|
|
|
|
|
by theturtletalks
858 days ago
|
|
Your comment is quite naive and doesn't understand the damage KYC and AML laws do to businesses. The GUBMINT BAD because they effectively gave financial institutions the right to decide who can do business and who can't. That means effectively deciding the winners and losers. They can ban and deny any company from accepting payments only behind the ruse of KYC and AML laws. They don't have to tell you why (security thru obscurity). Let's take OnlyFans. OnlyFans can accept payments using Stripe and other payment processors. Now try to make your own OnlyFans. The banks say you can't. Isn't this what laws are for? Selling porn is legal, yet payment processors decide what you can sell online. And to think they don't decide which company can process payment or not, effectively decides who wins. This is where decentralization and CRPYTO GUD comes from. I don't want a few companies deciding what I can sell online, especially if it's legal, and they hide behind KYC/AML laws afterwards. Just looking at credit card processing fees where we essentially have a rent-seeking fee that will continually increase and is not even refunded to the merchant when a customer returns something. That's the power the government gave to these financial institutions with these laws. |
|
The difference between my comment and yours, as well as my comment and the initial post, is that I acknowledge the complexity. You look only at the bad - you don't seem to understand the reason that KYC exists or the value that it provides (and yes, despite the negatives, there is value to KYC rules).