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It is a financially-privileged perspective [1] for members of the W3C to assume that vulnerable or marginalized groups of users would not need access to Bitcoin. A decision by the W3C to deny its relevance and importance, from an individual and human rights perspective, would cause a fragmented web to unfold as users who require decentralized identifiers would be forced to find non-standard solutions.
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Who cares? Does anyone still use their software? There's a reason Firefox market share is in a tailspin, while others like Brave, that embrace new ideas are trending up. The market will not be kind to these social justice luddites.
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Does anyone still use their software? Er, yes, actually; I do. Mozilla upset me a few years back: you can read about it here - Firefox is on a slippery slope The issue with using most other browsers is that the code base is very centralised, being so, as it is based on Chrome and, as you may guess, I'm for decentralisation. I also use Thunderbird as I've not found any other email client that's as good.
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