Loss aversion is a cognitive bias where the pain of a loss is felt more strongly than the pleasure of an equivalent gain. This means people are more motivated to avoid losses than they are to acquire gains. For example, the pain of losing $100 is often felt more intensely than the pleasure of gaining $100.
Pain vs. Pleasure: The pain of losing something is often felt more intensely than the pleasure of gaining the same thing.
Impact on Decisions: Loss aversion can influence decisions, especially in situations involving risk or uncertainty, leading people to be more risk-averse when faced with potential losses.
Prospect Theory: Loss aversion is a key component of prospect theory, developed by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, which explains how people make choices under risk.
Loss aversion is a cognitive bias where the pain of a loss is felt more strongly than the pleasure of an equivalent gain. This means people are more motivated to avoid losses than they are to acquire gains. For example, the pain of losing $100 is often felt more intensely than the pleasure of gaining $100.
Pain vs. Pleasure: The pain of losing something is often felt more intensely than the pleasure of gaining the same thing.
Impact on Decisions: Loss aversion can influence decisions, especially in situations involving risk or uncertainty, leading people to be more risk-averse when faced with potential losses.
Prospect Theory: Loss aversion is a key component of prospect theory, developed by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, which explains how people make choices under risk.
Telegram and Signal Havens for Right-Wing Extremists
Since the violent storming of Capitol Hill and subsequent ban of former U.S. President Donald Trump from Facebook and Twitter, the removal of Parler from Amazon’s servers, and the de-platforming of incendiary right-wing content, messaging services Telegram and Signal have seen a deluge of new users. In January alone, Telegram reported 90 million new accounts. Its founder, Pavel Durov, described this as “the largest digital migration in human history.” Signal reportedly doubled its user base to 40 million people and became the most downloaded app in 70 countries. The two services rely on encryption to protect the privacy of user communication, which has made them popular with protesters seeking to conceal their identities against repressive governments in places like Belarus, Hong Kong, and Iran. But the same encryption technology has also made them a favored communication tool for criminals and terrorist groups, including al Qaeda and the Islamic State.
Export WhatsApp stickers to Telegram on Android
From the Files app, scroll down to Internal storage, and tap on WhatsApp. Once you’re there, go to Media and then WhatsApp Stickers. Don’t be surprised if you find a large number of files in that folder—it holds your personal collection of stickers and every one you’ve ever received. Even the bad ones.Tap the three dots in the top right corner of your screen to Select all. If you want to trim the fat and grab only the best of the best, this is the perfect time to do so: choose the ones you want to export by long-pressing one file to activate selection mode, and then tapping on the rest. Once you’re done, hit the Share button (that “less than”-like symbol at the top of your screen). If you have a big collection—more than 500 stickers, for example—it’s possible that nothing will happen when you tap the Share button. Be patient—your phone’s just struggling with a heavy load.On the menu that pops from the bottom of the screen, choose Telegram, and then select the chat named Saved messages. This is a chat only you can see, and it will serve as your sticker bank. Unlike WhatsApp, Telegram doesn’t store your favorite stickers in a quick-access reservoir right beside the typing field, but you’ll be able to snatch them out of your Saved messages chat and forward them to any of your Telegram contacts. This also means you won’t have a quick way to save incoming stickers like you did on WhatsApp, so you’ll have to forward them from one chat to the other.