Welcome To aBlackWeb

Status
Not open for further replies.
I miss 1000 ways to die
There is a YouTube channel called "they will kill you" and he has a bunch of ways people die or get injured. Things like: when bunjie jumping goes wrong and then list deaths or injuries related to that. Not quite 1000 ways but still.

Ps. I don't recommend his early videos, overly dramatical way of speaking.
 
How the fuck do the screws in light switches slowly back themselves out?

this shit is funny on its own

but it made me think of my geekin ass dad....he sends me pictures of shit like that in his apartment and swears somebody's watching him ? ??

"this screw wasnt like this yesterday and the neighbors been acting funny.....its alright ima catch em and they gone pay"
 
i wanted to for 5 mins but that buzz went fast

seen too many grown folks making a fool of themselves...all it takes is for you to start it up

next week you fully dressed dancing in the shower and on top of your car for no fucking reason
 
Damn, it seems Robinhood really stopped yall from buying certain shares to protect their wall street homies. Thats tufffff.

But yall should of known better than to still trust an app that got fined 65mill for misleading its customers on how they make money

Robinhood Financial has been fined $65 million for misleading its stock market customers about how the company makes its revenue from their trades, the Securities and Exchange Commission said Thursday. The SEC fine comes one day after regulators in Massachusetts filed a lawsuit against Robinhood for allegedly targeting young, inexperienced investors with flashy gimmicks on its app that treat stock investing like a game.

Federal officials said that between 2015 and 2018 the company only partially explained on its online FAQ page how it makes money, omitting details about its largest revenue source — trades. Robinhood takes a user's stock order and sells it to a larger trading firm that executes the trade, a process known as "payment for order flow," the SEC order states.

Robinhood made no mention of payment for order flow rates, federal regulators said, at a time when the company was rapidly growing. While Robinhood markets its services as "commission free," the SEC claims that customers in reality received inferior trade prices that "in aggregate deprived customers of $34.1 million," despite any savings they received from paying zero in commissions.

 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top