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>what do you call it when someone tries to conceal the origin of money? Maybe just "concealing the origin of money"? Btw, in your scenario you actually left a public, immutable record of the transaction, which is pretty much the opposite of what somebody engaging in this activity (i.e. not LARPing) would want to. Money laundering has to do with turning so-called "black money" into clean money. In your example, that is not happening anywhere. If A's money is dirty, B will be dirty as a consequence; whereas if A's money is already clean, B should be fine, so, why bother? It's just a regular transfer of money, you just used a fancy technolord mechanism but not different, in essence, than writing a check or using venmo or w/e. Also, for anyone thinking they could outsmart RICO[1] (or their country's equivalent) with some PNGs of badly drawn apes, that is just so stupid it's actually quite funny. Levine would have a field day with that. Also also, congrats, all that money you "laundered" with your fancy tokens is worthless now, per TFA. Very smart. 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racketeer_Influenced_and_Corru... |
If you think the NFT marketplace crashing resulting in monetary loss is the first time a business deal has gone wrong between criminals, I'm not sure what to tell you.