There are a few ways that the court can get this money. Disclaimer I am not an expert in bankruptcy law.
The most obvious one is what you said. The court can order the company’s assets to be liquidated and then the proceeds of the sales would be distributed proportionally among the creditors.
Next they can go after the perpetrators like Sam Bankman-Fried and his crew. If they have any personal assets that they acquired as a result of their criminal activity at FTX, the court may be able to take some of that money to pay creditors.
Lastly is “clawbacks”. Let’s say you invested $1,000,000 in FTX and you were one of the lucky ones and happened to withdraw $10,000,000 in proceeds during the height of the scam. The court could claw back up to $9,000,000 from you since all of those proceeds were the result of a scam, even if you had no idea that FTX was shady. This is typically how the courts recover money from ponzi schemes like Bernie Madhoff
For small apps, generating it in the backend, trying to insert it, and then catching the exception should be totally fine. The odds of collision are quite small.
I personally feel UUIDs are overused unless you happen to be running truly distributed systems that are all independently generating IDs.
In this case where the ID is also going to be in the URL, you’ve just added 32 characters to the URL that don’t need to be there. Since OP is apparently concerned with the look and feel of the URLs, I thought that UUIDs wouldn’t be the best option.
You could also just use a random non-numeric primary key. For example you could generate a string of 8 random characters + numbers. That would give you well over 2 billion possible IDs.
So long as you have robust data sanitization on the backend to prevent XSS and HTML injection attacks…
If you can get away with just using Markdown, you should definitely use that instead of full HTML.
Racoon is the chaotic energy choice
For most transmissions of digital information (even those here on earth) there’s a concept of a “checksum”. Basically at the end of every message, there’s a special number, and you can do some math on the rest of the message to get that same number. If anything happened to change or damage the message in transit, the math doesn’t work out and so the checksum fails.
I would assume Voyager works in a similar way so every time it receives a message it will compute the checksum and see whether it matches
All words you spell must include the central letter, adjacency doesn’t matter.
The design is a bit of a visual joke combining the concept of a “spelling bee” competition with the honeycombs of literal bees.
Losing my religion
The OMNY system in NY doesn’t require you to install an app on your phone. It’s tap to pay with any credit or debit card, even apple or Google pay. If you want you can still get a physical OMNY card and refill it, but it’s not required.
Sounds like a skill issue on the author’s part tbh.
Also fuck physical checks, online payments are 100x better. Writing all of your baking information on a slip of paper and handing it to someone is probably the least secure way to transfer money.
Jetbrains Phpstorm is probably best in class, but you’ll have to pay for it.
It’s perfectly normal for your computer to have daemons.
You should definitely set up a DMARC record to prevent other people from using your email domain to send spam. If you don’t have DMARC configured, other email servers will give any senders the benefit of the doubt and accept mail that claims to be from your domain.
You can just set the DMARC record to reject 100% of unverified mail and call it a day. Since you aren’t sending anything it won’t affect you.
The ideal solution is to have one identity provider and then use Single Sign-On (SSO) to authenticate your users to all of their other apps. All of the big identity providers (Microsoft, Google, Okta, etc) support security keys.
I recognize that it might not be feasible to use SSO for all of your apps as a small business; a lot of SaaS platforms unfortunately charge extra for SSO. That being said my advice would be use SSO whenever possible for your apps and include SSO availability in your decision-making process for purchasing new software.
For those apps that do not support SSO, my advice would be to either compensate employees for using their personal devices for work or give them corporate devices that are only used for work things.
“Embargo” sure is a funny way to say “launching pirate raids and missiles”.
Mods of communities can already see votes in communities they moderate. Admins of instances can already see votes on all content.