Bitcoin Can Become Untraceable.
Bitcoin's creator designed it to be radically transparent, but the tools exist to make it as hard to trace as cash.
HD DownloadBitcoin's true believers hold on through the wild price swings because they see enormous value in its properties as a currency with a fixed number of units that can't be inflated by a central bank and its "uncensorability," meaning no government or corporation can prevent one party from sending value to another no matter the reason.
"We support [bitcoin] because we've seen a need from dissidents under authoritarian regimes for it," says Alex Gladstein, the chief strategy officer at the Human Rights Foundation and author of Check Your Financial Privilege: Inside the Global Bitcoin Revolution.
Gladstein sees bitcoin as a tool of liberation—especially for people living under oppressive regimes around the globe. Activists, dissidents, and human rights workers often face prosecution by hostile regimes for receiving money from foreign sources.
"They need to receive earnings from abroad in a way that can't be easily traced. That's impossible to do using the banking system, but it's quite possible to do with bitcoin, and we've seen it happen," says Gladstein.
Bitcoin proved hard to stop in Canada. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declared a state of emergency after truckers parked their rigs outside the national capital and blocked a border bridge in protest of the government's vaccine mandates and other COVID-19 restrictions.
His administration ordered financial institutions to freeze donations flowing into the truckers. But hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of bitcoin still got through.
As one bitcoin activist involved in the fundraiser told Reason in March: "Here's the thing with bitcoin versus [government-issued fiat money]: Fiat, you can confiscate first…with bitcoin, you have to go through the process of trying to confiscate funds before you actually take possession of them. And that asymmetry, it gives you the high ground as a defender."
This man, who requested anonymity and who we'll refer to as "Caribou," was involved in organizing a bitcoin-based fundraiser called Honk Honk HODL, which raised more than $1 million USD worth of bitcoin on behalf of the truckers, about two-thirds of which got through to them.
"[Bitcoin] actually makes the law have to work first before action is taken," says Gladstein, who pointed out that the Canadian government simply froze money raised by more traditional crowdfunding sites.
"They were able to just freeze it with a phone call or a button click…But with bitcoin, they can't do that. So they have to literally file an injunction. They have to use police officers. They have to go to people's homes," says Gladstein. "It makes the government do the work…which is really important."
Bitcoin may be as hard to stop as cash, but it has a major limitation that makes it far less useful to political dissidents: After the fact, it's not hard to uncover the real identity of someone who has sent or received bitcoin.
All bitcoin transactions are recorded in a public ledger called the blockchain. At first glance, all the blockchain appears to reveal are movements between user accounts—called bitcoin wallet addresses—assigned long strings of letters and numbers. But governments have grown increasingly skilled at connecting those pseudonymous addresses to actual people.
U.S. law enforcement has used what's called "chain analysis" to unmask drug dealers who transacted in bitcoin, and police recently arrested someone in Florida for selling logins to streaming services and ride-share apps for bitcoin.
The Canadian government froze hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of bitcoin intended for the truckers after the fundraisers transferred it to a local nonprofit that was under surveillance, and police raided the home of the campaign's lead fundraiser to confiscate his computer.
But advocates say many of these problems are temporary and that many privacy tools already exist that would protect bitcoin users. They just need wider adoption.
For instance, Gladstein says that the Canadian fundraiser could've set up what's called a BTC Pay server, which generates a new virtual address recorded to the blockchain every time someone sends bitcoin.
"With the Canadian truckers, we see how governments can take away money, but more importantly…[that] once [control over] money is in the hands of government, they have shown with 100 percent certainty that that monetary control will be abused," says Craig Raw, a software developer and entrepreneur who created Sparrow Wallet, a privacy-oriented bitcoin wallet. Wallets are applications for keeping track of the secret passwords required to transfer bitcoins. The Honk Honk HODL organizer told Reason that he would have used Sparrow Wallet if he had to do it all over again.
"I think [the trucker protest] woke people up to the idea of maybe we need to have some funds, at least, that the government can't just freeze, that we have access to no matter what," says Raw.
