What does a whitepaper have to do with cryptocurrency?
If you want a bluesky invite message me.
What does a whitepaper have to do with cryptocurrency?
@TheYang Exactly! Came here to say this. Everybody actively using chromium based browsers is a part of the problem.
Check out this video https://invidious.tiekoetter.com/watch?v=EAogtqyN22M for some more context.
Oh, nothing wrong with node at all. I used it for something very similar in the past myself. It’s just that certain modules just don’t work in termux.
I might if I find something I am missing.
I have some specific requirements when it comes to scrapping. I am planning to use it on my phone in termux which doesn’t allow all nodejs modules. Sadly also the most popular scrappers which use a xserver in the background. So it has to be very basic html scrapping which should be possible when you do it on the old.reedit site.
Ah sweet I was about to start working on something like this. Will definitely use it in the future. Thanks
*edit: Ah it still uses the public json endpoints. A “real” scrapper might be necessary in the future.
Whitepaper is just a different term for a technical documentation[1] and has literally nothing to do with cryptocurrency. Your reasoning in your initial post doesn’t make any sense what so ever. I guarantee most of the companies you mentioned, if not all, published white papers for various topics in their past. I can only repeat myself, white papers have absolutely nothing to do with crypto currency. Just as one example. Check the Signal protocol[2] Wikipedia page and search for whitepaper.
It’s ok to not know what a white paper is but then don’t start your posts with “Looked pretty interesting, until I saw the “read whitepaper” button.”.
That being said, where in the skiff white paper did you find crypto currency? Admittedly I didn’t read all or even most of it but a simple search for “currency”, “blockchain” or even “chain” doesn’t return any results. I really hope you don’t talk about the word “crypto”, cause that has an entirely different meaning in that context.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_paper
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_Protocol
*edit: Removed some unnecessary inflammatory language.