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Makes CBInsights look pretty good, actually.


I'll second that. It makes CB Insights look good because it now is well-known that a slightly more unscrupulous competitor stole the otherwise brilliant design of CB Insights because they were unable to come up with something they could call their own (or do better than CB Insights).

It's the lazy way. The beautiful thing about it? Those who copy (blatantly) are doomed to fail. In most cases, they will lack the understanding and foundation of how you arrived at the designs in the first place which certainly consisted of iteration and changes based on interactions with & feedback from customers.


Yeah, fair point. It was a legitimate question when I posted this -- the page wasn't loading and some weird text was appearing at the bottom.

Not sure there's a way to remove the link on HN and just make this a discussion, otherwise I would do so.


It's struggling to load though -- I don't think the hacker was anywhere near ready for Craigslist levels of traffic.


Maybe somebody hijacked their DNS?


I have a feeling the lesson at the end of this is going to involve setting longer TTLs.


That's a tough one, because in the event of a hijacked domain like this, a lower TTL would also force the "good" settings back faster.


A whois on craigslist.org shows that it was updated today.


My favorite bit from this article:

“A tobacco store lady talking about physics in the wee hours of the morning doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to me,” [General Carey] said in an interview with Air Force investigators, according to the report. “You need to watch out for that because that’s just like our training says, you know, people are trolling for information.”

*

Nuclear disarmament never sounded like a better idea.


Yeah, the Blueprint folks are great: They've been amazing sponsors for the Health Devs meetup group and have hosted our meetups in their space since we started.


I organize Health Devs, which is pretty much exactly as you describe: we do monthly events where people show off things they've created, get help on code, etc. Our next meetup, on Tuesday, will focus on the Open mHealth project: http://www.meetup.com/HealthDevsNYC/events/138467042/

We are always looking for people to help organize more events though, and would love to have you (or anybody else interested) involved. Events are informal and always free. Shoot me a line: michael @ aqua.io


West coaster here: as someone who watches all the NY health + technology activity form afar, seems like HealthDevsNYC is the place to be.


I'm trying to think of what else to do, too. The current strategy of elected officials, all the way up to Obama, is to try to change the conversation (to the economy, to the Zimmerman shooting, to the credibility of Snowden as a person, etc.).

I'm planning on keeping up on Mike Rogers until I get a response, and keeping the correspondence public until the shame factor kicks in and he gives a response. If somebody has a better idea than that, please let me know.


I wrote an e-mail to Congressman Mike Rogers about his misleading quote in this article. I encourage others to reuse my template and also ask him to justify his misleading remarks about Snowden's statement: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6134672

We should start hold our public servant to task for lying to the American people about these programs.


Right--it's easy for the Chinese government to restrict the points of exchange for bitcoin into other currencies, like banks (most of which are state-owned), mobile phone recharge cards, credit cards, etc.

Doing that would leave bitcoin only attractive to the elite that can move their country in and out of the money easily. But then the obvious question is: for folks that can already move money around easily outside of government control--why would those people want to take on the extra risk inherent in bitcoins?


For corrupt officials BTC presents an easy way to hide black money. A banking account has official records which can be obtained by police (and seized by it!).

So, a criminal moves his funds into Bitcoin, either at a Chinese exchange or at a foreign one, and then hides the private key on paper somewhere. If he gets arrested/sentenced to death/whatever, family/friends can always recover the money.

Actually, I'm wondering why the Mafiya doesn't use Bitcoin for cross-border drug exchanging already...


Hawala or the equivalent makes MUCH more sense for moving money. BTC has neither the depth nor technical features to accomodate massive illegal flows.

The problem with cross-border drug exchange is that at the retail level, you end up with a fuckton of $5-20 bills. You could color up to $100s in some cases, but even that is hard at scale.

Dealing with bulk currency in the heavily surveilled customer nations (USA, EU) is hard. The gold standard seems to be shipping bulk currency out, since most drug people are already good at moving bulk products in. Trying to deposit it into

If you had a way to spend infinite $5 bills in the US to buy BTC, you'd be just as likely to have a way to spend infinite $5 bills in the US to buy bank deposits in Macau. It's the first stage which is the serious problem, not stages 2/3. Pretty much all 3 stages of money laundering now happen outside the US -- or you bring washed money back into the US to invest in some cases, the last stage.

Hawala works because you can net stuff out, thus reducing the need to move bulk currency. But you still need to move bulk currency eventually to settle up.


Well, the retail-level $5/10/20 bills can be exchanged anonymously at Bitcoin ATMs. If I were a dealer, I'd do this so that coptards can't seize the money at the place I store it.

Often in local news there are reports about small dealers getting busted, while they only have small quantities of drugs at home, if at all, most have shitloads of money in their homes - which breaks their neck in court.


The issue isn't street dealers dealing with shoeboxes of cash, it's levels up from that. You can pay for jewelry, guns, rent, stolen precursors, grow equipment, labor, rims, etc. in cash. You can't pay for cars or houses. You can generally pay the dealers 1-2 steps up from retail in bulk cash without problems, but at the point where they need to bring product in internationally, it becomes an issue.

It used to be meth worked a lot better (since you could produce it more locally/closer to consumption), but since Diane Feinstein severely restricted effective formulations of Sudafed (pseudoephedrine) in the Methamphetamine Control Act of 1996, most of the production moved to Mexico, along with most of the (ditchweed) marijuana production, and smuggling routes for both South American cocaine and heroin (also brought in from abroad).

The pharm market is probably more cash-based, since it seems to be just as much "buying pills off people who get them for ~free from pharmacies, for cash" as "bringing in bulk pills from India/China/Israel". This might vary per medication though, but there are definitely entirely-domestic pharm dealers.

I'm not really sure what's happened with the MJ market post-MMJ; I know a lot of the grow ops in the Triangle went from being local people to being Mexican gang grows, but I think there are plenty of 100-400 plant warehouse grows now. I'm not really sure about the outdoor market in places like Missouri (which I believe is one of the bigger domestic outdoor producers). I do know there's a huge pricing differential between Oakland and the East Coast, probably due to MMJ and quantity.


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