"blah happened before bleh [but we missed that]" is caused by using variables, 100% of the time. Also, if you do not use variables, there cannot possibly be such a thing.
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Replying to @dibblego
Huh, I disagree. It could also be caused by logging in a stage of the pipeline before the password is hashed. Like, maybe they log HTTP requests.
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Replying to @dibblego @JadenGeller
You got this wrong. It's called a variable because it varies between executions of a program. Doesn't matter if within one execution it changes (mutable) or not (immutable). Similarly in y = 2*x+1, x and y are variables, but immutable. They vary from case to case.
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Replying to @PLT_cheater @JadenGeller
I do not mean a variable, in the mathematical sense, as clarified earlier.
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Replying to @dibblego @JadenGeller
Boltzmann Brain Think Tank Retweeted
Boltzmann Brain Think Tank added,
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Replying to @PLT_cheater @JadenGeller
You understand that this is consistent, right?
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Replying to @PLT_cheater @JadenGeller
Then all nomenclature, even with clarification, must be derived from mathematics?
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Replying to @dibblego @JadenGeller
No, but this clearly is. You've just performed the fallacy of excluded middle.
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I've asked a question about this apparent, yet elusive, inconsistency. There is no fallacy.
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