"Brains don't fully mature until age 25!" is pseudoscience weaponized by feminists to justify bad behavior. It has been refuted by mainstream academics, libtard mainstream media, and it even has a Wikipedia refutation
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In 2000, professional poker player Victoria Coren, was seeing a therapist to help overcome her fear of flying
Her therapist then died in a plane crash, so now she chooses to travel only by rail or boat
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Her therapist then died in a plane crash, so now she chooses to travel only by rail or boat
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Anthropic just published a support page that should terrify anyone holding its shares on the secondary market.
"Any sale or transfer of Anthropic stock, or any interest in Anthropic stock, that has not been approved by our Board of Directors is void and will not be recognized on our books and records."
Void. Not restricted. Not pending review. Void.
That means if you bought Anthropic shares through Forge, Hiive, or any other secondary platform without board approval, you are not a stockholder. You have no stockholder rights. Your transaction is invalid.
It gets worse. Anthropic says it does not permit SPVs to hold its stock. Any transfer to an SPV is void. Investment funds claiming to offer indirect exposure are "most likely relying on mechanisms that attempt to circumvent our transfer restrictions." Forward contracts, tokenized securities, synthetic exposure products, all of it potentially worthless.
Their advice to investors: "Assume that it is invalid."
There is a multi-billion dollar secondary market in Anthropic shares right now. Platforms are pricing the stock at $265-$1,400+ per share based on a $380 billion valuation. Real people have put real money into these positions. And Anthropic just told them none of it counts.
This is the purest possible illustration of counterparty risk. You can buy a share of a company and have the company itself declare your ownership void because you bought it through the wrong channel.
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"Any sale or transfer of Anthropic stock, or any interest in Anthropic stock, that has not been approved by our Board of Directors is void and will not be recognized on our books and records."
Void. Not restricted. Not pending review. Void.
That means if you bought Anthropic shares through Forge, Hiive, or any other secondary platform without board approval, you are not a stockholder. You have no stockholder rights. Your transaction is invalid.
It gets worse. Anthropic says it does not permit SPVs to hold its stock. Any transfer to an SPV is void. Investment funds claiming to offer indirect exposure are "most likely relying on mechanisms that attempt to circumvent our transfer restrictions." Forward contracts, tokenized securities, synthetic exposure products, all of it potentially worthless.
Their advice to investors: "Assume that it is invalid."
There is a multi-billion dollar secondary market in Anthropic shares right now. Platforms are pricing the stock at $265-$1,400+ per share based on a $380 billion valuation. Real people have put real money into these positions. And Anthropic just told them none of it counts.
This is the purest possible illustration of counterparty risk. You can buy a share of a company and have the company itself declare your ownership void because you bought it through the wrong channel.
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DoomPosting
Anthropic just published a support page that should terrify anyone holding its shares on the secondary market. "Any sale or transfer of Anthropic stock, or any interest in Anthropic stock, that has not been approved by our Board of Directors is void and willβ¦
Great engagement farming but except for the facts getting in the way...
Requiring board or company approval for stock transfers, along with mechanisms like Rights of First Refusal (ROFR), is extremely common in private startups and closely held companies. This helps them control their cap table, prevent unwanted shareholders (e.g., competitors, activists, or speculators), manage valuations, and align ownership with long-term goals.
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Requiring board or company approval for stock transfers, along with mechanisms like Rights of First Refusal (ROFR), is extremely common in private startups and closely held companies. This helps them control their cap table, prevent unwanted shareholders (e.g., competitors, activists, or speculators), manage valuations, and align ownership with long-term goals.
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Not sure what happens here, if you bought anthropic secondaries...
openai has a similar announcement:
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openai has a similar announcement:
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China just built a device that can cut the cables carrying 95% of the worldβs internet.
China has revealed a deep-sea cable-cutting system capable of severing the steel-reinforced undersea cables that handle more than 95% of the worldβs internet traffic, sparking alarm across the global defense and cybersecurity communities.
Built by the state-run China Ship Scientific Research Centre, the device can descend to depths of 4,000 meters and slice through armored cables with a diamond-edged grinding wheel. While Beijing describes it as a tool for salvage operations and seabed resource recovery, its clear military potential, especially when deployed by quiet submersibles near key chokepoints such as Guam, has put analysts on high alert.
The technologyβs stealthy deployment options make it both an engineering marvel and a potent instrument of strategic disruption. Although Chinese officials maintain it is purely civilian in purpose, the obvious dual-use capability has intensified worries about deliberate sabotage of the fragile underwater arteries that keep the global internet running.
As geopolitical rivalries deepen and countries scramble to safeguard their digital infrastructure, this breakthrough serves as a stark reminder: the same innovations that push technological boundaries can also exposeβand dramatically alterβthe balance of power in an increasingly connected world.
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China has revealed a deep-sea cable-cutting system capable of severing the steel-reinforced undersea cables that handle more than 95% of the worldβs internet traffic, sparking alarm across the global defense and cybersecurity communities.
Built by the state-run China Ship Scientific Research Centre, the device can descend to depths of 4,000 meters and slice through armored cables with a diamond-edged grinding wheel. While Beijing describes it as a tool for salvage operations and seabed resource recovery, its clear military potential, especially when deployed by quiet submersibles near key chokepoints such as Guam, has put analysts on high alert.
The technologyβs stealthy deployment options make it both an engineering marvel and a potent instrument of strategic disruption. Although Chinese officials maintain it is purely civilian in purpose, the obvious dual-use capability has intensified worries about deliberate sabotage of the fragile underwater arteries that keep the global internet running.
As geopolitical rivalries deepen and countries scramble to safeguard their digital infrastructure, this breakthrough serves as a stark reminder: the same innovations that push technological boundaries can also exposeβand dramatically alterβthe balance of power in an increasingly connected world.
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NEW - California mayor admits to being Chinese agent, US authorities say
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We just got robots banned from Southwest Airlines. Youβre welcome
Yesterday we flew our humanoid robot Stewie from Las Vegas to Dallas on Southwest β something we (and others) have tried and failed multiple times because batteries are always the issue.
This time we cracked it. Custom lithium pack, specβd just under the legal limit. Stewie boarded, buckled up, and flew like a completely normal passenger.
This morning a Southwest employee leaks us the internal training they just pushed to EVERY flight attendant companywide. Mandatory. Urgent. With a photo of Stewie on the plane as the example of what to look out for.
We didnβt break a single FAA rule. Not one.
They just werenβt ready for us.
Robophobic? Arguably.
The robots are traveling whether the airlines are ready or not.
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Yesterday we flew our humanoid robot Stewie from Las Vegas to Dallas on Southwest β something we (and others) have tried and failed multiple times because batteries are always the issue.
This time we cracked it. Custom lithium pack, specβd just under the legal limit. Stewie boarded, buckled up, and flew like a completely normal passenger.
This morning a Southwest employee leaks us the internal training they just pushed to EVERY flight attendant companywide. Mandatory. Urgent. With a photo of Stewie on the plane as the example of what to look out for.
We didnβt break a single FAA rule. Not one.
They just werenβt ready for us.
Robophobic? Arguably.
The robots are traveling whether the airlines are ready or not.
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π2
NEW: Monero replaces ring signatures with full-chain membership proofs, boosting anonymity set from 16 to 150M+ outputs
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