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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/25/24 in Posts

  1. Breast specialist Beverly with a rather rare ass, thigh and pit shit
    6 points
  2. In a Reddit post, u/WorriedOstrich6819 shared that they will no longer be buying Ramly burgers in Singapore simply because of the differential treatment they received as a Chinese. This occurred at a Pasar Malam outside of Tampines MRT, and the store did not have a price list. When the u/WorriedOstrich6819 asked for a double beef burger, the stall owner quoted $8. This differed from the week before when the same stall only charged $6. So on the same day, u/WorriedOstrich6819 decided to ask a Malay friend to ask for price, and low and behold he was quoted $6. “So i got the chinese price. It wasn’t some sudden price increase. It was simply because I wasn’t malay.” u/WorriedOstrich6819 Has anyone else experienced the same? Share in the comments below. https://kuanyewism.com/2024/01/ramly-burger-stall-charges-chinese-price/
    5 points
  3. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    4 points
  4. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    4 points
  5. 4 points
  6. as usual with PAP lah. when compare our transport system, they will use backwards countries like africa to compare. but when compare with cost they will use cities like HK or tokyo discounting the fact that our cb cars due to COE is the most expensive in the world even compared to places like London and Tokyo and HK. Only fucking daft and stupid 60% sinkies believes in them. KNN
    4 points
  7. @ManOfTheHour @noobmaster @coffeenut @CannotTahanLiao
    4 points
  8. I haven’t ordered this for many years. That kind of money top up a bit more can go eat fast food like kurt
    4 points
  9. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    4 points
  10. @Cybertan @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    4 points
  11. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx
    4 points
  12. More than 300 people bought INDXcoin, a cryptocurrency created by the pastor and marketed through his online church, which was deemed "illiquid and practically worthless." A Colorado-based pastor for an online church accused of pocketing $1.3 million through a cryptocurrency fraud scheme told followers in a video statement that the Lord told him to do it. Eli Regalado and his wife marketed their cryptocurrency, INDXcoin, to Christian communities in Denver, saying God told him people would become wealthy if they invested, the Colorado Division of Securities said in a statement Thursday. INDXcoin raised nearly $3.2 million, the Securities Division said. At least $1.3 million of that went directly to the Regalados or was "used for their own personal benefit," said a complaint filed Tuesday in Denver County District Court. The Regalados could not be reached for comment. In a video statement to his followers last week, Eli Regalado said the charges that they pocketed $1.3 million "are true." “Out of the $1.3 [million], half a million dollars went to the IRS, and a few hundred thousand dollars went to a home remodel the Lord told us to do," he said in the video. The couple also allegedly spent their investors’ funds on a Range Rover, luxury handbags, jewelry, an au pair, boat rentals and snowmobile adventures, according to the complaint. The couple were charged with violating anti-fraud provisions under the Colorado Securities Act. Colorado Securities Commissioner Tung Chan said she filed the civil fraud charges after she was approached by people who invested and lost money through INDXcoin. “We allege that Mr. Regalado took advantage of the trust and faith of his own Christian community and that he peddled outlandish promises of wealth to them when he sold them essentially worthless cryptocurrencies,” Chan said in a statement. 'Illiquid and practically worthless' Regalado claimed that God told him investors would become wealthy if they put money into INDXcoin, promoting it as a low-risk, high-profit investment pegged to the average value of the top 100 cryptocurrencies, the Securities Division said. In reality, INDXcoin was "illiquid and practically worthless," the Securities Division said in its release. The cryptocurrency was available only in Kingdom Wealth Exchange, which the Regalados shut down. It can no longer be sold anywhere. "We took God at his word and sold a cryptocurrency with no clear exit," Regalado in his video address Friday. "What we're believing for still is that God is going to do a miracle. God is going to work a miracle in the financial sector." In the comments on Regalado's video, dozens of people continue to reassure him that God will "turn the situation around." Faith-based marketing Regalado was 22 and serving a prison sentence for “boosting cars” when his faith called him to become a pastor 20 years ago, he said in a YouTube live podcast. He began preaching for the online-only Victorious Grace Church, where he and his wife are listed as the only two employees. Regalado, who had no cryptocurrency or exchange background, said divine inspiration called him to launch INDXcoin and Kingdom Wealth Exchange. “It was last October [20]21 that the Lord brought this cryptocurrency to me. He said, ‘Take this to my people for a wealth transfer,’” Regalado said in a video update to INDXcoin followers in August 2022. Regalado advertised INDXcoin through presentations at his church and at others he found through other pastors, according to the legal complaint. From June 2022 to April 2023, the cryptocurrency raised nearly $3.2 million by selling unregistered securities, it said. In