Fiat in a sentence as a noun

What fiat money has going for it is a degree of control to get out of systemic problems.

I've come to understand the real nature of the federal reserve and the fiat currency of the USA.

Or are you just, as I assume, by fiat deciding that 500 MB is too much?• There's very often a speed / memory usage tradeoff.

\n We don't support any currency txn whether fiat or BTC for a host of regulatory \n issues.

Municipalities should find a way to make Uber lawful, but I'm not sure Uber should be able to make that happen by fiat.

As far as I can tell, the only difference between Anonymous, Lulzsec, and the FBI is that the FBI act by executive fiat.

90% of the people using Bitcoin don't believe in the Federal Reserve system or fiat money and just want anonymous online cash transactions.

This is just wrong in every conceivable direction -- Ben has in a stroke created an organization ruled by fiat, bureaucracy and fear.

Remember Hollywood's successful efforts to lobby the FCC to impose "broadcast flags" on computers by bureaucratic fiat?

Google and Facebook manage this problem by hiring very smart vulnerability researchers and allowing them to come up with criteria pretty much by fiat.

It's for all of the people who smugly told us for years that Bitcoin is superior to our "legacy" fiat managed and regulated monetary system system in every way, and anyone who can't see that is an idiot.

By then the speculators will have been burned so badly that they'll stay far away, so it'll quietly gain adoption in the background, and then eventually become the new currency of choice when inflation starts to make it's way through current fiat currencies.

Because they think that they get to just make up laws, all on their own..."So by making administrative changes to business permits, police get effective warrant-free surveillance?It continues to amaze me how various government agencies are doing these end-runs around the legislature and voters by fiat.

Fiat definitions

noun

a legally binding command or decision entered on the court record (as if issued by a court or judge); "a friend in New Mexico said that the order caused no trouble out there"

See also: decree edict order rescript