STX Wire Fraud - Stacks CEO Discusses MIA Coin and NYCCoin
The Wire Fraud statute makes it illegal for anyone to use, or cause the use of “wire, radio, or television communication in interstate or foreign commerce” for the purposes of executing a scheme to defraud or to obtain money by false or fraudulent pretenses. It is punishable by *up to 20 years in prison: * https://www.new-york-lawyers.org/wire-fraud.html#:~:text=The%20Wire%20Fraud%... . -------- Stacks Founder and CEO careless wire fraud in a new CityCoin's promotion: https://www.citycoins.co/post/stacks-founder-muneeb-ali-shares-his-thoughts-... Muneeb Ali <https://twitter.com/muneeb>, the founder of Stacks <https://www.stacks.co/> and CEO of Hiro Systems <https://www.hiro.so/>, shares his thoughts on CityCoins and the project’s potential to accelerate meaningful change. CityCoins is built on the Stacks Protocol — a layer-1 blockchain that recycles Bitcoin’s PoW in a way that is both secure and resource-efficient <https://www.citycoins.co/post/citycoins-are-environmentally-friendly>. Muneeb has been following the project’s development since inception and had a lot to say about CityCoins. What excites you the most about the CityCoins project? I feel like crypto networks could actually be a very unique and new way of facilitating public-private partnerships. Take MiamiCoin for example. If you live in Miami, you're from there, you're interested in the city, or just want to be a part of the Miami economy — there’s now a way for you to get involved. There is a crypto asset that represents the community of Miami that could spread globally. And there are so many interesting things you can build on top of CityCoins. It opens up a new design space for government services and other types of community activity. What types of applications are you most excited to see the CityCoins community build using MiamiCoin, NYCCoin, and other future city-specific tokens? Interfaces to government services. Government software has historically been painful to use. You can theoretically get really good engineers to build modern apps for government services by incentivizing them and letting them integrate CityCoins like Miami’s and New York City’s in the apps. -- *Gunnar Larson - xNY.io <http://www.xNY.io> | Bank.org <http://Bank.org>* MSc <https://www.unic.ac.cy/blockchain/msc-digital-currency/?utm_source=Google&utm_medium=Search&utm_campaign=MSc-Digital-Currency-North-America&utm_term=blockchain%20unic&gclid=Cj0KCQiAyJOBBhDCARIsAJG2h5ctwwMz0MRbVSk-LaYD-GMU5UgDSw7ynxbGr_a7SkaFAZzJc1-pzxEaAi4NEALw_wcB> - Digital Currency MBA <https://www.unic.ac.cy/business-administration-entrepreneurship-and-innovation-mba-1-5-years-or-3-semesters/> - Entrepreneurship and Innovation (ip) G@xNY.io +1-646-454-9107 New York, New York 10001
crypto networks could actually be a very unique and new way of public-private partnerships.
You don't need to go around propping up governments like that when, so long as your ways remain voluntaryist, you are free to do whatever you like together yourselves.
It opens up a new design space for government services
You've wasted hundreds of years designing optimizing and executing these services, yet those pandora boxes you keep "opening up" haven't worked, at all, none of them, ever, else you wouldn't need to keep churning through them, and by odds of historical precedent and now exhausted iterations, they never will work. Yet you still refuse to do the one thing you have NEVER tried... live your lives freely without such Govts. So when your next pointless iteration of your glorious government services fails to work yet again... don't claim you didn't know what else to try. Even Bitcoin clearly told you from early days to go try p2p freedom without such governments.
Government software has historically been painful to use.
That's because government itself is always a historic and painful failure. Stop imparting that pain, suffering, and death upon yourself and others. Go try something actually new for once.
participants (2)
-
grarpamp
-
Gunnar Larson