Cryptocurrency: HavenoDEX, Stallman Taler v Monero, Govts Seize Crypto $Billions Every Year, MiamiCoin CBDC
https://haveno.exchange/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-t4lmHcXqw Stallman Taler v Monero https://www.vice.com/en/article/v7eqa9/miami-launches-miamicoin-to-make-mill... https://www.theblockcrypto.com/linked/113562/us-senate-crypto-tax-amendment-... https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/04/irs-has-seized-1point2-billion-worth-of-cryp... The U.S. government regularly holds auctions for its stockpile of bitcoin, ethereum, litecoin and other cryptocurrencies it seizes and then holds in crypto wallets. "In fiscal year 2019, we had about $700,000 worth of crypto seizures. In 2020, it was up to $137 million. And so far in 2021, we're at $1.2 billion," said Jarod Koopman, director of the IRS' cybercrime unit. CNBC reports: As cybercrime picks up -- and the haul of digital tokens along with it -- government crypto coffers are expected to swell even further. Interviews with current and former federal agents and prosecutors suggest the U.S. has no plans to step back from its side hustle as a crypto broker. The crypto seizure and sale operation is growing so fast that the government just enlisted the help of the private sector to manage the storage and sales of its hoard of crypto tokens. [...] Once a case is closed and the crypto has been exchanged for fiat currency, the feds then divvy the spoils. The proceeds of the sale are typically deposited into one of two funds: The Treasury Forfeiture Fund or the Department of Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund. "The underlying investigative agency determines which fund the money goes to," said [Sharon Cohen Levin, who worked on the first Silk Road prosecution and spent 20 years as chief of the money laundering and asset forfeiture unit in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York]. Koopman said the crypto traced and seized by his team accounts for roughly 60% to 70% of the Treasury Forfeiture Fund, making it the largest individual contributor. Once placed into one of these two funds, the liquidated crypto can then be put toward a variety of line items. Congress, for example, can rescind the money and put that cash toward funding projects. "Agencies can put in requests to gain access to some of that money for funding of operations," said Koopman. "We're able to put in a request and say, "We're looking for additional licenses or additional gear,' and then that's reviewed by the Executive Office of Treasury." Some years, Koopman's team receives varying amounts based on the initiatives proposed. Other years, they get nothing because Congress will choose to rescind all the money out of the account. https://www.theregister.com/2021/08/03/russia_cybercrime_laws/
On Thu, Aug 5, 2021, 7:51 AM grarpamp <grarpamp@gmail.com> wrote:
Was this taken down or is my isp bubble revealing itself?
~ $ curl -I haveno.exchange
curl: (6) Could not resolve host: haveno.exchange
~ $ curl -I haveno-dex.github.io
HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
Server: GitHub.com
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
permissions-policy: interest-cohort=()
ETag: "5f7b904d-239b"
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'none'; style-src 'unsafe-inline';
img-src data:; connect-src 'self'
X-GitHub-Request-Id: DDE0:0D75:2C4328E:3A1DD5F:610D960A
Content-Length: 9115
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Date: Fri, 06 Aug 2021 20:06:10 GMT
Via: 1.1 varnish
Age: 40
Connection: keep-alive
X-Served-By: cache-bos4653-BOS
X-Cache: HIT
X-Cache-Hits: 1
X-Timer: S1628280370.306722,VS0,VE0
Vary: Accept-Encoding
X-Fastly-Request-ID: a4df97d72ed68196d182ed7bd15796bb1e6ad0ad
The site can be hosted locally from the code at https://github.com/haveno-dex/haveno-site/ using https://jeckyllrb.com/ . Haven't tried it myself.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-t4lmHcXqw Stallman Taler v Monero
It's for people like me who have been living under a rock. Casts Stallman as a little irritating here and there; he may have been a little tired for the video. Stallman has a lot of facts to back his opinions up. The starting TEDx video at https://fsf.org/TEDx quickly explains the four principles of software freedom needed to prevent computerised population control, and how that is different from open source. I am guilty of being scared to say "free", saying "open" instead, and hope to remember this ted talk a little. Stallman supports GNU Jami, previously called Ring, SFLPhone. https://jami.net/ . It appears to be a decentralised audio/visual/text communications platform using TLS 1.3 . It supports multi-device linking, unlike many other decentralised communication networks. GNU Taler, https://taler.net/, is a cryptographic financial network that protects full anonymity of the buyer, while also providing for taxability if needed while preserving this anonymity. Contrariwise, as I understood Stallman, large merchants must operate completely transparently on GNU Taler This moves power away from entities that gain dominance a little. Taler does not use a universally stored permanent ledger nor a proof lottery. (I think Stallman missed the point that cryptocurrencies provide to end network and storage censorship in a way dangerously otherwise missing in the technological ecosystem, but Taler seems a good thing.) After this it got more political around Monero, which Stallman hasn't spent much time studying. He repeats his point that everybody is free to make whatever decisions they want; that that is part of software freedom. I took the time to write up the above information as it seemed valuable to repeat, and didn't catch as much of the political parts of the video. I do recall him saying that a report showed that over 10% of the world's wealth was held secretly by something like rich people avoiding tax regulations. It sounds like I have some similar politics to him.
participants (2)
-
grarpamp
-
Karl Semich