• nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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    21 days ago

    To be fair, apart from the privacy aspects, they’ve chosen some of the worst arguments against a full cashless society. Seriously, piggy banks and birthday cards?

    • GiantChickDicks@beehaw.org
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      21 days ago

      I think it’s easier for us, as adults, to dismiss those things, but they bring kids joy and an opportunity to learn about the value of money and saving.

      • trolololol@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        I though this whole post was sarcasm until I saw people’s comments taking it seriously. Thanks for bringing sanity to this thread.

        Also have any of you heard of instant transfers or crypto currency? So cringe.

      • futatorius@lemm.ee
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        19 days ago

        HOAs only control 25-27% of housing in the US. A number that should be zero, but not enough to kill off all garage sales, by any stretch.

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      I use my paypal card reader! Both when holding garage sales and when visiting, it’s pretty normal and a lot of people use it without blinking.

      If you pearl-clutching Christians fearful of change don’t want a cashless society, maybe stop pouring all your support behind the political powers that want to see giant megacorporations flourish and crush out small businesses. The people who want to control your rmoney are not the banks nearly as much as the Walmart down the street that can now take credit card payments simply by glancing at the store as you pass.

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        19 days ago

        No one is pushing for a “cashless society” like this post describes. It’s fear mongering.

          • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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            19 days ago

            There is a massive difference between a business being cashless and a government enforced “cashless society” like this post describes.

            • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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              16 days ago

              Spain, Belgium, and France have banned cash transactions above a threshhold (e.g. €3k) at least 5 years ago already. Cannot pay tax using cash in Belgium. Think about that for a minute.

              New recent law in Belgium: all businesses (incl. self-employed workers and even landlords renting out property) MUST accept electronic payment. Try doing that without using a bank.

              • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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                18 days ago
                1. I completely disagree that if a majority of businesses went cashless that would mean the government has no choice but to be cashless.
                2. I never said it “could NEVER happen.”
                3. What do you mean it “DID happen,” it hasn’t.
                4. Ad hominem gets you nowhere.
            • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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              16 days ago

              Why do you think 210 is statistically insignificant? Is there a reason why the central limit theorem does not apply in this case?

              If you’re more fixated on the samples coming from Mastodon, can you explain why you might expect cashless proponents to be even fewer in populations outside of Mastodon? IMO, a Mastodon-using population is more likely to embrace individual rights and condemn imbalances of power that favor giant corporations like banks. I believe if the same survey is carried out outside of Mastodon, the 26% will be even bigger, if different.

              • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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                16 days ago

                The same reason someone might think Linux is a wildly popular choice of OS on Lemmy. These communities are very niche.

                • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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                  16 days ago

                  Mastodon is not niche. Mastodon is a diverse community of nerds and low tech people, artistic brains and analytical brains, white collar workers and blue collar workers. A substantial portion of Mastodon is from Reddit refugees. Reddit is no more niche than Facebook.

                  The greater Mastodon venue who that poll reached lacks right wing conservatives, who tend to stay in their bubble of extremist networks. That does not make Mastodon “niche”. Running the same survey on a right wing Mastodon node might be interesting, but we can see from the linked poll that political affiliation is generally orthoganol on this issue.

      • VirtualOdour@sh.itjust.works
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        19 days ago

        In a cash based society they might make us nail coins to our body with special screws only the government can undo.

        You, if digital transactions came before cash.

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      This is some boomer facebook shit.

      I have a Paypal credit card reader I keep with me because I do commissioned work on the side, it’s the size of a stick of gum, I can take a payment anywhere, I’ve paid friends for dinner or other things with a quick tap and use it at garage sales.

      Not saying I WANT a cashless society, nor do I think anyone is seriously pushing this issue because if you did away with cash people will come up with something to use as cash the very same day. But I do think this weird image/article is extremely 1-dimensional and likely published in some Christian magazine to reinforce the right-wing fear that anything will ever change at all.

        • AliasAKA@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          What would you do if (insert hypothetical)? Oh okay. Well what would you do (insert more far fetched hypothetical).

          Repeat.

          But fine I’ll bite the bait. You can’t de facto bar bartering, as a significant amount if b2b is effectively bartering. Now if only corpos can do it, then I’d say we should really look into that socialist democracy stuff.

            • AliasAKA@lemmy.world
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              19 days ago

              I dunno if you live in the US, but if you do, you’re already required to pay taxes on the goods you exchange. So literally nothing would change wrt this cashless society thing because the law is already there, and you’re already not paying your taxes, and it has nothing to do with cash because in a barter you’re not exchanging cash.

