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by africanboy 1901 days ago
> If your family was barely surviving in a restricted country I'm sure you would send funds to them as well.

I don't really understand why people don't read other people comments

I've literally said "as an Italian with roots in Africa" my African family was dirty poor and my Italian family isn't reach either.

I guess you are not from a poor country, so why are you imposing your rich country world view on me?

trustless systems are THE problem in a "restricted country" you'd know if you'd ever visited one.

They can and will take waway from you everything at will, imagine what would happen to a family that suddenly has money to spend but nobody can say where the money is coming from...

if there's no proof that the money is yours, you can't claim the ownership, taking it away from you it's easier.

"but... but... there's an entry in a global immutable ledger that says that the money was transfered from this anonymous wallet to my anonymous wallet and..."

"so you have no document proving that the money is yours! they are legally of the government now. we're also taking the keys of the wallet."

living the life of warlords or mobsters or arms dealer, hiding the sources of your income like criminals, is not what people in developing countries want!

they want banks and laws like everybody else

they don't want to try to be rich by investing in a pump and dump speculative asset so that Musk can make more money.

They absolutely want trusted systems, as small as possible, so they can trust them, not the global financial tools of the richest 1% elité

1 comments

I'm not going to go into my background as if that were some added credibility like you seem to think your background is. A point stands on its own, not based on the authority of the person making the point.

> if there's no proof that the money is yours, you can't claim the ownership, taking it away from you it's easier.

You seem to have little clue how cryptocurrencies even work here. You can't take someones crypto without taking their private key and you won't even be able to know how much crypto exists in someones wallet without the private key.

Now of course someone can put a gun to your head and demand your private key, but they won't have any indication that you even OWN a private key with crypto whereas with fiat they can just raid your house and claim the cash.

In no circumstance is it easier for a central authority to take crypto than cash.

I'm not sure what ledger you think will prevent criminals from taking cash from your house or bank in the same manner. If you think a thug with a gun can't demand your bank login the same as they can demand your private key then you really don't know what you're talking about. I could relay personal experience, but again I don't consider arguments from some notion of anecdotal authority to be valid so I'll let you just google the situation if you'd like where people at gunpoint are made to withdraw cash from ATMs. It's common enough.

Again, there's no situation where crypto is easier to steal than a countries fiat.

> A point stands on its own, not based on the authority of the person making the point.

paraphrasing Asimov

my ignorance is not as good as your knowledge

> You seem to have little clue how cryptocurrencies even work here

doesn't a point stand on its own, not based on the authority of the person making the point?

who said that? ... I can't remember

anyway, I was involved in btc from 2014 to 2016.

dropped it and never looked back.

> Now of course someone can put a gun to your head and demand your private key, but they won't have any indication that you even OWN a private key with crypto whereas with fiat they can just raid your house and claim the cash.

that's why we have banks and don't keep our money under the mattress.

so that the bank is responsible of keeping it safe and I don't lose it if the bank gets robbed.

what happens to my bitcoins if someone robs them?

but let's imagine you are in a poor country, can't open a bank account because the system doesn't accept you, you don't trust it, there is no bank system in your country, whatever...

now imagine you need to buy something that your family needs. you convert your bitcoins to fiat money (someway, that's another cane of worms entirely), because of course you can buy a Tesla with bitcoins, but not primary goods, and you are back at square one: you have cash in your home that is not safe.

> I'm not sure what ledger you think will prevent criminals from taking cash from your house or bank in the same manner

do you seriously don't know?

> people at gunpoint are made to withdraw cash from ATMs. It's common enough.

it's not.

because you can only withdraw a small amount of money from ATM (€ 250 in Italy) so the incentive is close to zero.

thieves steal the ATM machine and try to break it later

it's extremely rare, but it happens.

but even then the incentive is very low, because if you break an ATM machine the money inside is tainted with a special paint that makes it useless and highly recognizable.

> Again, there's no situation where crypto is easier to steal than a countries fiat.

bitcoins are useful only when converted to fiat money.

you can't buy bread for your family with bitcoins in Somalia.

You can't in Italy as well.

infact they steal your fiat money, which is much more valueable for a thief.

anyway you seem to not understand how developing countries work, at all.

money is not stolen from you, it's seized by corrupt governments and corrupt police forces.

crypto doesn't solve that, in any way.

if you can hide crypto, they will seize the goods you buy with them.

don't believe the hype

-- Public Enemy

you're all over the place, first it's crypto that's easy to steal now it's the goods you buy with crypto or the fiat you have to convert into.

If the vulnerability is when you buy goods or hold fiat then crypto isn't the problem. Your bank is safe, so is your wallet. If an attacker takes the keys to your bank or the keys to your wallet you are compromised. Maybe your bank is insured and will refund your withdrawals if you can prove you were forced to withdraw by an attacker. I'm sure that's something that would happen in Italy, but in the poor parts of the world I'm familiar with that is not the case.

>> > people at gunpoint are made to withdraw cash from ATMs. It's common enough.

it's not.

this is just ignorant - I've witnessed this multiple times. Maybe it's you living in Italy that has no exposure to the realities of poorer countries if you're ignorant of this common attack.

> first it's crypto that's easy to steal now it's the goods you buy with crypto or the fiat you have to convert into.

crypto is as easy to steal as any other property.

I was just playing along the game "crypto is safer"

it's not

> If an attacker takes the keys to your bank or the keys to your wallet you are compromised

Nope.

If I can prove that the keys to my bank account were stolen I don't lose anything.

That's why, again, we use banks.

> Maybe your bank is insured and will refund your withdrawals if you can prove you were forced to withdraw by an attacke

it's a requirement for members of the World Bank

go see the list of Countries

it includes places like Liberia, Afghanistan, Nicaragua

of course in Colombia or Los Angeles (same level of criminal behaviour) it happens more than in safer places, that still means that the greatest danger is losing your life, not your money.

and how is that different when using crypto?

I don't think that people using crypto become magically bullet proof.

> this is just ignorant - I've witnessed this multiple times. Maybe it's you living in Italy that has no exposure to the realities of poorer countries if you're ignorant of this common attack.

where exactly?

can you point me to some info?

you probably don't know that banks have to reimburse you if someone stole your money from the ATM, because it's their duty to protect them.

but even admitting you are right, they can only steal the amount of money you can withdraw from the ATM

if they get the keys to your wallet using the proverbial gun pointed at your head, you lose everything and can't get it back

police can't even do anything about it (to make it clear, you can prove you had the money before they were stolen, because the bank keeps a log of the transactions made by the ATM machine and can tie them to your persona, how can you prove those bitcoins were your property? if you own the keys you own the wallet)