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That is absolutely not true. Being underwater is having a Loan to Value ratio > 100%.


Article says he buried the treasure in 2010, not decades ago.

This feels a lot like Halliday's Easter Egg.


When you are outside in bright sunlight, your pupils will constrict, so that only a small part of the lens actually needs to darken.

Is there a reason the entire lens has to darken? If they only deposited the dye in a smaller center portion, it would be unnoticeable against a black pupil.




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> Water has no taste.

At least not to humans. Many animals have taste buds tuned for water.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/canine-corner/201104/ho...

Edit - formatting


Have you actually read the link you're providing as source?

It doesn't explain what it means to have "taste buds tuned" for water, just that dogs will drink more after eating salty or sugary foods, which could be entirely unrelated to the actual taste at all.

Even if these taste buds functioned like what you allege, they wouldn't be tasting water, they'd be tasting chemicals (flavors and smells) dissolved in the water.


To nitpick even further, Accenture was not a part of Arthur Andersen. It was known as Andersen Consulting, and when they split from Arthur Andersen, they adopted Accenture as a name.


That split took place in 1989. Prior to that, it was a part of Arthur Andersen itself, at least if Wikipedia is to be believed.

But this is a meaningless exchange at this point. haha


Bi-directional replication


> If the institution needs more confidence, it can feed back and ask for additional mechanisms: more biometric data, for instance, or an old-style password.

I get the feeling that early adopters of this would end up erring on the side of more confidence and still ask for "old-style" passwords. So basically, 2fa on a more widespread/intrusive scale.


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