The Sweet Sound of Cash and Steempay

in steem •  8 years ago 

Yesterday I got excited when I read Stevel Walschot's post announcing STEEMPAY.IO v1.0.1 LIVE! Why?

Because protecting your personal privacy is a lifestyle design choice and can protect you from identity theft. Developing effective privacy hygiene habits and practices that are conducive to secrets will give you more control over which aspects of your life are made known to whom and when. One key way to do this is to use cash for as many transactions as possible.

After all, you do not want to end up like poor little Sally Harpold who we discuss later. When it comes to the sweet sound of cash on the Internet then the closest tools we have are things like Steem and Bitcoin.

PRIVACY BENEFITS OF USING CASH

I suppose the sweet little grandmother Sally Harpold ‘had something to hide’.

One of the biggest returns on privacy for the effort invested is probably by using cash for as many transactions as possible; whether as payment or receipt of funds. Another is Bitcoin or Steem which are like digital cash; or cash you can use on the Internet.

The paper trail which follows such transactions vanishes into anonymity when you use cash. It is almost impossible to link you to a transaction whether you are looking at your own financial records or the records of a merchant.

All reporting requirements for tax and other purposes should still be followed but even this only reveals some information about the aggregate amount of cash that has changed hands. Nevertheless, the benefits to the average person can be enormous.

In the unfortunate event that your bank records or statements are compromised then the cash transactions will appear only as withdrawals or deposits and there will be no way of telling where that money came from or went. The more cash transactions then the fewer bits of information that are available from reviewing your financial statements.

PRIVACY BREACHES BY CREDIT AND DEBIT CARDS

Using cash instead of credit or debit cards also keeps the damage from compromised statements to a minimum. Just look at the mess Stratfor caused their clients by not accepting Bitcoin. Then you are less likely to suffer from identity theft.

However, with credit or debit cards you need to be careful when using them to make purchases and carefully select which purchases to make which cards and when because financial privacy is not built in to the design by default like with Bitcoin or cash. This means means that your transaction information will be in the hands of credit or debit card companies, marketers and other “affiliates” of the credit card company or banks.

SNEAKY NINJA TIP FOR USING CREDIT CARDS

Talk about the potential for a wild goose chase!

If you are really sneaky then you could carefully craft which expenses you pay with credit cards and which ones you pay with cash so that marketers and anyone else who has access to a record of your credit and debit card purchases will only have the profile that you carefully painted.

Or perhaps you have let someone use your credit card to make gas purchases in a location far away from where you actually are. Talk about the potential for a wild goose chase!

AN UNFORTUNATE EXAMPLE

A rather dramatic example of why someone should use cash to make a purchase is found in the experience of Sally Harpold. Although she was prosecuted under Indiana state drug laws for purchasing one box of Zyrtec for her husband and, a few days later, one box of Mucinex for her daughter.

Both medications are available over the counter and without a prescription but the Indiana law prohibits the purchase of more than a certain amount of medicine containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine within a seven day period.

Without her knowledge Sally purchased two medications which, combined, exceeded the statutory limit. Although she had (1) never had legal trouble before, (2) had no intent to commit a crime and (3) was not committing a victimless act that is wrong or immoral in and of itself nevertheless she was prosecuted. In order to have her record expunged, but not from the Internet, she was forced to pay for the cost of the criminal prosecution.

This extremely bad decision by county prosecutor Nina Alexander to enforce a poorly worded law in a manner which was never intended could have been avoided if Mrs. Harpold made one or both of those purchases with cash.

In this example, a cash transaction would have left the purchase of the over the counter medication in complete anonymity and it would have been impossible to connect to Mrs. Harpold. I suppose the sweet little grandmother Sally Harpold ‘had something to hide’. Or is she really a terrible and horrible drug abuser and menace to society in Indiana?

CAVEATS TO USING CASH

There are some caveats to using cash as often as possible. Cash is almost impossible to recover if stolen so having enough cash on hand to pay your expenses can raise security concerns.

You should never use cash solely to with intent to commit fraud, evade taxes or engage in behavior which could be construed as money laundering. So avoid using cash with either a washer or dryer.

Also, banks and other institutions may be required to file Currency Transaction Reports for any transaction or series of transactions that are greater than $10,000. They also may be required to file Suspicious Activity Reports if they think that your cash transaction is somehow suspicious.

CONCLUSION

One of the most effective ways to protect privacy is to use cash, Steem or Bitcoin for as many transactions as possible. By taking control of the facts which are recorded, stored, archived, databased and searchable forever you greatly reduce the probability for identity theft.

This will go a long way to protecting both your personal privacy and financial privacy and may even keep you out of jail like poor little Sally Harpold.

WHAT DO YOU THINK

Do you think pool little Sally deserved to go to jail? Why not? How has using cash helped in your life? Do you find crypto-currencies like Steem to be like digital cash? How so? What are some strategies and tips you have for using them?