Integrated into Sparrow Wallet is PayNym, another tool for creating different payment addresses for every transaction, throwing off the sleuths.
Are these privacy-preserving tools illegal? Generally, they're not, just as long as there's no third-party service involved. In April, the feds seized bitcoins valued at $34 million from an individual in South Florida accused of selling stolen passwords, whom they caught by connecting his online profile to an address previously listed to receive shipments.
The suspect was charged with money laundering for using a so-called mixing service that exchanges bitcoin for other bitcoin to throw off the trail.
But Gladstein says a more decentralized option known as a "CoinJoin" would be much more difficult to define as "money laundering" under current U.S. law.
"[CoinJoins are] legally protected as open source software and free speech," says Gladstein."They are merely their open-source code. There's no one taking control of your bitcoin. It's a collaborative spend. That's completely legal here."
CoinJoins, which are built into Sparrow Wallet, combine lots of bitcoin into one and then break them back into pieces, so it's hard to figure out whose money is going where.
"I think the best analogy for it is like smelting gold," the developer behind the Samourai Wallet, who asked to be identified as "Samourai," told Reason. The company created Paynyms and their own coinjoin protocol called Whirlpool.
"You'll have you have an ounce of gold, and you can smelt it down into smaller pieces. It will still be gold, and it will still be an ounce. That's what CoinJoin is for bitcoin," says Samourai.
A front line in the bitcoin-privacy arms race is developing the Lightning Network, which is a decentralized payment network for bitcoin. The bitcoin network itself can never scale to the size of Visa or Mastercard because every transaction needs to appear on the blockchain, and if there were too much data stored on this public ledger, it would become too unwieldy for users all around the world to maintain a constantly updated copy, which is what makes the network decentralized and thus highly resistant to government control in the first place.
The Lightning Network was designed to extend bitcoin's capacity almost infinitely. It's analogous to a bar tab, in which lots of small purchases are added up and combined into one transaction at the end of the night. But it also enhances privacy because, like with a CoinJoin, chain analysis firms can't easily untangle what transactions were included in the bundle.
"You might have a Cash App or Coinbase account or something [that] the government knows about, and you have income coming in. But then you withdraw into the Lightning Network, and you get that same degree of privacy, ditto with deposit," says Gladstein.
There are cryptocurrencies specifically designed to anonymize transactions, such as ZCash and Monero, both of which use "zero-knowledge proof" encryption, but Raw and Samourai have focused their attention on bitcoin because it has wider adoption, a larger network, and is more decentralized.
"Monero is interesting from a privacy point of view but less interesting from the store of value point of view, and really store value, I think, is going to become the driving reason people turn to bitcoin in the coming years," says Raw.
An unsolved problem is that all of these privacy-preserving tools require that users maintain custody of their own bitcoin, which requires some technical savvy. It's much easier to store your bitcoin on an exchange like Coinbase, which requires you to upload an image of your driver's license to comply with a federal anti-money laundering regulation called "Know Your Customer," or KYC. Samourai isn't available for iPhones, and Sparrow Wallet doesn't exist yet for mobile at all, greatly limiting adoption potential.
Samourai says that using bitcoin anonymously might be more difficult but that it's the raison d'être of a technology rooted in the privacy-obsessed cypherpunk movement of the 1990s.
"That [cypherpunk] message has gotten diluted as the years have gone on," says Samourai. "But at its root, [bitcoin is] a cypherpunk tool to route around the state. And it's only useful if we use it that way."
Raw says that the biggest privacy boon for bitcoin would be a protocol change built into the network itself that combines transactions automatically—in effect, making CoinJoins the default.
"It's one of those things that everyone in the privacy bitcoin world has their eye on. So that's, for me, the most important thing that I would hope for in terms of the future," says Raw.
Gladstein says that in a world where entire countries like Russia are being cut off from the global financial system, bitcoin's privacy and uncensorability are more vital than ever before and that privacy-preserving tools can make bitcoin more like cash.
