contributing author and Head of Global Asset Allocation Strategy, Tracie McMillion, compared crypto investing to the “early days of the 1850’s gold rush.” This week Tracie McMillion from the American...
Free TON, From an Abandoned Project to the Frontier of PoS Networks
The Durov brothers fought a long and exhaustive battle with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over the Telegram Open Network (TON)’s acceptance in the United States, which ended with an official announcement that the further development of the project was abandoned. However, the TON project was fully open-source. Using the TON repositories a group of independent enthusiasts came together, forked the best that...
Cyberpunk 2077’s Use of Denuvo To Prevent Leaks Makes Total Sense
Cyberpunk 2077 may well be the most-hyped videogame of all time. It will be released in two days’ time and for hundreds of thousands of gaming fans, those 48 hours can’t be over soon enough so they can empty their wallets. Of course, piracy is always a risk, yet after a herculean development cycle utilizing hundreds of workers to put together what developer CD Projekt Red hopes will be its most successful title, the company will throw...
EU Research Unveils “Most Pirated” Movies, TV-Shows and Music
The European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) regularly conducts studies to see how piracy develops over time. These studies help the public to understand local piracy trends and can be used as input for future policy decisions. Last month, for example, EUIPO research showed that EU citizens increasingly pay to access content legally. However, a group of stubborn pirates, who often pay for legal content too, remains. This...
Make medit your next Linux terminal text editor
There’s XEDIT, jEdit, NEdit, gedit, and, as it turns out, medit. read more Powered by...