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"One of the most effective ways to protect privacy is to use cash, Steem or Bitcoin for as many transactions as possible." - Exactly. We are also adding the Stealth features to BlockPay (which is already integrated with Bitcoin and Steem) for total anonymity (addresses and amounts).

Let's VANISH. Keep up the great posts Trace!

This is really awesome. I need to do some more research on BlockPay but it looks really promising. Thanks for the heads up. What a great use case for transferring Steam Dollars to other users. Like an inbox that has a slight hurdle to get into!

Here's some pertinent BlockPay links & info:
BitShares Munich (the parent co): http://BitShares-Munich.de
https://BlockPay.ch
https://steemit.com/@kencode
https://twitter.com/kenCode_de
http://youtube.com/BitSharesMunich-de
CEO/CFO Christoph Hering @chris4210
CMO Rodrigo Crespo @rodrigocrespo
Dev Team Lead Ken Code
Over 50 BlockPay Ambassadors in 28+ countries
5 products so far, 5 more on the way

I do not earn money, money earns a place in my life

Rather like that one, thanks.

Private transactions are possible and on the roadmap. Steemit will provide secure P2P messaging and the equivalent of crypto cash transactions.

The Harpold case is such a good one for demonstrating why privacy is important, even if you're doing nothing wrong. Though I guess the die-hard statists will just say "She shouldn't have broken the law!"

Thanks Trace.

I wouldn't think STEEM is particularly anonymous though. All transactions are visible.

I agree that Steem dollars are not particularly anonymous given that the Steem community seems to value people who do an introduce yourself post and verify their identity. That immediately ties the account to a person. Then Steem transactions can effectively be attributed to an offline identity.
Today on The Cryptoverse I covered why Monero has rocketed in price recently (a) because it's privacy centric and (b) because a couple of dark markets are adopting it.

That is true but Steem provides the ability to be used entirely anonymously, or at least with tremendous amounts of obfuscation if steps are taken.

For example, (1) exchange Steem for another alt-coin on Shapeshift, (2) move the alt-coin around and through different addresses and perhaps even alt-coins and (3) eventually convert back into Steem associated with your 'ghost account' that you access only through TOR.

Pretty easy actually. And it will probably only get easier as more financial innovation takes place like ring singatures, confidential transactions, Z-cash, etc. to create truly anonymous digital cash.

I don't use Tor but I do use TunnelBear

Big Brother is Always Watching...

Sure, but not everywhere and not all at once since it has priorities.

The root of the problem goes deeper than medium of exchange, it's government, lobbyists - taxes. Sure there's no need for government but today there's too much government and the fascism attached to it via the lobbyists and the result of taxes to pay for the fascism. Get rid of the lobbyists, lessen government or just get rid of it, make everyone accountable for they're own actions....... no taxes or low taxes. Basically get back to the constitution again. The pendulum swings back and forth over the centuries and we're at a cross road of too much government involvement leading to less involvement. Digital currencies will play a role, but will evolve. Unfortunately, usually with a bit a pain in the process.

I agree but unfortunately, it will probably only get worse before it gets better. Why? Because it can get a whole lot worse and it is really just not painful enough yet for the average person. Just look at Venezuela to see how much people will take.

Ya...... I hate to think about it. But something similar to Venezuela around the world will probably occur before the elites let go of their reign of power and then the cycle can start all over again..... by the way, you do great work .

Again you did good job. Thanks from my heart

If blockchain tech incorporates an open ledger along with being decentralized, then it has great potential to change our perspective on how money works and how we should use it, provided it catches on enough of course. I don't think money being totally private is a good thing.

All reporting requirements for tax and other purposes should still be followed but even this only reveals some information about the aggregate amount of cash that has changed hands. Nevertheless, the benefits to the average person can be enormous.

I actually wondered if there is a CPA that would weigh in on how to do taxes for those who are treating steemit as a job. If you are not taking money out, then I would be forced to believe that it is similar to the stock market, where you don't pay on anything until you have fiat gains. (I'm not an expert, but this makes sense to me)

Also what business expenses can we write off? Travel, lunches with people you are collaborating with. Necessary hardware/computer/cell phone.

I'm mostly interested in the US tax but other countries may wish for help too.

I feel that the security of credit cards is ridiculous. My mom (not tech savvy) could take a photograph of a credit card, use a vpn and buy a product online and have it shipped somewhere where she knows nobody and go and pick it up. And to have the cvv on the back of the card? So foolish.

I'd love two factor authentication for credit cards so in addition to swiping your card, you'd get sent a random pin sent to your phone to enter to verify your transaction.

I've had identity theft and it sucks and it's very easy to do. It boggles my mind at the lack of security attached to the cards we use almost daily.

The only thing I dislike about cryptocurrency is the fear you may send money to the wrong address and lose a large sum forever. Or forgetting/losing your password. Those two problems need to be solved before I see crypto being widely accepted.

Great article @tracemayer. I have been listening to and reading a lot of your work as of late.