Going forward into the future and not measuring more accurately because we are worried about false positives in our current limited understanding is a very conservative take.
On what basis do you say this? There is an extensive literature that refutes this. Scanners have been getting much better since the first CT scans and many more people are getting them.
It's not about it being hard to create and manage a website, it's that the vast majority of customers use social media platforms (as well as platforms like google maps) to find out about shops and F&B. For many businesses having an Instagram page will draw a lot more people than having a random website.
https://askmike.org tech blog (slightly outdated, but working on it)
This is definitely an interesting way of looking at it. If your blog ends up in pre-training data, it will become part of the AI. Or if not, an AI might still fetch it when a user asks something specific. It reminds me of voting in a democracy, which many people consider a right and a duty - but in reality a single vote is hardly going to swing any election.
I can definitely relate, and find this true as well. While a (monetary) return has never a big focus for me. It's still hard to keep going over time with motivations around self improvement, accountability, etc.
So in the Dutch tax system there is no difference between realized and unrealized gain. As such it doesn't matter when you buy/sell your investments. It doesn't impact your tax burden. The effect you get is that everyone's wealth just slowly erodes away, just like with inflation (unless your yield outpaces that).
But with this new law that all might change.
[1] https://fundresearch.fidelity.com/mutual-funds/summary/31612...
As to a more constructive path: bureaucracy all over EU is definitely considered a big problem (for startups, and for many others) and there are a bunch of movements aimed at addressing them at all kinds of levels. For example look at the eu acc movement.
I miss the MSN days.
I think everything I wrote a decade ago in node still runs fine.
For the most part, I haven't had too much trouble the past couple years taking an existing project and running on a newer runtime. I have seen a lot of incompatible library breaks trying to update dependencies though.
Ironically, I think the worst libraries for breaking changes are actually the testing libraries themselves. Having to jump 2-3 major versions to update to latest is an exercise in extreme frustration.
I appreciate a lot of what Deno is doing in their direction, though I've felt a few breaking changes along the way there too.