@CORRitOUT@NevadaLiberty64@CollinRugg They do. It's called Adderall (generic name: Amphetamine) and it's free to all drug addicts who want it, $40 a pill for silicon valley tech nerds.
Fooled again by Mexican trolling. Those amigos are having fun on the job by rage baiting you. Roofing is Latino territory here in FL. Ain't no white boy gonna be laying tar in a 105 degree summer in 80% humidity without crying. That's why our roof prices doubled and our insurance ran away the minute they had to hire dudes with manbuns and flip flops to swing hammers.
@NagelNilson@P_Kallioniemi Cuz his kids are safely living in the US attending private school in FL under pseudonyms while his servants oversee the construction on his gated FL mansion meanwhile his countryman's kids are being sent to slaughter.
@AntiLeftMemes Can someone please be so kind as to hand this handout a set of teeth? Or at least help her push them back to the side they came from? That would be a huge handout, for whomever she talks to.
@shellshockkk Touching black women hair can give you the cooties. Y'all should be grateful for the warning. Thank the black lady for the warning then go bust out the hand sanitizer
Western civ created all the GOOD music, but WTF is this? North Korean crap mixed with high pitched Indian Bollywood vocals. It's so sad that Asian music and Jap cartoon art captured western youth. Bring back classic western culture or Asia will swallow us via X accounts like this.
Exchanges, custodians, and wallets now run address/entity risk scoring on deposits/withdrawals. Tools like Chainalysis KYT/Address Screening and TRM Transaction Monitoring/Entity Risk flag or block flows in real time.
Scoring blends on‑chain heuristics/attribution with policy rules (sanctions exposure, hacks/ransomware links, mixers, darknet ties, etc.). Scores are typically Low/Medium/High/Severe and trigger alerts, holds, or re‑KYC.
Big venues publicly discuss ML‑based address risk scoring at scale (e.g., Coinbase’s system to predict risky counterparties beyond their platform).
This is largely driven by sanctions/AML expectations: OFAC’s guidance tells the industry to screen addresses, IP/geolocation, and keep risk‑based programs—no new law needed for a venue to freeze/deny a transfer.
How it affects you
Deposits can be delayed or blocked if your coins have indirect exposure (e.g., multiple hops from a sanctioned/hacked pool). Even “clean” users can get flagged via counterparty exposure.
Off‑exchange wallets are not immune: many providers embed screening and continuous rescoring.
Appeals = documentation: expect to provide source‑of‑funds/transaction trails; the venue’s score often keys off the highest‑risk indicator in the graph.
Practical moves (fast list)
Keep a clean routing wallet: receive funds there first, then forward to exchanges; don’t co‑mix high‑risk counterparties. (Reduces inherited exposure risk.)
Label & export proofs (tx notes, invoices, mining/payout records) so you can answer compliance reviews quickly. (Aligned with risk‑based programs venues follow.)
Before sending to an exchange, pre‑screen counterparties using a third‑party checker or the venue’s own KYT APIs where available.
Avoid bridging/mixing paths tied to sanctioned or hacked flows; even indirect contact can push a score into “review/block.”
If you want, tell me the exchange(s) you use and your typical flow (wallet → venue → custody), and I’ll sketch a minimal, low‑friction hygiene setup to keep your transfers from getting stuck.
Here’s a quick, plain‑English heads‑up about how crypto flows are increasingly gated by risk scores—and why that matters for traders, founders, and anyone moving coins.
What’s happening
Exchanges, custodians, and wallets now run address/entity risk scoring on deposits/withdrawals. Tools like Chainalysis KYT/Address Screening and TRM Transaction Monitoring/Entity Risk flag or block flows in real time.
Scoring blends on‑chain heuristics/attribution with policy rules (sanctions exposure, hacks/ransomware links, mixers, darknet ties, etc.). Scores are typically Low/Medium/High/Severe and trigger alerts, holds, or re‑KYC.
Big venues publicly discuss ML‑based address risk scoring at scale (e.g., Coinbase’s system to predict risky counterparties beyond their platform).
This is largely driven by sanctions/AML expectations: OFAC’s guidance tells the industry to screen addresses, IP/geolocation, and keep risk‑based programs—no new law needed for a venue to freeze/deny a transfer.
How it affects you
Deposits can be delayed or blocked if your coins have indirect exposure (e.g., multiple hops from a sanctioned/hacked pool). Even “clean” users can get flagged via counterparty exposure.
Off‑exchange wallets are not immune: many providers embed screening and continuous rescoring.
Appeals = documentation: expect to provide source‑of‑funds/transaction trails; the venue’s score often keys off the highest‑risk indicator in the graph.
Practical moves (fast list)
Keep a clean routing wallet: receive funds there first, then forward to exchanges; don’t co‑mix high‑risk counterparties. (Reduces inherited exposure risk.)
Label & export proofs (tx notes, invoices, mining/payout records) so you can answer compliance reviews quickly. (Aligned with risk‑based programs venues follow.)
Before sending to an exchange, pre‑screen counterparties using a third‑party checker or the venue’s own KYT APIs where available.
Avoid bridging/mixing paths tied to sanctioned or hacked flows; even indirect contact can push a score into “review/block.”
@ceowithai@Cobratate And the most oxymoronic thing about this is .. all that was written by CHAT GPT. Like it can read our patterns and cadence, many of us can distinguish it's writing, punctuation and formatting patterns too.
Here is your list from the best AI (obviously not gr0k)
Short version: there is no single “complete” list on the open web. But here’s a tight, high-signal set of actual eyewitness/by-stander videos (non-broadcast, original vantage points) with working sources. No punditry, no TV anchors.
Core eyewitness videos (direct links)
Michael Hezarkhani — ferry vantage, UA175 hits South Tower (raw).
Kevin Westley — second impact from the harbor; full raw-audio upload by the filmer.
Pavel Hlava — rare footage that captured both impacts (civilian camcorder; multiple restorations).
Scott Myers — street-level raw clips (multiple timestamps/angles).
Scott Myers FOIA bundle (as released later via NIST → Internet Archive; still his original bystander video).
Peripheral but legit “non-news-crew” captures
Wolfgang Staehle’s gallery webcam — automated stills that caught the first impact (art installation; not a TV feed).
Borderline (independent filmmakers, not TV news; include if you’re okay with that)
Jules Naudet — the only moving image of the first impact (filming a firehouse doc that morning). Link here compiles his raw camera rolls.
Deep archives (first-person material, minimal editorializing)
CameraPlanet / NYPL announcement — >500 hours of first-person 9/11 week video being made public (roll-out ongoing). Watch this space for more civilian tapes as they’re digitized.
NIST Disaster & Failure Studies repository — source of many FOIA’d civilian clips later mirrored to the Internet Archive.
If you want me to keep digging for specific vantage points (e.g., West Street, Battery Park, Fulton St. rooftop, ferry deck angles), say which, and I’ll pull those exact bystander uploads—not compilations.
Dude they can easily control the wallets and issue permits to transact. Unpermitted wallets will be tainted and no one will dare transact with a tainted wallet lest theirs become tainted too. U do see mixers and wallets shutting down, crypto giants going to jail, right? You ain't seen nothing yet. Your amex crypto card is already available BTW make sure u give them your wallet address for your 4% back.