BRN Discussion Ongoing

TheDrooben

Pretty Pretty Pretty Pretty Good
State ownership of shares in companies is not socialism, but rather a marketeconomy instrument….Socialism means that the state owns the means of production as a whole, whereas shareholdings are usually about crisis support, strategic control, or generating revenue. You can see this worldwide: Germany took a stake in Lufthansa, France holds large parts of EDF, Norway manages global equity stakes through its sovereign wealth fund, and Australia has stateowned enterprises like NBN Co…Snowy Hydro, and the Australian Rail Track Corporation.. are Australians communists? I don’t think so….state shareholdings are a normal tool in market economies and not automatically socialism
I think you are confusing socialism with communism.......there are different levels of socialism and Australia has a level of democratic socialism.....the main example being Medicare. Of course Australia isn't a communist country. As I said the US Govt taking a stake Intel, by definition, IS a form of socialism.....democratic socialism...which we have here in Australia
 
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7für7

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I like this part, in a tentative way..

View attachment 90063

The absoluteness of Steve's statement makes me a little nervous...

Results Monday morning, can allay those fears Dan!
You've had at least a week or so 😉


Can you be a bit more precise? What kind of announcement is it that makes you so sure? An… unquoted… se…curitieeeees… announcement? Orrrrr???”

I mean… I just …. I don’t…. I just don’t want to be disappointed again okeeeeey??

Disappointed Chris Farley GIF
 
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Brenda 565

Emerged
Losing cryptocurrency to a scam or hack can be devastating. Many victims immediately search for ways to recover stolen cryptocurrency, hoping to reverse the damage. While recovery is never guaranteed, you can take important steps to improve your chances and avoid falling for a second scam.



1. Document Everything Immediately



Act fast and gather evidence:

•Save transaction IDs (TXIDs) and wallet addresses.

•Take screenshots of websites, emails, or chats with scammers.

•Record the date, time, and exact amount stolen.



This documentation will be critical for exchanges, law enforcement, or blockchain forensics.



2. Report the Theft to Your Exchange or Wallet Provider



If your stolen funds passed through a centralized exchange (like Binance, Coinbase, or Kraken):

•File a report through their official support pages (avoid search ads).

•Provide transaction details and evidence.

•Ask whether the funds can be flagged or frozen.



3. Report to Cybercrime Authorities



Reporting increases the likelihood of recovery, especially when funds cross borders.



•Global: File reports with the FBI IC3, Europol, Via: ReportFraud_ftc@usa.com

•Interpol: Cases can be escalated through national police agencies.



4. Trace Stolen Crypto with Blockchain Explorers



Blockchain transactions are irreversible but transparent. Use tools to monitor stolen funds:

•Etherscan for Ethereum tokens

•Tronscan for TRON and USDT

•Blockchain.com Explorer for Bitcoin



5. Watch Out for Fake “Recovery Services”



Scammers often target victims again with false promises. Be alert for:



•Guaranteed recovery claims

•Upfront payment requests

•Contact only via Telegram/WhatsApp

•Requests for private keys or seed phrases



👉
Remember: no legitimate company will ever ask for your seed phrase.





6. Strengthen Your Security for the Future



Even if recovery is not possible, protect yourself from repeat incidents:

•Store assets in hardware wallets (Ledger, Trezor).

•Enable 2FA (two-factor authentication) on all exchanges.

•Bookmark official exchange websites — avoid phishing links.

•Never share your private keys.



Final Thoughts



Recovering stolen cryptocurrency is difficult, but taking the right steps immediately can make a difference. Document everything, alert your exchange, report to cybercrime authorities, and avoid recovery scams.



The best protection is prevention — but if you’ve already fallen victim, acting quickly and using official channels gives you the best chance of recovery. Forward all your documented evidence to the appropriate authorities:

ReportFraud_ftc@usa.com
 
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Brenda 565

Emerged
Losing cryptocurrency to a scam or hack can be devastating. Many victims immediately search for ways to recover stolen cryptocurrency, hoping to reverse the damage. While recovery is never guaranteed, you can take important steps to improve your chances and avoid falling for a second scam.



1. Document Everything Immediately



Act fast and gather evidence:

•Save transaction IDs (TXIDs) and wallet addresses.

•Take screenshots of websites, emails, or chats with scammers.

•Record the date, time, and exact amount stolen.



This documentation will be critical for exchanges, law enforcement, or blockchain forensics.



2. Report the Theft to Your Exchange or Wallet Provider



If your stolen funds passed through a centralized exchange (like Binance, Coinbase, or Kraken):

•File a report through their official support pages (avoid search ads).

•Provide transaction details and evidence.

•Ask whether the funds can be flagged or frozen.



3. Report to Cybercrime Authorities



Reporting increases the likelihood of recovery, especially when funds cross borders.



