| > 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 |
> 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.