You ever shopped at kroger? Their produce selection is so bad and/or rotten that I don't even want to buy produce when I shop there. They don't even care and I think use it to drive buying more predictable goods (like canned). Their subsidiary Pick N Save in the midwest was similar, but not near as bad as Kroger in the south.
We buy produce from the cheaper Aldi instead, or worst case, the overpriced Publix (if Aldi doesn't have it).
Funnily enough, in the UK, Aldi produce is generally very fresh and still cheap. There's plenty of turnover, precisely because people shop at Aldi so much.
That’s really the key I’ve found - fresh deliveries of produce are about the same everywhere; what matters is how fast the turnover is. And it varies by area which store is “the good one”.
Yeah wouldn't lineageOS be a great option for those on pixel 4a? I'm on 4xl, so I'll need to start exploring this soon :D have wanted to do so anyways...
I think this is solved by "authenticated atomic action", where users sign individual interactions instead of trusting login servers. In this case, each upvote, downvote, and comment must be cryptographically signed.
Once user action is signed, trust must be assigned to networks of users. (Of course, individual users can be trusted, but it would be easier to manage if users are bundled into networks somehow.)
Key management is the hard problem for this to work. User need to be able to have many keys that are revocable. Blockchains like Ethereum are advocating for chain centralized solutions, but I see no reason why that must be the case. It can be done, from top to bottom, in a totally distributed way. From the blockchain perspective, a "multi-chain" solution is the right one.