Re: IRS vs. privacy
M >The IRS loves the current digital cash systems, such as ATM cards, M >because they let them spy on your bank account. :) M >digital-cash!=anonymous-transactions M > The existence of ATM networks gives the IRS no info that they didn't have in, say, 1965 except your physical movements if you use them a lot. If you used to cash or use a lot of checks in the past, they could "follow" you that way as well. What *does* give them (and everyone else) extra powers are the new "voice mail" account information systems that use the SS# as a PIN. Anyone can use those to spy on your account. As always, accounts not in your True Name or in another country are much harder to link to you. DCF In 1985, while he was dying of AIDS, Roy Cohen had almost $1.5 million in judgments against him -- half in favor of the IRS and half in favor of civilian creditors. Meanwhile, he lived in an Upper East Side townhouse, used a house in the Hamptons, and flew Concorde back and forth to Europe frequently. Being judgment proof means never having to say you're sorry. --- WinQwk 2.0b#1165
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Duncan Frissell