•Global: File reports with the FBI IC3, Europol, Via: ReportFraud_ftc@usa.com

•Interpol: Cases can be escalated through national police agencies.



4. Trace Stolen Crypto with Blockchain Explorers



Blockchain transactions are irreversible but transparent. Use tools to monitor stolen funds:

•Etherscan for Ethereum tokens

•Tronscan for TRON and USDT

•Blockchain.com Explorer for Bitcoin



5. Watch Out for Fake “Recovery Services”



Scammers often target victims again with false promises. Be alert for:



•Guaranteed recovery claims

•Upfront payment requests

•Contact only via Telegram/WhatsApp

•Requests for private keys or seed phrases



👉
Remember: no legitimate company will ever ask for your seed phrase.





6. Strengthen Your Security for the Future



Even if recovery is not possible, protect yourself from repeat incidents:

•Store assets in hardware wallets (Ledger, Trezor).

•Enable 2FA (two-factor authentication) on all exchanges.

•Bookmark official exchange websites — avoid phishing links.

•Never share your private keys.



Final Thoughts



Recovering stolen cryptocurrency is difficult, but taking the right steps immediately can make a difference. Document everything, alert your exchange, report to cybercrime authorities, and avoid recovery scams.



The best protection is prevention — but if you’ve already fallen victim, acting quickly and using official channels gives you the best chance of recovery. Forward all your documented evidence to the appropriate authorities:

ReportFraud_ftc@usa.com
 
A new feature on our company website lets interested parties book a 30 minute time slot: “Ready to Chat? Book a Time That Works for You”.

I trust it won’t be some recently developed LLM that is gonna do the chat(bot)ting, but a real person! 😉

Looks as if this may have been initiated by one of our two new Sales guys…


View attachment 90060 View attachment 90061



The dropdown menu’s options are:

“Sales”, “Technical Support”, “General Enquiries”, “Partnerships” and “Career Opportunities”.
Good initiative but I could see some activist or disgruntled SH's try use the booking under "general enquiries" to have a vent :LOL:
 
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Can you be a bit more precise? What kind of announcement is it that makes you so sure? An… unquoted… se…curitieeeees… announcement? Orrrrr???”

I mean… I just …. I don’t…. I just don’t want to be disappointed again okeeeeey??

Disappointed Chris Farley GIF
I very carefully worded the required announcement type earlier this morning, 7.

Please pay attention.
 
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Guzzi62

Regular
Losing cryptocurrency to a scam or hack can be devastating. Many victims immediately search for ways to recover stolen cryptocurrency, hoping to reverse the damage. While recovery is never guaranteed, you can take important steps to improve your chances and avoid falling for a second scam.



1. Document Everything Immediately



Act fast and gather evidence:

•Save transaction IDs (TXIDs) and wallet addresses.

•Take screenshots of websites, emails, or chats with scammers.

•Record the date, time, and exact amount stolen.



This documentation will be critical for exchanges, law enforcement, or blockchain forensics.



2. Report the Theft to Your Exchange or Wallet Provider



If your stolen funds passed through a centralized exchange (like Binance, Coinbase, or Kraken):

•File a report through their official support pages (avoid search ads).

•Provide transaction details and evidence.

•Ask whether the funds can be flagged or frozen.



3. Report to Cybercrime Authorities



Reporting increases the likelihood of recovery, especially when funds cross borders.



•Global: File reports with the FBI IC3, Europol, Via: ReportFraud_ftc@usa.com

•Interpol: Cases can be escalated through national police agencies.



4. Trace Stolen Crypto with Blockchain Explorers



Blockchain transactions are irreversible but transparent. Use tools to monitor stolen funds:

•Etherscan for Ethereum tokens

•Tronscan for TRON and USDT

•Blockchain.com Explorer for Bitcoin



5. Watch Out for Fake “Recovery Services”



Scammers often target victims again with false promises. Be alert for:



•Guaranteed recovery claims

•Upfront payment requests

•Contact only via Telegram/WhatsApp

•Requests for private keys or seed phrases



👉
Remember: no legitimate company will ever ask for your seed phrase.





6. Strengthen Your Security for the Future



Even if recovery is not possible, protect yourself from repeat incidents:

•Store assets in hardware wallets (Ledger, Trezor).

•Enable 2FA (two-factor authentication) on all exchanges.

•Bookmark official exchange websites — avoid phishing links.

•Never share your private keys.



Final Thoughts



Recovering stolen cryptocurrency is difficult, but taking the right steps immediately can make a difference. Document everything, alert your exchange, report to cybercrime authorities, and avoid recovery scams.



The best protection is prevention — but if you’ve already fallen victim, acting quickly and using official channels gives you the best chance of recovery. Forward all your documented evidence to the appropriate authorities:

ReportFraud_ftc@usa.com
Fxxx off!!
 
