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When the Japan Olympics were cancelled in 2020 I read that there was actually some kind of "Olympics cancellation insurace" policy that paid out over it, potentially hundreds of millions. I'll see if I can find it

See here: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-olympics-insurance/insure...

The IOC had 800 Million insurance and overall was 2-3 Billion. It would be really interesting to understand how to price an 800 Million Olymoic insurace policy



in Germany there were quite some lefal battles around cancslling of Oktoberfest. If I didn't miss an uodate on that itnwas concluded that the 2020 Oktoberfest wasn't "cancelled" but it wasn't announced innthebfirst place, as usually the city councils votes for helding an Oktoberfest in spring while there isn't a permanent rule or similar about it. Thus insurances covering "cancelling" didn't have to pay.


Excuse me sir, but have you been drinking?


Reminds me of a time that me and a co-worker stayed in late on a Friday night figuring out how to make our email alerts seem convincingly human through “random” typos in alert messages by performing human like keyboard adjacent miss-presses, extra key presses (either duplicate or keyboard adjacent), and occasional whole word omissions for things like “the” or “and”- but only for alerts sent between midnight and 2am on weekends. This of course, only after dissecting and trying to characterize what kind of typos we thought were common by drunk people using QWERTY keyboards.

It was a simpler time, before autocorrect errors dominated, and it was also a fun Friday night. The somewhat regular “Adam bot” in “party mode alerts were just little bit more amusing to be woken up by late at night when things were broken.


Heh, that reminds me:

Officer: Sir, how high are you?

Dude: No officer, it’s high how are you


He's been to Oktoberfest, obviously


maybe but I regularly do that x<space>y oh no I hit xny and the auto-corrector will not split wordx and wordy. And I am pretty sure I have managed to add andnthen to my auto-correct dictionary.


lefal is a perfectly cromulent word and nothing to do with f and g being quite close on a keyboard.

I am personally, barely, three sheets to the wind - I've only guzzled two bottles of red!


One thing that I had to learn the hard way after switching to full-time remote is to never open slack or anything work-related while drunk or under the influence of other substances.

Especially if use the same messenger app both for work and for personal use. And by "personal use" I mean sharing porn with your significant other.


I personally thought it was the contagion of the two typos in the end of the parent comment


Wimbledon too.

https://www.sbnation.com/tennis/2020/4/8/21214031/wimbledon-...

> The All England Club reportedly updated its Wimbledon insurance policy years ago to include the infectious disease clause following the worldwide SARS outbreak in 2002.


"Force majeure" became one of those semi-obscure legal concepts that took front & center during the onset of the pandemic...


I’m surprised Force Majeure didn’t provide a way for the insurance company to not have to pay this out.


Wimbledon took out insurance against a pandemic after the SARS outbreak in 2002, so maybe the Olympics also paid to insure against pandemics specifically.

https://www.sbnation.com/tennis/2020/4/8/21214031/wimbledon-...


If you are insuring against the Olympics being covered you are insuring against a lot of things that are normally covered by Force Majeure (wars, revolutions, pandemics, terrorism etc).




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