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by mrvc
5483 days ago
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Open source code tends to give a false sense of security. Many people assume others will check the code, yet few do. In addition, it is possible to spread malicious code throughout a code base to prevent detection. (mentioned in article). To use TOR you still connect through an ISP. That can be tracked and deep packet analysis can be done. TOR is not a magic bullet. Exchange - Correct. That was coming in part 2 of the article covering methods around each point, but unlikely to find the time to write it up at this point. I leave the question: Why else would one use an anonymous currency unless they don't want to be detected? From there, who does not want to be detected? Usually those doing things they shouldn't. Otherwise, you'd just use a credit card or normal payment service as an everyday citizen would. |
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Those few who do are usually enough. Closed-source code gives a false sense of security. There are way more exploits for closed source code and they tend to take longer to fix.
To use TOR you still connect through an ISP. That can be tracked and deep packet analysis can be done. TOR is not a magic bullet.
Untrue. Deep packet won't see anything besides an encrypted connection. If you use Tor bridges nobody will know you're connecting to Tor.
Why else would one use an anonymous currency unless they don't want to be detected?
It isn't an anonymous currency. That's the main misconception about Bitcoin. Bitcoin can be anonymous using Tor. Just like the web can be anonymous using Tor. But the web isn't anonymous per se, and so isn't Bitcoin.
Again, the main point of Bitcoin is how disruptive it is for the banking industry. It makes micropayments easy, it makes transactions among individuals easy and decentralized, etc. It disrupts their business models based on an oligopoly.
Why would you use Bitcoin? Because you can:
- Be anonymous if you want, but you don't have to.
- Transfer money to someone, overseas, without any fees.
- Charge money for your business without paying horrendous credit card or Paypal fees.
- Stash your money securely in case of Government collapse (think Argentina 10 years ago, Belarus 2 weeks ago, or Greece very soon)
- Make confiscation impossible if you leave in a corrupt country.
- Make micropayments (like tips) without fees.
- Buy stuff online from overseas (people are doing this with a NewEgg proxy that accept bitcoins)
And there are many more use cases that I'm probably forgetting right now.