"It gives people the option to have freedom money," says Gladstein. "Yes, the government will know all the ins and outs of what the flows are coming in and out, but they won't know what you do with it when you leave. And that, that allows us to preserve the privacy of cash, which I think is essential for democratic society."
It's not always easy being a bitcoin HODLer. This past year, the world's most widely held cryptocurrency lost more than half its value, down 70 percent from its all-time high of about $69,000 USD.
But the true believers say it's still early days and that eventually the price will catch up with the tremendous value that a fixed-supply, censorship-free, and, ultimately, private money brings to the world.
"Why should the government be able to see everything that we do from a transactional point of view?" says Raw. "It's a very Orwellian world where all of that stuff is just available…So really, I'm just trying to put technology out there that allows people to transact in a private way."
Produced by Zach Weissmueller. Edited by Danielle Thompson; graphics by Lex Villena, Nodehaus, and Thompson; camera by Jim Epstein and Noor Greene.
Photo credits: Emin Dzhafarov/Kommersant Photo / Polaris/Newscom; Anonymous / Universal Images Group/Newscom
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Wow, Reason is FINALLY talking about Bitcoin.
To be fair, they started this at the beginning of the year. It was a long time coming, but they are good for 2 - 3 articles a month.
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"but the tools exist to make it as hard to trace as cash"
Yay, easier for the money launderers and scammers to get away with their schemes.
re: money launderers: excellent.
Yes, those scamming, laundering canadian truckers!
Money laundering is a government fiction like insider trading. Your use of it shows you either don't know what it is, or approve of the government sticking its nose into people's business.
If by "scammers" you mean con men, they can only trick people who think they are getting something for nothing, or think they themselves are scamming someone. Your use of the word shows you are just another fucking busybody statist.
Fuck off, slaver.
Money launderers are doing god's work IMO. Bless them all, every one.
I wouldn't go that far. They very well could be laundering money for insidious reasons, it's just that it's such a negative infringement on freedom that it's not really worth the benefit to me.
I've always been bothered by Al Capone getting caught on tax evasion, and a lot of associated laws that came out to catch things that weren't immoral but feared to be crime adjacent. Like, it seems that a lot of issues with getting Capone was that Chicago was so thoroughly corrupted, and getting Capone didn't deal with what is actually a pretty big issue.
Thank God that Chicago is completely corruption free these days though.
benefit to me.
I've always been bothered by Al Capone getting caught on tax evasion, and a lot of associated laws that came out to catch things that weren't immoral but feared to be crime adjacent.
Income taxes are immoral. This is why they're useful.
You have money in your pocket, did you pay your taxes on it? Prove it, show us where the money came from and that you paid your taxes or you're going to jail.
By scammers with schemes do you mean the politicians and bureaucrats in government? Do you include their cronies?
"An unsolved problem is that all of these privacy-preserving tools require that users maintain custody of their own bitcoin..."
That's not a problem. If you don't maintain custody of your own bitcoin, it's not your bitcoin any more.
Word.
THIS. Owning cash has its disadvantages. Owning crypto is the same. The question is whether the advantages of having your own money outweighs these inconveniences.
Maintaining your own keys is the ultimate protection. Some of my crypto sits in custodial wallets, for ease of use. But the bulk is under my mattress in my possession.
Cash under the sofa is old bag, man. Stockpiling ammunition is the future of crazed survivalist thinking.
Didn't you read this months issue of Compound Monthly?
Keep your guns an ammo with a cloud storage provider.
That's not a problem. If you don't maintain custody of your own bitcoin, it's not your bitcoin any more.
Welcome to [takes a drag off cigarette, scratches 3-day beard, pulls from flask] the *urp* revolution. Can I see your vaccine card?
This is half or more of the conversation around bitcoin. Some moron saying "How can I share my information and transact with someone without giving them any information about me?" and some idiot saying "Oh, that's easy, you the entire system is encrypted and you don't use your name, you use a wallet and a key."