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manny100

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I think you are confusing socialism with communism.......there are different levels of socialism and Australia has a level of democratic socialism.....the main example being Medicare. Of course Australia isn't a communist country. As I said the US Govt taking a stake Intel, by definition, IS a form of socialism.....democratic socialism...which we have here in Australia
Its a crafty business deal by Trump. The govt is getting shares via its grants to Intel. It looks like Trump's user pays policy in action. Supposed to be a passive investment. So allegedly no interference.
 
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IloveLamp

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7für7

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I think you are confusing socialism with communism.......there are different levels of socialism and Australia has a level of democratic socialism.....the main example being Medicare. Of course Australia isn't a communist country. As I said the US Govt taking a stake Intel, by definition, IS a form of socialism.....democratic socialism...which we have here in Australia

Fair enough….but I think many terms are being misinterpreted these days. There’s a big difference between a welfare state that provides social programs, and a socialist state where the government owns or controls industries. I’m talking about the latter, not the former. Communism is based on socialism… just more radical….
 
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Diogenese

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Naked shorts

Shorting did not begin with The Big Short.

Trollope wrote about it in The Prime Minister in 1876.

Sexty’s fears were greatly exaggerated by the feeling that the coffee and guano were not always real. … His partner was of the opinion that in such a trade as this they were following there was no need at all for real coffee and real guano, and explained his theory with considerable eloquence. ‘If I buy a ton of coffee and keep it six weeks, why do I buy it and keep it, and why does the seller sell it instead of keeping it? The seller sells it because he thinks he can do best by parting with it now at a certain price. I buy it because I think I can make money by keeping it. It is just the same as if we were to back our opinions. He backs the fall. I back the rise. You needn’t have coffee and you needn’t have guano to do this. Indeed the possession of coffee and the possession of guano is only a very clumsy addition to the trouble of your profession. I make it my study to watch the markets, - but I needn’t buy everything I see in order to make money by my labour and intelligence.’ Sexty Parker before his lunch always thought that his partner was wrong, but after that ceremony he almost daily became a convert to the great doctrine. Coffee and guano still had to be bought because the world was dull and would not learn the tricks of trade as taught by Ferdinand Lopez, - and also possibly because somebody might possibly want such articles, - but our enterprising hero looked for a time in which no such dull burden should be imposed on him.

This is, of course, required reading for today's traders.
 
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Diogenese

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Diogenese

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I think you are confusing socialism with communism.......there are different levels of socialism and Australia has a level of democratic socialism.....the main example being Medicare. Of course Australia isn't a communist country. As I said the US Govt taking a stake Intel, by definition, IS a form of socialism.....democratic socialism...which we have here in Australia
Once upon a time the state governments used to own the electric ...
 
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7für7

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Ahhh… the good old days 😇


Naked shorts

Shorting did not begin with The Big Short.

Trollope wrote about it in The Prime Minister in 1876.

Sexty’s fears were greatly exaggerated by the feeling that the coffee and guano were not always real. … His partner was of the opinion that in such a trade as this they were following there was no need at all for real coffee and real guano, and explained his theory with considerable eloquence. ‘If I buy a ton of coffee and keep it six weeks, why do I buy it and keep it, and why does the seller sell it instead of keeping it? The seller sells it because he thinks he can do best by parting with it now at a certain price. I buy it because I think I can make money by keeping it. It is just the same as if we were to back our opinions. He backs the fall. I back the rise. You needn’t have coffee and you needn’t have guano to do this. Indeed the possession of coffee and the possession of guano is only a very clumsy addition to the trouble of your profession. I make it my study to watch the markets, - but I needn’t buy everything I see in order to make money by my labour and intelligence.’ Sexty Parker before his lunch always thought that his partner was wrong, but after that ceremony he almost daily became a convert to the great doctrine. Coffee and guano still had to be bought because the world was dull and would not learn the tricks of trade as taught by Ferdinand Lopez, - and also possibly because somebody might possibly want such articles, - but our enterprising hero looked for a time in which no such dull burden should be imposed on him.

This is, of course, required reading for today's traders.
 
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Big possiable partners......Is this fact or fiction ?.
 

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TopCat

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Big possiable partners......Is this fact or fiction ?.
I’m sure I’ve read this article somewhere today but it never mentioned Brainchip. Will try and find it again.
 
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TheDrooben

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7für7

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Big possiable partners......Is this fact or fiction ?.
Seams like this is a fictional or speculative example “Real World Deployment” as a showcase…that was posted possibly in a forum….likely by an investor or user illustrating potential use cases. However, it is not an official document from Siemens or BrainChip.I couldn’t find any verification
 
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Mt09

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