  • AwesomeLowlander@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    21 days ago

    False dichotomy. Many, even most, of the examples given here could be accomplished in a cashless society (not that I’m actually advocating for one, but this is just factually incorrect).

    • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      21 days ago

      Grandma slipped me a secret credit chip connected to an illegal bank account in Panama, with $5 in it. You want a soda or something?

      How would you accomplish these things without cash?

      • AwesomeLowlander@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        21 days ago

        I’m not sure how you would accomplish a secret credit chip, with or without cash, sorry.

        Assuming we’re talking about granny slipping her grandchild a few bucks though, what’s stopping her? Nobody’s proposing a system where under 18s are cut out of the economy. Everybody gets a bank account the moment they learn to crawl. Granny just sends the money to her favourite grandkid of the month.

        None of this is hypothetical BTW, before you start trying to come up with scenarios why this doesn’t work. This is literally the system in Norway.

        • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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          21 days ago

          Christmas could be accomplished via a spreadsheet too. Just have a big table where the labels on each axis are all the people, and you can enter the values for what gift each gave to the other. Reveal the squares in random order with a timer.

          It’s functionally equivalent! It’s how we do Christmas in Norway, so there’s literally no reason it can’t work.

          It’s not like kids will be cut out of the Holiday system. We can have special user accounts, maybe with read-only access to the spreadsheet.

          It’s functionally isomorphic guys. It’s a proved model and we’re just wasting time holding off the implementation. Norway bro.

      • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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        21 days ago

        Well you can’t give someone cash if there is no cash.

        Obviously nanna can transfer money to the kids.

        The real question is what is the difference?

        My kids have an account with an index fund. When I log in there’s a qr code you can scan which takes you to a payment gateway.

        • englislanguage@lemmy.sdf.org
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          20 days ago

          If the children are young enough, nanna can transfer money to some account the parents control. If the parents are fine, that’s fine. However, what if the parents are addicts (drugs, gambling, whatever)? Or what if they are so deep in debt that every cent on their accounts immediately gets turned to whoever the owe to? In that case the kid can’t even buy themselves lunch on their own.

          • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            20 days ago

            I don’t think this is a great argument for the prevalence of cash?

            What about kids who’s nannas don’t give them money?

            Better to build a society that identifies kids as risk like this rather than prattling on about cash and hoping for the best.

        • Sirence@feddit.de
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          20 days ago

          Young children can not create a bank account so they can not get money transferred. In case their parents set up a bank account, the parents will have access to that money and see any transactions.

          Now you are probably a good person who would not steal money from your children. However some parents are not good people.
          There are also a lot of cases where parents don’t want their children to have things they need, like soap or tampons. Doubt much has changed about that from the time I was a child. It would be a lot harder for children to access things like that if no one can slip them some secret money.

            • Sirence@feddit.de
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              20 days ago

              That way nanna would need to know that the children are struggling with this. A lot of children wouldn’t tell from the shame and since they are doing something ‘forbidden’. I know I wouldn’t have told my grandma.

              • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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                20 days ago

                I’m not really following you. I thought nanna was secretly giving a kid money so they could buy that stuff. If she didn’t know the kid needed a secret Toiletries fund, why would she give cash in secret? She would just transfer the money.

                I am sympathetic to what sounds like a tough childhood with shit parents. I just don’t think it’s a good argument for prevalent use of cash.

                I’d rather invest efforts in making sure kids aren’t neglected in this way.

                • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  20 days ago

                  If their grandma was anything like mine, she didn’t know I wanted a secret stash of money for X or Y, what she knew was that my parents unfairly controlled and removed money from my account, which since they’re my parents was legal so she couldn’t call the cops or something, and she knew that all she could do was her part to help by slipping me a $20 and saying “don’t tell your mother.”

                  Sure, it’s not the end of the world, kids get abused all the time worse than that and survive. Still lame though.

        • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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          21 days ago

          Well one happens while grandma is hugging the kid. It involves perceiving and interacting with a physical object, which uses parts of the brain that are hundreds of millions of years older than the parts you’re using when you see a notification on your phone.

          Also there’s the fact of the secrecy, which isn’t there when all transfers are recorded for possible analysis later.

          Quite a bit is different actually.

          • Honytawk
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            21 days ago

            Creating a QR code and scanning involves the same interaction though.

            • averyminya@beehaw.org
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              19 days ago

              Yes, I fondly remember growing up smelling QR codes that my grandma handed me before getting on my plane flight, I’ll always have the memory of hugging her and scanning the QR code from her phone that she can definitely figure out.

              Which of course is a much better memory than a pinch on the cheek and being given $50 in cash for your flight.

      • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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        21 days ago

        Most of these things would be solved with payment apps like Venno or CashApp.

        You can also get pre-paid cards to give to homeless people on the street, or use a “garage sale” app that has digital payment options like OfferUp to sell your unwanted crap.

        I also wouldn’t want the banks to have full control, but I know there are already solutions to most of the problems listed in the image. The only one that seems accurate is the domestic violence one.

    • jpeps@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      Possibly with the exception of the domestic violence example, the examples that directly reference ‘cash’ make the least sense. Of course you can’t give cash to your grandchildren, there’s no more cash!

      • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        20 days ago

        When I was a kid my parents controlled my account and would take money out of it sometimes, sometimes to punish me for this reason or that (staying up late sneaking SNL back when it was good, for instance.) What they didn’t control is the cash they didn’t see my grandparents slip me on my birthday, and therefore they couldn’t steal that. Sure “well they shouldn’t have done that in the first place,” but they did, or “you shouldn’t have disobeyed your parents,” ok whatever Mom, but I’m thankful I had my secret stash.

  • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    For people who think that Crypto will solve these issues, it won’t. In a mass-adoption scenario, a few coins will be accepted as currency while the rest remain mostly useless for commerce. Those orgs behind those coins and their exchange platforms will then become just like the banks of old. Any attempt at democratizing Crypto is illusory, it’s a fantasy.

    • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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      21 days ago

      “Crypto will fix that!”

      By having a publicly visible ledger of all transactions ever recorded???

      Monero would be the exception

    • Kalcifer@sh.itjust.works
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      21 days ago

      For people who think that Crypto will solve these issues, it won’t. In a mass-adoption scenario, a few coins will be accepted as currency while the rest remain mostly useless for commerce.

      That argument is entirely dependent on what the “few coins” hypothetically turn out to be. For example, regarding privacy, Monero is private by design.


      Those orgs behind those coins and their exchange platforms will then become just like the banks of old. Any attempt at democratizing Crypto is illusory, it’s a fantasy.

      Are you arguing that it is inevitable that exchanges, or some other entity, will inevitably gain majority control of the networks of decentralized currencies?

      • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        No government would ever allow coins like Monero to become main forms of currency. The potential for abuse and tax evasion is just too high. They would sooner ban them outright. No legitimate business would accept them then.

        Accepting random alt coins would also come with the expense of having to track them and their wallets separately, exchange costs, volatility, etc, so over time just a few will become generally accepted by businesses.

        And yes, the most likely consequence of long-term crypto usage is that users will centralize into a few trusted platforms who will get the Lion’s share of tokens and power.

        • Kalcifer@sh.itjust.works
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          4 days ago

          No government would ever allow coins like Monero to become main forms of currency.

          It depends on what you mean by “allow” and “main form of currency”. Afaik, in the US (and the rest of the west), at least, there are no laws regarding what form the medium of exchange should take for the exchange of goods and services. The dollar is simply the standard currency to make payments to the government. For example:

          United States coins and currency (including Federal reserve notes and circulating notes of Federal reserve banks and national banks) are legal tender for all debts, public charges, taxes, and dues. Foreign gold or silver coins are not legal tender for debts. [31 U.S. Code § 5103 (archive)]


          Accepting random alt coins would also come with the expense of having to track them and their wallets separately, exchange costs, volatility, etc, so over time just a few will become generally accepted by businesses.

          Is that just a statement of fact, or is that supposed to be an argument against Monero? I’m not sure what the point of that statement is. In any case, I don’t see any issue with that outcome — it would simply be a market decision.


          And yes, the most likely consequence of long-term crypto usage is that users will centralize into a few trusted platforms who will get the Lion’s share of tokens and power.

          I’d say that this is still TBD, but yes centralized control is a concern, as it would break the current designs of cryptocurrencies (as far as I currently understand their designs, that is). Though, note that there is a difference between central ownership of coins in circulation, and central ownership of the network (of course depending on the design of the network — I feel that proof of stake would be vulnerable to this).

      • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Probably, but at least you can just copy-paste your home folder across most distros as long as they’re similar enough. Also your distro isn’t quite as important as your personal finances lol. Even in the case of potential security issues, most people would rather have their PC hacked into than their bank acct.

  • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    21 days ago

    I live in New York City. The current way to pay for buses and subways is with a Metrocard. You can buy them at some stores and check cashing places, or at most subway stations. You can pay with cash or a card. Now, at great cost, they are introducing a ‘better’ system where you pay for your rides with a credit card or smart device. They are planning on getting completely rid of the Metrocards. Soon, they will be able to trace anyone’s movements.

    • rh4c6f@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      trace anyone’s movements

      There’s literally a GPS enabled mind control device in almost everyone’s pocket.

      • Kairos@lemmy.today
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        21 days ago

        Yes but its not required to get around, airplane mode, and not everyone has their cell service tied to their name, etc.

      • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        This same lame comment gets posted on every fucking internet post about Privacy. Stop it.

        Not everyone uses a compromised phone with the GPS turned on all the time. Plenty of us put in effort to mitigate cell phone tracking, and anyone can leave their phone at home to completely eliminate tracking where they go.

        FYI there are a number of privacy-focused Android distributions, and lots of options on Apple iOS to disable what can track you. Stop being complacent and protect your own privacy instead of hand-waving away the entire premise of Privacy.

        • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          If your cell phone is turned on, the phone company knows where you are. This fact is why your GPS doesn’t take 5 minutes to show your location every time you turn on your phone. The OS gets the cell towers to identify where you are and combines that with GPS to get a quicker lock and more accurate location.

          The most secure Android OS cannot turn that off. If you transmit or receive data to a cell phone network, your location is known.

          • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            No that’s not very accurate. Cell phone tower triangulation only gives a rough approximation of location, and GPS is definitely able to be disabled by the software. I know a bit about these things as someone who has compiled their own android ROM from open source. I’ve been working on this stuff for more than a decade now.

            Regardless of all of the above, anyone can turn off their cell phone or choose to not carry it to eliminate the ability for that cell phone to provide location data on them. This alone negates all the stupid “gotcha” comments about trying to preserve one’s privacy while owning a smartphone. So we are back to my first comment on this topic, with the point of STOP IT.

            • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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              20 days ago

              Cell phone tower triangulation only gives a rough approximation of location

              That’s why I said they send that to allow the phone’s GPS to get a lock quicker and more accurate. All cell phone towers have GPS. Agps means the tower sends its GPS constellation to the phone so it doesn’t take 5 minutes to lock.

              https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assisted_GNSS

              So yes, even with GPS disabled, the phone company has a rough idea where you are.

              If you are in the city on high band 5g, that location is known within 15 to 600 meters.

              https://nybsys.com/5g-bands/

          • nehal3m@sh.itjust.works
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            21 days ago

            Sure, there’s no way around that, even dumb phones are triangulated by default and that data is sold.

            But doing just that is better than being triangulated AND leaking your GPS data to every Tom Dick and Harry that asks your phone.

            • uis@lemm.ee
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              20 days ago

              EDIT: Sorry, I am idiot. What I described IS triangulation.

              Reeeeeee! Phones. Are. Not. Triangulated.

              Most cell towers use phased antenna array, so they know relative direction all the time. And distance can be estimated from latency and signal strength.

              Two cell towers allow to get precise location from angles. Angles are derived from phase differences on elements of array and can’t be manipulated like latency or signal strength.

              • Mercury@lemmy.world
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                20 days ago

                Two cell towers allow to get precise location from angles.

                But using two cell towers and angles would literally be triangulation…

                • uis@lemm.ee
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                  20 days ago

                  Sorry, I am idiot. What I described IS triangulation. Alternative with distances is trilateration.

          • Damage@feddit.it
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            21 days ago

            The GPS thing is different. The phone downloads the satellite positions from the net instead of having to receive the same data, very slowly, from the satellites themselves.

            • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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              21 days ago

              No, that’s not quite how GPS works. The satelites are constantly sending a signal, the GPS receiver is trying to pick up at least two satelites, and it computes your location off of the phase shift and whatnot of those constantly-broadcasting signals.

              That’s why GPS still works in airplane mode.

              • uis@lemm.ee
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                20 days ago

                GPS receiver is trying to pick up at least two satelites

                Four. GPS solves position in 4-dimensional space.

                • ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world
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                  19 days ago

                  3 satellites for 2 dimensional space, 4 satellites gives you height as well (3 dimensional).

                  your wristwatch gives you your fourth dimension ;-)

                • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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                  20 days ago

                  No, more is preferred, but the way the signals are designed, some positioning slowly works with only two satellites.

                  Like old phones. Remember when GPS was slow and always a few meters off? Part of that was they were bad at or could not acquire more than two signals.

              • Damage@feddit.it
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                20 days ago

                Yes, but the receiver need the position of the satellites to compute its own position. That data is transferred very slowly, so if you can download it through the internet, then you only need the identifiers of the satellites to immediately compute.

                • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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                  20 days ago

                  You’re still misspeaking and implying the data is necessary. It is not. At all. Period.

                  How do you think Garmins and the like work when they have NO external data connection? They don’t magically take way longer to position…

        • Mango@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          You only know what you’re told. There’s all kinds of space inside your phone for components with capabilities you know nothing about.

      • Mango@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Yeah and there’s a reason you can’t drive unregistered and that reason has nothing to do with bad drivers.

    • rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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      21 days ago

      Take off the tinfoil hat, NYC is not planning to get rid of metrocards. The credit card payment ability is just a convenience feature to get more people riding transit.

      • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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        21 days ago

        I mean, my tinfoil hat is on for the same reason - I haven’t been arsed using Transport for London’s Oyster card because there’s a cost cap placed on all travel paid for by one single card. I suppose my bank has my details already so it’d better that than having another party with my data… and another card to lose, more likely.

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      21 days ago

      You can buy preloaded credit cards with cash from convenience stores. It’s as trackable as your MetroCard.

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    21 days ago

    Call it what it really is - a backdoor registry.

    Guns, books, contraceptives… whatever an oppressive government may be interested in having a registry of, they have one by default once anonymous payments are destroyed.

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      20 days ago

      Guns, books and contraceptives. Great list.

      You forgot 3d printers.

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        Yeah. Recent court records suggested the feds do (or did at one point) request purchase records of 3D printers. So those probably are on a list.

  • whoisthedoktor@lemmy.wtf
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    21 days ago

    I love how in a PRIVACY Lemmy community there are people who actually, unironically argue for a dystopian cashless society.

    We’re all fucked, aren’t we?

  • NIB@lemmy.world
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    Sweden is a mostly cashless society. Let me try to respond to those points

    1. In case of domestic violence, you go to the police.

    2. You can still give individual people money with things like Swish. Yes, even “homeless” people have swish and they use it. Kids of all ages can have swish.

    3. It costs 0(for individuals) or 10-30 cents(for companies) to transact on swish and minimum transaction is basically 10cents(1sek).

    There are privacy issues and it is kinda controlled by banks. Maybe eventually things like digital euro can improve on that in the future. You can have an anonymous digital payment system with near 0 fees, it is just that the governments arent incentivized to do it. Thats where cryptocurrency could fit, if it wasnt a pump and dump, to the moon hellhole.

    • englislanguage@lemmy.sdf.org
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      Let me try to respond back:

      1. Depending on your situation, your identity, your society, you cannot always rely on the police helping you. There are lots of documented cases of discrimination (e.g. racism) at police institutions in all kinds of regions across the globe. The companies probably don’t want to delete the data any time soon, so there is a chance that this data persists for decades. What if your country chances and starts discriminating or harassing whatever group you belong to? Can you guarantee that your government/society won’t flip the switch on any group of society within their lifetime? Can you guarantee that nobody ever wants to visit a country which their group will be discriminated or persecuted?
      2. If the homeless person does not own a smartphone, how do they receive money on their Swish account, yet create a swish account? How does a person without documents create a swish account?
      3. In your case, Swish seems to be a digital gatekeeper. What prevents them from going rogue, increasing prices or discriminating people? I recommended reading Jaron Lanier’s Gadget for understanding the power of digital monopolies.

      If the first point does not convince you, here are 2 examples:

      • gay dating apps: It repeatedly happened that information from gay dating apps were leaked, sold or extorted to bad governments. Those governments discriminated or persecuted, in some cases killed people just for being homosexual. Chances are high that a gay person has some digital traces to that, e.g. in Swish. Cashless puts them even more at risk in countries like Egypt. https://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2017/apr/03/jailed-for-using-grindr-homosexuality-in-egypt
      • In the 1930s, a lot of Jews in Europe were identified through state documents which (unnecessarily) mentioned their religion. In some locations, brave people protected them by destroying, hiding or faking state documents.