videos on INDXcoin’s YouTube channel, Regalado quotes Bible verses, telling investors to expect a “miracle” as they wait for “God’s plan” to unfold. Regalado also told investors they would "tithe" and "sow" in causes helping widows and orphans, but the funds primarily went into their own pockets, according to the complaint. “They specifically went out to the Christian community, and there’s a lot of references to scripture and faith. He cloaks himself in that to get people to give their money to him,” said Chan, the securities commissioner. “That’s really heartbreaking for the people who trusted him.” Eli Regalado, his wife and his three companies are charged with securities fraud, unlicensed broker-dealer activity, selling unregistered securities and imposition of constructive trust. They are scheduled to appear in Denver District Court next week, according to the court docket. Chan urges others who have invested in INDXCoin to contact the Colorado Division of Securities. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/colorado-pastor-accused-pocketing-13m-crypto-scheme-says-lord-told-us-rcna135143
    3 points
  13. https://www.instagram.com/p/C1PEBgSy-Ho/ Maybe some kk or mm left a mark :s
    3 points
  14. @ManOfTheHour @pigpigoink @zendude @ExTreMisTxxx @coffeenut look like droopy face
    3 points
  15. 3rd 5 yr later post Oda blur blur
    3 points
  16. I wanted to see if anyone realised i bumped a few threads 😂
    3 points
  17. whats happening here? old pic. now he less fat
    3 points
  18. Trick title. edmwer bbfa no wife
    3 points
  19. Back in 90s, there was very little trolling of muslims. it really blew up, pun intended, after 9/11
    3 points
  20. When I was young, I rmb some Jesus worshipper told me not to play with Pokémon game and MTG card games cause it is demonic
    3 points
  21. He has so many different spirits to blame for every random incident in his life. The spirits like very free wor
    3 points
  22. This one part of his long QnA beedio from Harbourfront / Vivo .. that's why I wtf
    3 points
  23. wah shitty pasar malam food nowadays also cost at least $6 - $8 sia. crazy
    3 points
  24. Her shoulders damn broad mmmmm
    3 points
  25. The irony is that it has never happened in the satanic temple, they are publicly audited, and are rabid about handling donations properly.
    3 points
  26. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    3 points
  27. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx @zendude
    3 points
  28. The person who posted this 100% never go concert in their life. almost impossible to get a cab and some charge $50
    3 points
  29. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx
    3 points
  30. 2 points
  31. I used to get detention for liking metal music at Catholic school :D religious folk cause more hate than others
    2 points
  32. Dont play leh. He call himself KL socialite
    2 points
  33. his profile got nice wonder woman cosplayer https://www.instagram.com/reel/C0UhmvnvGze/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
    2 points
  34. Anyone can get scammed online, including the generation of Americans that grew up with the internet. If you’re part of Generation Z — that is, born sometime between the late 1990s and early 2010s — you or one of your friends may have been the target or victim of an online scam. In fact, according to a recent Deloitte survey, members of Gen Z fall for these scams and get hacked far more frequently than their grandparents do. Compared to older generations, younger generations have reported higher rates of victimization in phishing, identity theft, romance scams, and cyberbullying. The Deloitte survey shows that Gen Z Americans were three times more likely to get caught up in an online scam than boomers were (16 percent and 5 percent, respectively). Compared to boomers, Gen Z was also twice as likely to have a social media account hacked (17 percent and 8 percent). Fourteen percent of Gen Z-ers surveyed said they’d had their location information misused, more than any other generation. The cost of falling for those scams may also be surging for younger people: Social Catfish’s 2023 report on online scams found that online scam victims under 20 years old lost an estimated $8.2 million in 2017. In 2022, they lost $210 million. “People that are digital natives for the most part, they’re aware of these things,” says Scott Debb, an associate professor of psychology at Norfolk State University who has studied the cybersecurity habits of younger Americans. In one 2020 study published in the International Journal of Cybersecurity Intelligence and Cybercrime, Debb and a team of researchers compared the self-reported online safety behaviors of millennials and Gen Z, the two “digitally native” generations. While Gen Z had a high awareness of online security, they fared worse than millennials in actually implementing many cybersecurity best practices in their own lives. So, why? Why is the generation that arguably knows more about being online than any other (for now) so vulnerable to online scams and hacks? There are a few theories that seem to come up again and again. First, Gen Z simply uses technology more than any other generation and is therefore more likely to be scammed via that technology. Second, growing up with the internet gives younger people a familiarity with their devices that can, in some instances, incentivize them to choose convenience over safety. And third, cybersecurity education for school-aged children isn’t doing a great job of talking about online safety in a way that actually clicks with younger people’s lived experiences online. “I think Gen Z is thinking about it. We have to live with these threats every day,” says Kyla Guru, a 21-year-old computer science student at Stanford who founded a cybersecurity education organization as a teenager. When she teaches classrooms of students about email safety or phishing or social engineering, she said, there’s often an instant recognition. “They’ll be like, ‘Oh my God, I remember getting something really similar.’ Or, ‘I’ve seen a ton of these kinds of spammers in my Instagram DMs.’” The kinds of scams that target Gen Z aren’t too dissimilar to the ones that target everyone else online. But because Gen Z relies on technology more often, on more devices, and in more aspects of their lives, there might just be more opportunities for them to encounter a bogus email or unreliable shop, says Tanneasha Gordon, a principal at Deloitte who leads the company’s data & digital trust business. Younger people are more comfortable with meeting people online, so they might be targeted with a romance scam, for instance. “They shop a lot online,” Gordon said, “and there are so many fraudulent websites and e-commerce platforms that just literally tailor to them, that will take them from the social media platform that they’re on via a fraudulent ad.” Phishing emails are also common, she said. And while a more digitally savvy person might not fall for a copy/pasted, typo-riddled email scam, there are many more sophisticated, personalized ones out there. Finally, Gordon added, younger people will often encounter social media impersonation and compromised accounts. Older Americans also date, shop, bank, and socialize online. But for every generation except for Gen Z, the technologies that enabled that access weren’t always available. There’s a difference between someone who got their first smartphone in college and someone who learned how to enter a password into their parents’ iPad as a kid — the latter of which is much more the experience of a Gen Z or Gen Alpha, the generation following Gen Z that is rapidly approaching teenagerhood. Millennials, particularly older millennials, had occasional access to computers in school, but younger generations may have been issued laptops by their school district to use in the classroom at all times. Taken together, these differences have led to some educated speculation on what that shift might change about how people approach cybersecurity. If online mayhem feels like part of the cost of being online, might you just be a bit more accepting of the risks using the internet entails? This generational difference might lead younger people to choose convenience over security when engaging online with their devices, according to Debb. Social media apps like Instagram and TikTok are convenient by design. Install the app on your phone and you’ll stay logged in, ready to post or browse at a moment’s notice. The app will send alerts with updates and messages, designed to get you to open it up. Debb offered a hypothetical: If Instagram made users log out every time the app closed and re-log in with two-factor authentication in order to reopen it, then Instagram would probably be more secure to use. It’d also be extremely frustrating for many users. Older generations might be a little more accepting of this friction. But for those who grew up with social media as an important part of their self-expression, this level of security could simply be too cumbersome. But Gen Z’s online experience isn’t really a black-and-white choice, where convenience lives behind one door and safety the other. Instead, online safety best practices should be much more personalized to how younger people are actually using the internet, said Guru. Staying safer online could involve switching browsers, enabling different settings in the apps you use, or changing how you store passwords, she noted. None of those steps necessarily involve compromising your convenience or using the internet in a more limited way. Approaching cybersecurity as part of being active online, rather than an antagonist to it, might connect better with Gen Z, Guru said. “We’re the ones changing the scene in the future, right?” said Guru. “We’re the ones doing activism around climate change or reproductive rights. And so I think your threat model changes the moment that you take on those kinds of responsibilities or those roles.” There’s another factor here, too: Many experts say that the responsibility for remaining safe while using these apps should not fall solely on the individual user. Many of the apps and systems that are designed to be convenient and fast to use could be doing a lot more to meaningfully protect their users. Gordon floated the idea of major social media platforms sending out test phishing emails — the kind that you might get from your employer, as a tool to check your own vulnerabilities — which lead users who fall for the trap toward some educational resources. Privacy settings should also be easier to access and understand. But really, Guru says, the key to getting Gen Z better prepared for a world full of online scams might be found in helping younger people understand the systems that incentivize them to exist in the first place. “Why do these scams happen, who is behind them, and what can we do about them? I think those are the last synapses that we need to connect,” she said.
    2 points
  35. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx https://www.instagram.com/reel/C2e7c_lJVjT/?igsh=OGwyYWt3ZjZrcWFu
    2 points
  36. After trying more than a dozen set of clothes, I realized that the clothes ain't ugly. It's me.
    2 points
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