

Banks have their own fraud prevention methods that are more mature than whatever is offered by payment processors.
Banks have their own fraud prevention methods that are more mature than whatever is offered by payment processors.
Can you please explain what is wrong with an idea of paying with a direct, fast, cheap payment option that half of the world already uses on a daily basis?
It’s called Single Sign-On because you have to sign on every single time!
Our family was looking for a newer car. We found a listing for a VW, went to the dealership with intent to buy and was told that the car (which was standing RIGHT there) was available for sale in 3 months. Now we enjoy our new Toyota.
Same here, I think there would be a real use for such tool.
This guy transponds!
Awesome! Can we have a similar tool for Lemmy?
Just like Russia has been conditioning their population to think less of Ukrainians, Poles and other neighbors.
I’d say that a fit person can sustain up to 150W, so with a low power PC and some battery to even out the flow of power it’s more than possible to power the device and do some actual work, although perhaps it’s not the best idea to pedal while working on a computer.
I have been to that website. Have you? I see no way to actually use it, that’s why I’m asking. There is a demo with fake money and that’s it.
Show me a place that accepts it and a way to deposit into the wallet.
Does it ever work for real payments yet?
This is different. It’s a EU gov app that gives your website a zero-knowledge proof of age. Basically the only info they get is a “yes” or maybe the age itself. This is much better than what you describe, but I’m not familiar with the way the UK system works today.
That is exactly why I’m asking.
I’m just learning about this and I wonder what has Steam done in this case to protect my rights as their client.
He can rest in a cell.
Mamdani receives a great endorsement by being rejected by Nazi genocide leader.
The CEOs of the banks that seem to support genocide and child starvation are Chris Rhodes and Colin Fyfe.
Fortunately they hold the charge for realistically short time and therefore are limited in use.