Re: Anonymous payment scheme
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- There are a couple of issues here. One is whether you could get a debit card with another name printed on it than your own. Sandy Sandfort and some others have suggested here that this would be legal and possible already as long as you don't do it with the intention to commit fraud. You can open a secured account by mail and give a false name. I'm not sure what you do in this situation if they ask to see some ID when you try to use the card. This would be rather embarrassing, it seems to me. Sorry, I guess I left my drivers license in my other pants... Or, never mind, try this card. That other one was from before I changed my name... The other issue is whether you could set up a payment system which did not require social security numbers from the participants. I think this is much more questionable. Although the phone cards and some other restricted usage systems are apparently legal, bank accounts seem to have many more restrictions. Barter and scrip systems are also heavily regulated. All these laws involving reporting requirements, etc., were passed to help the government track the flow of money. There is no way the government is going to make an exception at this point. In fact, I suspect that if the limited systems expanded to where they were used for general payments, the government would crack down. I recall reading that just such a crackdown occured in Las Vegas when casino chips started to be accepted for non-gambling payments. So, you may be able to have a form of anonymity from the person you are transacting with, but I don't think you can be anonymous from the bank and from the government. And personally, I am more concerned about the bank and gov't tracking my spending patterns than whether the guy I buy gas from knowing my name. The bank has a lot more information about me which is much more threatening to my privacy. A nom de guerre VISA or debit card does not seem to help this problem. Hal -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6 iQBVAwUBLwhuNRnMLJtOy9MBAQEkPQIAqEEglLxt8E4Rrgh7dR93fuCSJUI+UMgF 3XUrsTxM4whOejFMrluOAYM+2RdBOgYTk1mNEiAgSUPLLScIa9zU5A== =CF5G -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SANDY SANDFORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C'punks, On Mon, 2 Jan 1995, Hal wrote:
. . . There are a couple of issues here. One is whether you could get a debit card with another name printed on it than your own. Sandy Sandfort and some others have suggested here that this would be legal and possible already as long as you don't do it with the intention to commit fraud. You can open a secured account by mail and give a false name.
Opening an account in the US without ID is very difficult
I'm not sure what you do in this situation if they ask to see some ID when you try to use the card. This would be rather embarrassing, it seems to me. Sorry, I guess I left my drivers license in my other pants... Or, never mind, try this card. That other one was from before I changed my name...
The other issue is whether you could set up a payment system which did not require social security numbers from the participants. I think this is much more questionable. Although the phone cards and some other restricted usage systems are apparently legal, bank accounts seem to have many more restrictions. Barter and scrip systems are also heavily regulated. All these laws involving reporting requirements, etc., were passed to help the government track the flow of money. There is no way the government is going to make an exception at this point. In fact, I suspect that if the limited systems expanded to where they were used for general payments, the government would crack down. I recall reading that just such a crackdown occured in Las Vegas when casino chips started to be accepted for non-gambling payments.
So, you may be able to have a form of anonymity from the person you are transacting with, but I don't think you can be anonymous from the bank and from the government. And personally, I am more concerned about the bank and gov't tracking my spending patterns than whether the guy I buy gas from knowing my name. The bank has a lot more information about me which is much more threatening to my privacy. A nom de guerre VISA or debit card does not seem to help this problem.
Hal
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6
iQBVAwUBLwhuNRnMLJtOy9MBAQEkPQIAqEEglLxt8E4Rrgh7dR93fuCSJUI+UMgF 3XUrsTxM4whOejFMrluOAYM+2RdBOgYTk1mNEiAgSUPLLScIa9zU5A== =CF5G -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
HH> So, you may be able to have a form of anonymity from the person you ar HH> transacting with, but I don't think you can be anonymous from the bank HH> and from the government. And personally, I am more concerned about th With a debit card you can't be anonymous, because your money resides in the bank. With digital cash, and the ability to transfer money to another digital cash card via phone lines, I don't see how they can successfully trace everything. They will try, no doubt.
On Tue, 3 Jan 1995, Bob MorrisG wrote:
HH> So, you may be able to have a form of anonymity from the person you ar HH> transacting with, but I don't think you can be anonymous from the bank HH> and from the government. And personally, I am more concerned about th
With a debit card you can't be anonymous, because your money resides in the bank. With digital cash, and the ability to transfer money to another digital cash card via phone lines, I don't see how they can successfully trace everything. They will try, no doubt.
I don't see why a debit card couldn't be anonymous, even to the point of having no name, AND no picture on it. Yes, the bank has the money, but their only obligation is to dish it out to the vendors/ATMs that you have used your card with. Why should a bank care who you are once they have your money in the account. As to avoiding fraud with the card, is it really that huge of a problem? As long as noone copies the number(could go so far as no embossed number. Just a gloss black card with a hologram of a Bald Eagle on the front of it), and you don't lose the card how can someone use your account? I think that this anonymous debit card would be a good first step towards anonymous digital cash. You still couldn't exchange digital cash with your buddy in Taiwain, but it would work for converting to physical cash(Which I still like, and is the best anonymous cash around right now). Anyone here adept enough at finance to write a proposal for CitiCorp? :> How would they make their mony off the cards? Annual fees, and vendor percentages I guess? Brian ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "Everyone is a prisoner holding their own key." | finger blane@seanet.com -- Journey | PGP 2.6 email accepted ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BL> I don't see why a debit card couldn't be anonymous BL> Why should a bank care who you are once they have BL> your money in the account. The bank might not care. The IRS probably does and would insist on knowing about transfers from bank accounts to anon debit cards. BL> you don't lose the card how can someone use your account? Just like with real cash. Possession is ownership. Digital cash involves crypto and, I assume, some type of personal ID?
participants (4)
-
bmorris@netcom.com -
Brian Lane -
Hal -
Sandy Sandfort