Data Havens in Anguilla About to End?
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At 5:16 PM 8/10/96, Anonymous wrote:
As of immediately, the "taxBomber's Site & Internet Offshore Center" has been pulled by our Anguilla provider and will remain inaccessible for a few days.
This is the work of some journalist hacks who did a major job of character assassination by claiming that we (and our provider) were involved in selling fake passports.
"Pulled by our Anguilla provider." This says it all about the probable viability of nominally offshore providers. (I assume this is Vince Cates' site, though I haven't doublechecked...he's the only Anguilla provider of similar sites I know of. I certainly mean no criticism of Vince, if it was indeed his site. My comments are analogous to what we might say about a particular remailer site going down, even if we don't criticize the site operator for removing his remailer.)
But now, it seems, little Anguilla is getting "worried about its international reputation".
Well, they are right, though with a vengeance: the reputation they have most certainly lost as of today is that being of one of the world's last truly liberal tax and data havens ...
I'm not an expert on offshort tax and data havens, but *any* country can be pressured by larger countries, and even by the glare of publicity. If a country derives very little revenue from "permitting" some service, and the costs (they believe) are much greater than the revenues, they will likely act. Thus, the negatives of allowing offshore data havens in Anguilla may easily exceed the few thousand dollars (or whatever) they get in taxes and fees (whatever they might be) from Vince and his customers. Longterm, I've never believed there is much safety in locating in *any* physical country. (By this I mean advertising and making it clear that one is in Country X, said to be "friendly" to tax avoiders, data havens, money laundering, etc. Policies can and do change overnight. Corrupt governments are, well, corrupt, and will change tunes if another piper pays them enough.) The case in Switzerland, with banking, is quite a bit different, with huge deposits and huge fees from their financial services. Even so, Switzerland has continually yielded more ground to tax collectors and various pressure groups from large nations. I'd guess that Vince has had a fun time in the Carribbean, but that he'll be closing up shop sometime soon. Once some services are yanked, confidence is lost. The interesting question will be whether the U.S. authorities and especially the Internal Revenue Service will put pressure on him if he chooses to return to the U.S. (Assuming this was Vince's service that is. But even if it wasn't, pressure on another service means pressure on all Aguillan services.) --Tim May Boycott "Big Brother Inside" software! We got computers, we're tapping phone lines, we know that that ain't allowed. ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero W.A.S.T.E.: Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Licensed Ontologist | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders aren't even speed bumps on the information superhighway."
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"Pulled by our Anguilla provider."
Note that the taxbomber site is moving to a provider in the US. -- Sameer Parekh Voice: 510-986-8770 Community ConneXion, Inc. FAX: 510-986-8777 The Internet Privacy Provider http://www.c2.net/ sameer@c2.net
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sameer
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tcmay@got.net