Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | rafaelm's comments login

It's cne.gob.ve, and that doesn't work either. They want us to believe that because the website is down, the whole system that counts the votes is down. Hey, maybe the votes are counted in WordPress...


Hinterlaces is a government linked company, not exactly impartial.


Calling Hinterlaces "the most respected" is quiiiite a stretch. The owner Oscar Schemel, frequently parrots the govt propaganda talking points ("it's the evil empire, there's no inflation it's sabotage etc)


A lot of YouTube channels are getting hacked recently with the same "sponsorship offer" hack. Wonder if this was the case here as well.

Paul Hibbert got hit recently. This video has more details on this works and how the bypass 2FA : https://youtu.be/YIWV5fSaUB8


As a caracan myself, it's actually "caraqueños" :)

Regarding the subject, it is indeed very popular. You can go to restaurants, car parts stores and clothing stores and find the Binance QR code prominently displayed.

And a LOT of freelancers working online have no way of receiving payments from abroad other than through Binance (verifying Paypal here because of currency controls). No one wants to receive the local currency.

I wouldn't say that you'll see grandmothers in the grocery store buying stuff with USDT, but it's definitely used.


I don't know about the other numbers, but my wife has had two scheduled c-sections and the recovery for both suuucked when compared to everyone we know that had natural birth.

Of course, the process of going through labor pains for many hours might make things even between the two...


I can assure you, it's a much much better situation than three hours of active labor followed by an unplanned or worse, emergency, c-section. Consider yourself fortunate. Labor isn't just painful, it's trauma which makes surgery much more risky and difficult to recover from.


> Of course, the process of going through labor pains for many hours might make things even between the two...

It's not. Labor pain is more time limited and the mother is kind of "out of it", and doesn't usually remember it clearly - plus there's a prize at the end :)

C-section pain is worse, and it lasts several weeks exactly at a time when the mother needs to do stuff. It's worse in every way.


My understanding is that when things progress naturally, the mother’s body and mind should be in a state that helps them cope with the pain, but it doesn’t reduce it or help you forget anything.

My wife remembers every instant of all of her births.


From my own experience, you can use a very popular exchange that has a huge P2P marketplace, precisely for this.


What is this marketplace named?


It's Binance P2P. You can transfer crypto directly into local currency. It uses local residents as liquidity providers.


Yep that's it. I just didn't want it to look like I was shilling something in the comments :)

Locally, Binance P2P is used a lot for remittances, and plenty of establishments use it as a way to receive payments as well. I've seen the Binance QR code in a bunch of restaurants and autoparts stores, for example

I used it earlier this year to send money to my sister in Argentina. Super fast, no fuss.


Just to balance this, Bisq is a decentralized alternative P2P marketplace (based on Bitcoin mainly) which will keep working even in adverse conditions, where a centralized company like Binance will generally restrict/stop their activity if a government shows their teeth.


I'm currently living the dictatorship in Venezuela. Ask me if you think Ciro's opinion is not valid, for whatever reason. (Don't know him btw. Epale Ciro!)


¿Crees que solo hay dictaduras bajo gobiernos anti-capitalistas o es algo en donde por ejemplo Qatar (o Reino Unido) siendo monarquías constitucionales podrían superar en autoritarismo?


I understand where you are coming from, but most of the time that's the only way people that live in south or central America can buy stuff online at decent prices. It's cheaper for me to pay the shipping fees to my country than it is to buy stuff here.

I use a freight forwarder to do most of my online shopping through Amazon, ebay and lots of other stores. I've bought everything from phones, TVs and even a standing desk.

It's a huge industry here. If you go to any warehouse district in Miami near the airport you'll find a bunch of these companies.

As a sidenote, I did some small development work for a friend that owns one of these companies. He was running a smallish operation and was making some good money.

There's a couple of software solutions for tracking, billing, ,support and CRM for those types of companies and they are absolutely abismal. There, I gave someone a business idea :)


Somewhat unrelated, but when I first moved to Latin America I had a job that consisted of taking enormous, empty suitcases to Miami and spending a week buying to order at the clothing outlets and end of season clearance sales. The upper class Latinos who ordered the clothes obviously paid a premium (and wouldn't be caught dead in the very convincing counterfeits that were available in the local street markets) as the whole operation paid my expenses and "wage" and made it worthwhile for the guy who I worked for.

Later I freelanced, doing basically the same thing with laptops although I would limit myself to 5 per trip just in case the customs guys got curious (they never got curious).

The global economy is really screwy, particularly with import taxes factored into the equation. I still have friends who will buy insurance write-off cars in the US online, drive them south (often with an undriveable one in tow), fix them up (so that they are salable but not strictly roadworthy) and still manage to make a living.

Then there was the whole thing about Mexican gasoline (which is state subsidised) getting smuggled over the border and sold by roadside vendors by the gallon.

It really is the purest expression of the "free market" - any tiny arbitrage leads to a clandestine industry springing up. For a while there was a boom in smuggled fresh eggs.


That's really interesting, thanks for your perspective. I tried to be careful not to blame the buyers but the forwarders. From a seller's perspective, they are a pain, and leave us wondering when and if a product will be delivered. I once sold a nice watch that way, and paid a lot to insure it. About 2 weeks later, I get the shipment back with REFUSED scrawled on it. I offered to refund the buyer minus shipping fee, which then led to a big back and forth fight via ebay. I felt sorry for them, paying for nothing, but why should I have to eat that? In the end, I won but refunded half the shipping cost as a gesture of good will.

In any event, I'm curious why it's cheaper to buy things from the US? Is it to do with tariff wriggling, or is business locally that inefficient? In that I mean, it seems some local company would realize they could import say a thousand Iphones, mark them up slightly, and make money while being cheaper than you paying to ship a single one from the US.


A combination of taxes, tariffs and an extra middleman.

If I buy an imported product here I pay local sales tax, import tariff (indirectly) and the overhead of a local importer/shop. If I buy on ebay, especially if its second hand, I pay little to none of that.

(actually, in practice, the govt here has figured it out and sales tax and tariff are usually collected on incoming shipments - stuff acquired in person overseas are more or less not paid. Depending on your country ymmv.)

But local importer & retail alone can add plenty to the overhead, and hence retail price.

Of course buying from the US this way is still very expensive, the real value is in buying direct from China.


Oh don't get me wrong, I totally understand your point as a seller. What's weird to me is that the seller gets blamed, even after the shipment is marked as delivered by UPS/Amazon logistics or whatever company was used to drop it off in Miami.

Unfortunately, I'm very familiar with the scamming culture around these parts as well:/


Regarding your question, I believe it's mostly down to corruption basically. Local businesses have huge markups because they have to deal with theft, paying off customs officials even if they have all the paperwork etc as well as the taxes. As others have mentioned, these freight forwarders have figured out ways to get around that, probably with more bribing, not paying import taxes etc. It's a never ending corruption cycle and the customers are part of it.


Yeah, but most of these operations declare the goods as low value gifts to avoid paying customs and taxes in the destination country. You get a good deal, but then the government doesn't have enough money to run hospitals, schools, roads, etc.


"the government doesn't have enough money" because politicians liberally help themselves to public funds, that's why

And you can be sure that it's the friends of the government that does the most egregious import tax dodges


If you rely on these forwarding companies, you should tell them that them participating in scams is hurting your ability to do business with them.

I doubt they care. The companies are probably mostly run by organized crime.


13 hours after your comment, 57 of the domains you've posted so far have been registered today. Only 6 were already registered. Nice!

I would like to know how you came up with these, they're pretty good.


Consider applying for YC's Spring batch! Applications are open till Feb 11.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: