| >It is obvious to many of us what "fraudulent" mean here, it could be an array of: >- previously flagged wallets moving through mixers So if someone robbed a bank, used that money to buy drugs, that money ended up in my hands somehow (eg. I bought from the same drug dealer), and I used that to buy a big mac, my big mac purchase is "fraudulent" as well? >- purchases and refunds to facilitate money laundering How does that even work? You can only refund to the same person. It's not like you can buy a game, gift it to someone, and have that person "refund" the game to cash out >- converting to and from steam wallet to crypto etc. There isn't an official way to convert steam wallet to crypto >It is NOT at all ambiguous which is what you are insinuating as the basis for not reading past the headline and discouraging others from doing so. 1. You say it's "NOT at all ambiguous" but you yourself listed 3 very different possible reasons. That sounds pretty ambiguous to me. 2. I skimmed the article and there isn't really much in the body either. |