--- begin forwarded text


Date: Thu, 16 Sep 1999 10:14:18 -0400
From: "Robert A. Hettinga" 
Reply-To: rah@philodox.com
To: rah@shore.net
Subject: Will this replace banking?

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         THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER 16
1999                


 

 

Will this Replace Banking?


				(c) 1999 Clair Wolfe	 © 1999 

Money, in Hardyville, is a private matter -- just as it used to be 
everywhere. What you have and what you do with it is between you and 
your banker, you and the shopkeeper, you and you alone.

Unless the government has take-to-the-judge evidence that the $10,000 
you just deposited is a payoff for rubbing out your lawyer's 
brother's mother-in-law (You know, like, actual harm has been done to 
an actual victim), it has no cussed business sticking its nose into 
your financial affairs -- not to tax you, not to keep statistical 
tables on you, not "for your own good," and not to go on fishing 
expeditions about such non-crimes as "money laundering" or that 
silliest bureauspeak crime of all -- 
http://www.ncjrs.org/txtfiles/assetfor.txt "structuring."

If there were a Bank of Hardyville, the tellers wouldn't question you 
about why you were making withdrawals, wouldn't file 
http://www.ustreas.gov/fincen/sarptfin.htmlSuspicious Activity 
Reports, wouldn't demand your National ID number or fingerprints, 
wouldn't routinely report your account to the tax vampires, and 
wouldn't sniff down their quasi-governmental noses at you. They'd 
treat you as a valued customer, not a crook or a peasant.

Besides all that, the confidentiality of your relationship with your 
banker would be as sacrosanct as that with your lawyer.

It goes without saying that there's no bank in Hardyville.

Are you kidding? Any banker who tried to set up that kind of 
operation would be arrested just ahead of his customers. So here in 
town we mostly use cash, money orders, barter and even the occasional 
bit of gold or silver. But these methods have their limitations and 
inconveniences.



Bob-the-Nerd -- he of the No Name (and Mostly 
Out-To-Lunch-Back-in-20-Minutes) Computer Store -- has for several 
years been beating the drum for a different type of store-and-spend 
currency option, called 
e-gold

 has been offered on the Net for about three years -- which 
makes it about as established as Lloyds of London. Well, in 
cyberspace terms, anyway. Because of the bankruptcy of an earlier, 
much-ballyhooed electronic money system -- David Chaum's 
http://www.ecashtechnologies.com/ Digicash (now ignominiously known 
as Digicrash) --  has had a struggle establishing a major 
market base or getting coverage from the once-burned wired press.

Though I've written about  in my books, I've personally ignored 
it because it didn't offer the one thing Internet commerce ought to 
enable -- truly, totally anonymous transactions. So, a couple of 
months ago, when mailto:jray@James Ray -- "chief mouth" 
of  started nagging me (Yes, Jim, you nagged) to write about 
, I said nope, no way, not interested, ho hum.

Then two things happened. First, a whole raft of orders for my books 
turned up missing in the mail under circumstances that pointed at 
theft, rather than mere postal incompetence. One of those orders was 
from an  advocate, who kindly refrained from saying, "I told 
you so." Second, at a conference, I heard one of  
techno-mavens, Douglas Jackson, (another is Ian Grigg) refer to 
something new -- something called , he said, will 
be a "strongly privacy enabled" electronic medium of exchange that 
uses  as its backing. An anonymous currency with a metal base!

As soon as I heard that, I said, "Hey, Jim! Tell me more." Now 
(though I stop short of endorsing either of these systems and urge 
you to investigate for yourself) I'm kind of excited.

First, a little on 

Before getting to . 
If you want to know more, just follow the 
http://www.e-gold.com/

Unlike other electronic exchange media,  isn't just fiat 
government notes turned into bookkeeping blips. The stuff is real 
money. When you open an  account, you can opt to store your 
currency as gold, silver, platinum or palladium -- metal in a 
warehouse. Everything in your account is 100-percent metal-backed. If 
you want verification that the metal is there, and assurance that 
these guys aren't going to take your money and run, check their 
website. (Jim Ray doesn't mind answering those questions -- but he 
does wonder why we don't ask our local bankers just how much real 
money they keep in their empty vaults!)

To open an account, you give minimal information about yourself -- 
information even a privacy freak like me considered non-invasive. 
Though they want an actual, physical address, it doesn't even have to 
be yours. No ID. No SSN. No fingerprints, either.

Of course,  isn't banking as they'd be the first to note. It's 
a currency system. You won't be paid interest on the metal in your 
account. In fact, you'll have to pay small transaction and storage 
fees. That's how they make their money. (Opening the account is free 
and you don't have to put in any money to start with.)

What can you do with ?