Imagine the old quote from Babbage about being asked to give the computer the wrong input and still getting the right answer and, instead of Babbage giving the ageless "I'm not able to rightly comprehend the kind of confusion that would produce such a question.", he says, "Oh, that's easy, once you encrypt the system and lose the key you can give it all the wrong input you like and won't know if the output is right or not."
Remember the original promise of bitcoin?
It's possible... it's possible.
I was kinda refreshed by the whole, "OK, they can absolutely track it, seize it, skim 30% off the top, parse out who's who and shut it down... and you have to take steps well outside the BTC protocol and even the network to avoid (some) of that (maybe)." frankness of the article. But the rest of it just comes across as terribly confused and naive. I'm sure the US Government's got track of each and every last dollar bill, down to the serial number, sitting in a C. American drug cartel boss's account. I'm sure remittances sent back by illegal immigrants are buttoned up tighter than the ATF's Fast and Furious investigation.
I've been saying this for years. It's trivially easy.
So effective and easy these tools gave 33% to the Canadian government and don't even care!
LOL those idiots got robbed by the government! This could never happen to your bank account!
This could never happen to your bank account!
BTCFanboi circa 2010: Choose Bitcoin! It's completely secret, anonymous, secure, and trusted/trustworthy! No government can touch it! It's immune to manipulation and inflationary/deflationary tactics. You can't have liberty without Bitcoin! It's the future!
BTCFanboi circa 2022: Choose Bitcoin! It's... uh... well... uh... not really worse than your bank account, I mean unless you prefer your bank account to be stable. But look! We successfully moved the same amount of money from the US to Canada as Burisma paid Hunter in one year! Well, it was worth that amount when we transferred it, it's gone down since then.
ROFLMAO!
I still don't get this. Why try to shoehorn bitcoin into anonymous money transfers when there are other cryptocurrencies in widespread use that were designed from the ground up for this sort of thing?
to be fair, bitcoin has the biggest brand and most people are familiar with it.
Telling someone to use Monero will just get you a confused look.
Plus the feds wont let you buy Monero on the exchanges, so the Monero onramp is very difficult.
to be fair, bitcoin has the biggest brand and most people are familiar with it.
Right, like Myspace was for a while.
Plus the feds wont let you buy Monero on the exchanges, so the Monero onramp is very difficult.
So... cryptocurrency IS regulatable.
That actually goes into a concern I have with the Reason-style of libertarianism where one ignores laws one doesn't like rather than dealing with getting it repealed.
I really fear that turns into an arms-race with government, and eventually you get bigger and bigger boots stomping on one's face for eternity.
Anonymity is a set of features. Bitcoin already has several of these features. It needs a few more. This isn't cramming, or shoehorning any more than adding a garage to your house is shoehorning it into car storage.
Can't the Authorities™ just torture a suspected money launderer until he gives up his password? Or subpoena him to appear before an IRS grand inquisitor?
Can't the Authorities™ just torture a suspected money launderer until he gives up his password?
That's if they want to lay hand on his money. If they just want to freeze his money they can just put him in jail or otherwise prevent him from accessing his wallet.
This man, who requested anonymity and who we'll refer to as "Caribou," was involved in organizing a bitcoin-based fundraiser called Honk Honk HODL, which raised more than $1 million USD worth of bitcoin on behalf of the truckers, about two-thirds of which got through to them.
Don't the random tests of TSA checkpoints routinely come up with like 80-90% failure rates? Meaning the overhead on sending my contraband through TSA is only like 10%.
So, government-imposed overhead using cutting-edge blockchain technology, pooled wallets/mixing technology: 33%, government-imposed overhead simply flying shit over the boarder: 10%.
Shit! For 33% of $1M you could charter 10 flights from O'Hare to Calgary.
Cash? Is that still legal in AD 2022?
At the moment, applications play a rather important role in our lives. They make our lives easier, but sometimes it becomes difficult to find a good software development company. My friends recommended me to engage in Upplabs that has lots of developers. They are versed in information technology, big data and artificial intelligence. Perhaps you will also feel comfortable working with them.
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