luisivan | 1 year ago | on: HopeHack: $50k prize for teenage hackers
luisivan's comments
luisivan | 1 year ago | on: HopeHack Fellowship: $50k prize for teenage hackers
I owe so much to this community, it was a great source of learning when I was a teenage hacker myself.
Winning HackNow, a 5k EUR prize for teenage hackers, changed my life at age 15. Just having someone believe in you changes the course of things so much.
There's never been a better time to be a teenage hacker. At the same time, it can be very difficult if living in a place where you aren't understood. During school I got routinely bullied and even told by teachers themselves that I would go nowhere, let alone be able to make software.
Today more than $30bn of cryptoassets are governed by software I built — aragon.org
Now that I can, I want to give back. If you are a teenage hacker, go apply! And if you know some teenage hacker that could benefit from this, please direct them my way :D
Thanks!
luisivan | 3 years ago | on: New Distro 'BlendOS' Combines Arch Linux, Fedora Linux and Ubuntu
luisivan | 3 years ago | on: Typst: A Programmable Markup Language for Typesetting [pdf]
luisivan | 8 years ago | on: U.S. To Ban Laptops in All Cabins of Flights from Europe
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Tim Berners-Lee wins Turing Award
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Show HN: Mongoaudit – CLI tool for auditing and pentesting MongoDB servers
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Show HN: A decentralized insurance vehicle on an Ethereum blockchain
We just open sourced a set of Ethereum contracts for anyone to freely provide, consume and invest in transparent and fair insurance vehicles.
Insurance can get really bureaucratic and opaque; using Ethereum, bureaucracy is nonexistent, and everything is transparent. No individual party has control over the funds, or can withdraw all its money at any time.
We want Provident One to be a community driven effort to create and standardize a set of Solidity contracts that anyone in the world can use to create insurance vehicles that are more transparent, fair and free.
Thanks!
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How to challenge a patent?
This is the exact reason why we built Unpatent (https://unpatent.co) so feel free to reach me at luis@(our domain name) and we'll help you out!
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: George Hotz cancels his Tesla Autopilot-like ‘comma one’
(Edited to reflect the point more politely)
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
We spend the crowdfunded money on the ex parte reexam PTO fees + lawyer fees (for preparing the filing) + rewarding the prior art searchers. As we're doing an ex parte, it's pretty cheap compared to an inter partes. The IPR one would be >$100k, while ex parte's minimum costs are about $16k. Ex parte has less success probabilities than an inter parte, but the fact that it's so cheap helps scaling the process so we can get rid of stupid patents at a good pace :)
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
luisivan | 9 years ago | on: Crowdfunding campaign against US patent on personalized content
I owe so much to this community, it was a great source of learning when I was a teenage hacker myself.
Winning HackNow, a 5k EUR prize for teenage hackers, changed my life at age 15. Just having someone believe in you changes the course of things so much.
There's never been a better time to be a teenage hacker. At the same time, it can be very difficult if living in a place where you aren't understood. During school I got routinely bullied and even told by teachers themselves that I would go nowhere, let alone be able to make software.
Today more than $30bn of cryptoassets are governed by software I built — aragon.org
Now that I can, I want to give back. If you are a teenage hacker, go apply! And if you know some teenage hacker that could benefit from this, please direct them my way :D
Thanks!