Pay money to other  account holders.
Purchase items from vendors who have  accounts.
Through a process called OutExchange, pay your bills or make 
pre-arranged payments to merchants that don't have  accounts. 
(You still can't go into the drugstore and write an  check.)
Make transactions of any size.
Make transactions in any major currency or by weight of any of the four metals.

You can also donate to worthy causes. One of the finest, 
http://www.jpfo.orgJews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership, 
has account number 105440. Or there's http://www.taig.orgTexans 
Against Intrusive Government; they're bringing suit against the use 
of SSNs on drivers licenses. TAIG holds account number 105988. Tons, 
ounces or grams of gold will also be welcome in an account I'm 
uncommonly fond of, 106974. (Only kidding, only kidding. Well, about 
the tons, anyway.)

It's necessary to have account numbers to make transactions, so I'm 
not giving away any secrets here. Security comes through password 
protection, secure servers and such. And that brings us to. ...

DigiGold

 is private in the sense that they don't sell customer 
information, and that you can open an account using personal 
information of your choice. But being physically located in the U.S., 
with its leagues of financial enforcers, they don't dare offer an 
anonymous transaction system.

 -- debuting soon -- is a different critter.

 
can spend it. And as with cash or gold coins purchasers don't have to 
identify themselves to vendors and (this being the Internet) it's 
even possible for vendors to be unknown to purchasers. It's private. 
Unlike  will have no transaction fees.

That also means it has the same vulnerabilities as cash. As Jim says, 
"Light a cigar with a $100 bill -- and that bill's gone." If you sent 
a  payment unencrypted and it was snagged by a stranger, that 
stranger would be richer by X-amount of . So there are 
certainly risks. Unlike most gov-cash, however, it's got a metal 
backing.

 backed. (Later, that will change to 25 
percent  intends to be a 
profitable operation.)

While  is a Delaware corporation that must remain "pure as the 
driven snow" in the eyes of the fedgov,  will be an offshore 
entity -- in fact, an entity that exists only in cyberspace.

"Ah, yes," some gov-o-snoop is muttering right now, "Another 
cyberspace purveyor of money laundering, dope-dealing, terrorism, 
right-wing extremism, smut and all those other wonderful things that 
let me build my agency's budget. Oh, goody."

And of course  could be used by criminals -- for instance, by 
the CIA to hide payments for one of its drug-smuggling operations. It 
could be used exactly -- as Jim Ray notes -- the way "Alan Greenspan 
money is used by criminals every day. The fact is, unimaginative 
people use anonymity irresponsibly. Responsible people use anonymity 
to solve real problems." (Like the problem of bureaucrats sticking 
their noses into private affairs.)

Are governments everywhere going to hate ? Is Bill Clinton a 
womanizer? Of course, those who love to control others, and who see 
"crime" in every expectation of privacy, are going to detest  
-- and it will be quite interesting to see whether the power of the 
state or the power of the 
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0684832720/wolfeslodgesoverei 
gn individual prevails (as James Dale Davidson and Lord William 
Rees-Mogg predict in the linked book of that name).

Bottom line: No amount of government intrusion will halt crime. But 
impenetrable financial privacy may halt government intrusion.

"If  was sold as the best thing ever to happen to Murder Inc. 
(or the CIA), that would be terrible," Jim agrees. "But this is going 
to be the best thing that ever happened to liberty. Think about it; 
Thomas Jefferson would have been horrified by a government that 
snooped into everyone's record books." If  is all its 
promoters say, it could give us back something our ancestors accepted 
as a given.

"Something like  is technologically and mathematically 
inevitable," Jim concludes. "Trying to build barriers against it is 
like trying to build sand castles against tidal waves. If they 
destroy this system, someone else will build another one. I just hope 
to see it happen peacefully and for prosperity."

To find out more

 is currently in "late alpha or early beta" testing stage. It 
isn't yet ready for marketing -- though it could go live in the next 
few months. If you have computer expertise and want to know more, you 
can check out  and related technologies at:

http://webfunds.org/webinstalldemo/to test .
http://www.systemics.com/docs/ricardo/for info and source code on 
the underlying payment system.
http://www.cryptix.orgstrong encryption products and news.
http://www.currently under construction, but soon to be 
 HQ.


Followup -- A small victory and a small defeat: WND advertiser, < 
http://www.pplthomas.com/Pre-Paid Legal Services, has announced it 
will stop requiring Social Security numbers for membership. Thank 
you, Pre-Paid. However, the young man whose 
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_cwolfe/19990819_xccwo_not_everyt 
.shtm
l>story brought this membership policy to light has -- in the face of 
the legal stonewalling of his mega-corporate employer -- decided he 
must accept a Social Security number, simply to survive. I applaud 
his courage for taking the battle as far as he was able.



 illustration by Wayne D. Holt


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--- end forwarded text


-----------------
Robert A. Hettinga 
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation http://www.ibuc.com/
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'




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