Duke of Marmalade
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Exactly! Did Dev build something into Bunrat that insists on privacy of the State currency even for criminal activity?In other words, complete privacy unless there is a suspicion
Exactly! Did Dev build something into Bunrat that insists on privacy of the State currency even for criminal activity?In other words, complete privacy unless there is a suspicion
My reading of this thread + some googling is that there's no firm/precise committment to privacy (not counting vague statements).One of the disappointments as far as I am concerned is this commitment to privacy
I've never understood the privacy argument against spending on cards. They may know how much you've spent in Dunnes, Boots and Amazon but they've no idea what you've bought.My larger expenditures are all documented on my AIB bank statement anyway
I don’t think double spending can arise with a central currency. When you flash your AIB debit card at the till AFAIK AIB instantly reduce your account balance and you can’t spend that money again. With a decentralised currency on an open source platform there needs time for everyone to agree that you owned the coin. An essential feature of Bitcoin is that when after say 10 minutes the miners have agreed you owned the coin your transfer to a new owner is recorded on the ledger and ithe coin remains traceable back to its creation.@Brendan Burgess did mention "There will be no record of the transaction.", however, I don't see how that could possibly work, as there needs to be a record in order to prevent double-spending. Even Bitcoin has a ledger where all transactions are recorded
"Sorry, the value of Bitcoin declined over the 10 minutes needed to confirm the transaction. You need to pay more"when after say 10 minutes the miners have agreed you owned the coin your transfer to a new owner is recorded
Dunnes, Boots and Amazon know, though. (As an aside, that's the main reason that retailers run loyalty programmes — so they can harvest that information and monetize it in various ways.)I've never understood the privacy argument against spending on cards. They may know how much you've spent in Dunnes, Boots and Amazon but they've no idea what you've bought.
To give up your privacy to prevent crime is to accept totalitarianism.One of the disappointments as far as I am concerned is this commitment to privacy. I saw it as a perfect way to reduce or at least detect crime.
And I was brought up to believe that totalitarianism was all badTo give up your privacy to prevent crime is to accept totalitarianism.
Boss I was starting to ask myself "what is the point of this CBDC?". The commercial banks have really optimised digital money transmission, I can't see how CBDC will make it more efficient. It will not compete with commercial banks in terms of the interest, if any, that is credited so no big change to the general role of our commercial banks including leveraging off the deposit base to finance industry.I attended an ECB webinar this morning on this topic. I knew nothing about it.
in the US, just 5% of point-of-sale consumer transactions are settled in cash; in the Asia-Pacific region, 15%; in Europe, 22%. And that's just point-of-sale consumer transactions; I haven't found figures for cash transactions as a percentage of total household spending, but my guess is that it will be well under 1% in the US; not much higher in Europe.
I on the other hand have Revolut, AIB, EBS, BOI, and 2x credit union apps on my phone. All of which provide different functionality and none of which I'd willingly dispense with.I have Revolut and AIB on my phone already. Do I want to add another one? Not really.
I think some of those countries skipped the bank stage altogether. The citizens went from cash straight to mobile app payments, and never really had a bank account for making payments.the commercial banking system didn't see it worthwhile to provide digital monetary transmission to the countries on that list
I on the other hand have Revolut, AIB, EBS, BOI, and 2x credit union apps on my phone. All of which provide different functionality and none of which I'd willingly dispense with.
It is very likely that the digital euro will be provided by existing banks and fintechs.But I see people with wallet loads of cards so adding another to their phone wouldn't make much difference.