@NotMtth I prefer it over btc for a number of reasons (not the least of which is privacy). It's also the most popular currency on bisq pretty regularly.
@NotMtth bisq is pretty nice. It has a built in tor node and supports bridges if you can't use tor because of your isp. If haveno ever goes live that's where I'll go next. Bisq gives you p2p trading, but it's based on bitcoin and the bisq token which each have some issues. Haveno is a fork of bisq that will use xmr as the base currency to improve privacy.
@Moon@NotMtth There are a few ways to fund trades, and I don't do a whole lot of cross chain stuff. I actually haven't even swapped to xmr from bisq yet. I mainly use it to acquire btc, and then I trade the btc elsewhere at an automated exchange like change.now or trocador. As far as I know though you use btc primarily. I don't know if you can do a swap from say eth to xmr. I think you'd have to go from eth to btc and then to xmr. That's part of the problem since btc is so expensive to use. Haveno using xmr will be cheaper to use which is nice for a low life like myself.
@lmorchard there are much worse things than mean words on the internet. Content moderation also shpuld be done (if at all) on a case by case basis since the way you phrase things and the context is important to understanding what actions might be necessary. It also seems like if you detail a specific set of conditions that will result in moderation activity in an interview context I think the result is a lot of people testing your limits. Referring people to the policy seems like an appropriate way to handle the question.
But modern technology can’t deal with flowy time like this. As a result, the timekeepers at Boulder and elsewhere make corrections to ensure these different flows of time look like they’re ticking in lockstep. The same goes for satellites farther from Earth, like those that make up the Global Positioning System. The system works by measuring the time difference between several satellites carrying clocks in space to the time that people measure on the ground.