I was trying to find information about this restriction. It seems it applies to cash and relates to Danish banks’ ability to implement AML controls. https://www.nationalbanken.dk/en/what-we-do/notes-and-coins/exchange-of-danish-cash-abroad
I have a non-verbal inner voice which gives meta-commentary on my verbal inner voice. If I want to think about what I’m thinking, that’s what is going on.
I don’t want to hear it but if his base does it’s a sacrifice I’m willing to make
specific, anatomical, detail.
I think the biggest risk is social engineering the elderly anyway
They’ll be in the public domain for infinity years, which is more than creator lifetime + xxx years. Works wanting copyright protection must be forced to submit copies to a permanent archive.
Pretty much the same situation with any Finnish bank.
Ah! Well, apologies.
My phone is my bank credentials, no other way to authenticate.
Nokia sealed their fate when they spent $8bn on NavTeq. Switching to Android would have made the purchase valueless, and the people responsible for the acquisition were still in charge.
Uh, it’s been coined for decades now.
Literally mythical man month
Interest rates rose above 0% for the first time in a decade and suddenly profit became more important than growth.
Edit: actually I’m wrong and it’s more complicated than that, but in essence the era of free money came to an end. Interest rates were increasing before 2020 in very gradual increments, but then went to zero, also accompanied by a lot of money being injected into the system.
https://www.macrotrends.net/2015/fed-funds-rate-historical-chart
So the sudden change at the end of the chart is what caused the regime change driving the trend of growth-driven companies trying to generate a profit - many not having a clue how to do it because they’ve never done it before.
Iain Banks’ book The Business features an organisation where people vote for their leaders. It was quite credible, I thought.
Probably best to avoid systems with known deniable encryption methods, and keep your dummy data there. Then hide your secrets e.g. in deleted space on a drive, in the cloud, or a well-hidden micro-sd card. All have risks, maybe it’s best of all to not keep your secrets with you, and make sure they can’t be associated with you.
As referred in other comment, the counter counter is to just keep beating to get further keys/hidden data.
There are some cases involving plausible deniability where game theory tells you should beat the person until dead even if they give up their keys, since there might be more.
A lake of pigshit