Financial accounts that can reproduce, inherit, and evolve.The above fundraising ideas published with this article came from this writer's exploration of a powerful and apparently new proposal: that for the first time in human history, widespread online commerce makes possible financial accounts that could reproduce at their owner's request, creating "children" accounts and family trees This is an index of family trees available. It includes noble, politically important and royal families as well as fictional families and thematic diagrams. Europe
Each new account will by default inherit To receive property according to the state laws of intestate succession from a decedent who has failed to execute a valid will, or, where the term is applied in a more general sense, to receive the property of a decedent by will. inherit v. any number of capabilities from its parent, such as: access to software applications and services; options and settings for these applications; overall look and feel; security restrictions; ability to accept many different kinds of bank cards and other payments; interactive business processes in many different human languages; art or other content for sale or distribution; automatic payments such as sales taxes sales tax, levy on the sale of goods or services, generally calculated as a percentage of the selling price, and sometimes called a purchase tax. It is usually collected in the form of an extra charge by the retailer, who remits the tax to the government. , commissions, royalties, charitable contributions charitable contribution n. in taxation, a contribution to an organization which is officially created for charitable, religious, educational, scientific, artistic, literary, or other good works. , etc.; automatic accounting and statistical projections that owners need not even request but can change if they want to; and much more. As they reproduce and inherit, these accounts will evolve in grassroots community use, due to users' selections of accounts with the most useful "mutations" (inherited changes made by various owners of different generations of ancestor ANCESTOR, descents. One who has preceded another in a direct line of descent; an ascendant. In the common law, the word is understood as well of the immediate parents, as, of these that are higher; as may appear by the statute 25 Ed. III. De natis ultra mare, and so in the statute of 6 R. accounts). Note: Due to limited space we cut most of this article. The full text is at http://www.aidsnews.org/2007/07/fundr-reproduce.html |
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