Utility of crypto to criminals
Posted: Mon Feb 13, 2023 3:07 pm
I thought I'd start a new topic rather than talking on the FTX one.
It seems that there is a crypto currency called Monero which has much better "privacy" than bitcoin. So even more useful for criminals. Increasingly kidnappers demand ransom in Monero. I found out about this because I watched something on Netflix called The Lørenskog Disappearance. This is a dramatisation of a true incident where the wife of Norwegian billionaire Tom Hagen disappeared, and a ransom note was left demanding a large ransom denominated in Monero.
When you learn of something so very useful for criminals, you wonder why the authorities don't do a bit more to stop that kind of thing. We got all antsy about the Swiss having their secret bank accounts and got them to be a bit more transparent. So how can Monero sit there being so untransparent for all to see? Law enforcement seems to focus on cracking the blockchain to follow the money, as they can with bitcoin, rather than making it illegal to be so untransparent.
Or is it that it can live there on the internet, available to the world, and you can't stop it short of behaving like China? Because you can't apply pressure to websites in the way you can to Switzerland?
It seems that there is a crypto currency called Monero which has much better "privacy" than bitcoin. So even more useful for criminals. Increasingly kidnappers demand ransom in Monero. I found out about this because I watched something on Netflix called The Lørenskog Disappearance. This is a dramatisation of a true incident where the wife of Norwegian billionaire Tom Hagen disappeared, and a ransom note was left demanding a large ransom denominated in Monero.
When you learn of something so very useful for criminals, you wonder why the authorities don't do a bit more to stop that kind of thing. We got all antsy about the Swiss having their secret bank accounts and got them to be a bit more transparent. So how can Monero sit there being so untransparent for all to see? Law enforcement seems to focus on cracking the blockchain to follow the money, as they can with bitcoin, rather than making it illegal to be so untransparent.
Or is it that it can live there on the internet, available to the world, and you can't stop it short of behaving like China? Because you can't apply pressure to websites in the way you can to Switzerland?