La Liga has El Clásico, France has Le Classique, and Argentina goes full gun with its Superclásico. English football has no true equivalent, with Liverpool and Manchester United fans unable to agree on a name for their grand-slam meetings. Up in the land of fitba, there’s this weekend’s 450th Old Firm/Glasgow derby (delete as applicable according to your stringency on Scottish company law). And Germany has Der Klassiker, between Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund. The Bundesliga marketing suits have been out in force this week for the one game, played on Saturday evening, that brings extra eyeballs. Though questions are often raised over whether this is a true, classic rivalry; Dortmund have not won a league title since Jürgen Klopp was making his rounds in 2012.
a journal in accounting terminology) have to be rounded up by the back office
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Technically, Linux ID is built around decentralized identifiers (DIDs). This is a W3C‑style mechanism for creating globally unique IDs and attaching public keys and service endpoints to them. Developers create DIDs, potentially using existing Curve25519‑based keys from today's PGP world, and publish DID documents via secure channels such as HTTPS‑based "did:web" endpoints that expose their public key infrastructure and where to send encrypted messages.