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replied 2325d
Yep, and now that dollar bill is worthless. If the police get it, it's dirty money, confiscated and used in a drug investigation. BCH is the same way.
replied 2325d
Only difference between fiat and BCH in this regard is that BCH is harder to confiscate. Monero coins cannot be considered dirty, as they are obfuscated on the protocol level.
replied 2325d
Korean exchanges dropped all privacy coins such as Monero in order to comply with regulations.
replied 2324d
yeah thats the gov's only play with privacy coins.
replied 2324d
Optional privacy, while the Monero community hates the idea, might just be the "good enough" solution we are looking for with BCH. But it must be protocol-level.
replied 2324d
the issue is every private tx on an optional privacy chain is treated as suspicious. if you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear line of reasoning. agree must be protocol lvl.
replied 2324d
Definitely, but my hope is that you can move your coins off exchanges and then do private transactions using that optional protocol.
replied 2324d
I think it's way too late for BCH to adopt a non-transparent blockchain, even if that's what everyone wanted, which it isn't.
replied 2324d
And tbh, anything better than mixers at this point, is better than sticking with the status quo of mixers and blockchain analysis cat-mouse.
replied 2324d
mixers are definitely a hack solution.
replied 2324d
my worry too. but I'm so far from understanding the math that makes all this work so idk maybe its possible? 🤔
replied 2324d
You'd definitely need a hard fork. And everyone would have to agree on it. Which isn't the case. Some prefer the transparent blockchain, as it supposedly make gov accountable.
replied 2324d
People prefer transparent blockchains for that, and because tracability makes crime fighting and business auditing easier. But all of this is at the expense of privacy, and freedom.
replied 2324d
biz & crime sound like reasonable requests, but like you said at the expense of privacy/freedom. thanks for the points. couldnt see why any one would want transparent chains
replied 2324d
hmm, using it to keep gov accountable sounds like a ring of power argument. aka some power we can wield to keep gov in check when in reality it will be turned against the general pop
replied 2324d
Exactly.
replied 2324d
I can come to terms with optional privacy with coins like nano that couldn't support it and remain feeless due to data restrictions, but I have a harder time accepting it with BCH
replied 2324d
At this point, I'm welcoming of anything that's bare minimum more sophisticated than mixers. CashShuffle not counting, being a mixer itself.
En Fri Mand
replied 2325d
Snorting cocaine with money is disgusting. You never now where this paper went.
replied 2323d
You may snort some microscopic residue cocaine for free, around 90% of dollar bills have traces of it.
En Fri Mand
replied 2323d
Haha what won't I do for free cocaine 😂
replied 2323d
If hyperinflation sets in, you may be able to get your hands on all the free residue you could dream of!
En Fri Mand
replied 2322d
Then I will sell it cheaply for Bitcoin Cash.
En Fri Mand
replied 2322d
Haha!
replied 2325d
The place with the highest concentration of cocaine on money is Wasington DC. It isn't worthless uness confiscated in a drug bust.
replied 2325d
With BCH it becomes worthless as soon as they trace it. Then the coins and associated wallets are blacklisted on every exchange from San Francisco to Hong Kong.
replied 2325d
That is your guess unless it actually happens.
replied 2325d
It happens all the time already with ransomware coins.
replied 2325d
This I have not heard of. Are they trying to track the coin to be sure the person can't sell them, or is it the coin itself they go after? Who tracks it?
replied 2323d
They use automated services like Chainalysis to track the coins, it does automatic real-time warnings any institution (like a bank/exchange) that the Bitcoin is no-good/tainted.
replied 2323d
Oh, so it only affects people selling crypto to banks. I have no interest in selling crypto anyway. I spend it instead. If anything I like that you can track bad actors.
replied 2323d
People have always been able to abuse tools. That doesn't mean we should abandon the particular tool.
replied 2323d
Most people like that you can track bad actors, but who decides who is a bad actor can be the state, so you may end up with political activists being bad, which often happens.
replied 2323d
People have always been able to abuse tools. That doesn't mean we should abandon the particular tool.
replied 2323d
There are cryptos that are close to 100% private, and they both make it so that privacy minded persons have an option, and it also takes some of the disagreeable actions of the BCH.
replied 2323d
I guess to me the "public ledger" was one of the big appeals that Bitcoin first had for me. I imagine government spending on a public ledger being quite easy to track.
replied 2323d
I am in complete agreement with you, the tools are amoral, not bad in themselves. There is a trade-off and balance and there will always be errors in both directions.