      In other words: If your society changes, any data that exists may be turned against you, even costing your life and the lives of your closest people. Avoiding to have this data saves lives and protects minorities.

      • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        20 days ago

        If your society changes

        This is why I know that I’ll end up on a list if things go as poorly as I expect in the USA during my lifetime.

      • NIB@lemmy.world
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        Swish is partly owned by the Central Bank of Sweden(which is 100% state owned) so it is basically state owned. But as with the digital euro, the private banks play a big part and atm are needed in order to facilitate the digital transactions. This could change in the future.

        Your points are societal points and not currency related points. You are right, there are significant issues with swish, you basically need to be a swedish citizen(have a “personal number”). A lot of things in Sweden are gatekeeped by needing a “personal number”. This is an obstacle even for other EU(Schengen) europeans.

        Societies are built with the majority in mind. There are holes that need to be fixed. But the existence of holes does not mean that they cant be fixed.

        As far as privacy is concerned, you are right, this is a big attack on privacy. But it doesnt have to be, it is just that the governments want it to be. Not because of some megalomaniacal genocidal plan but for tax and criminal issues. Could it be used for more nefarious plans in the future? Sure. You can always use a cryptocurrency like monero though.

        • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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          What all can you purchase with monero? I don’t see a lot of shops around me accepting any crypto whatsoever.

        • futatorius@lemm.ee
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          You can always use a cryptocurrency like monero though.

          Just don’t assume it provides anonymity both now and in the future. Even if you follow recommended security practices, Monero can leak details that can help track you. And if you were using Monero when it started, it was far less secure then, and all those transactions can be analyzed now.

        • englislanguage@lemmy.sdf.org
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          If our societies would be perfect (now and any time in the future), we would not need this discussion, maybe not even privacy at all. Though a lot of things are very good in our societies, I guess we will not live to see them becoming perfect, so I rather retain some caution, and privacy.

    • Shelbyeileen@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Speaking from going through it myself; in the USA, Police often don’t help you if you’re dealing with domestic violence/rape in a marriage. My ex’s military commander refused to help me too…

    • then_three_more@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      I think the only one that doesn’t really hold up is 1. There’s a lot of coercive control tied up with domestic violence that would make it hard for a victim to call the police for help.

      Having said that, in the UK you can open a bank account with a new company in a matter of minutes then transfer money to it and be out of the situation before any paperwork turns up showing what you did.

      Many of our banks have specific provisions in place to help victims of domestic violence. Including one that’ll set you up with a safe account and an emergency fund that doesn’t need to be repaid. https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/tsb-launches-emergency-flee-fund-for-domestic-abuse-victims-how-are-other-banks-helping-arSND8h82lGJ

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      In case of domestic violence, you go to the police.

      This was such an oddly specific “worry” that it kind of plays the hand of the target demographic as well as the intention of the snippet. Along with the weird bits about birthday cards and ice cream, it just screams propaganda for midwest Christian-leaning grandmothers and housewives.

      Right-wing, conservative Christian housewives who hand-wring about everything ALL put away stashes of money to hide from their 1-dimensional husbands who are usually somewhere on the abusive spectrum. I lived much of my life out in the outskirts of cities where the rednecks nest and breed, there are some very predictable stereotypes out there. One of the most common talking points on the far-right Christian slice of America is the perpetual warning that the Anti-Christ is going to take control of all the money and bring the entire planet under his control, and he will enact a one-world currency, take away everyone’s cash and guns and then everyone will have to get some chip in their wrist and that will be the Mark of the Beast, blah blah blah, fear-mongering and superstition and mindless worry.

      Nobody will ever take away physical money entirely because the moment you do, people will invent one. So if you don’t want unregulated Nuka Cola bottlecaps being traded for goods and services in your country, you need to maintain an official currency.

    • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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      In case of domestic violence, you go to the police.

      What a bizarre disconnect from reality. You have waaay too much confidence in police power (and assumptions about actionable evidence), capability, and motivation, and no idea about battered women living in fear of the next attack, which a restraining order does not necessarily stop, if you can get one, especially if the next attack is a bullet. A cop who checks on a battery victim will be told “that big bruise on my cheek is from falling down the stairs”.

      Domestic violence victims need options. You’re advocating for taking options away. That’s fucked up.

    • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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      20 days ago

      huh? anyone can dislike going cashless, since when do conservatives care about domestic abuse victims for example? conservatives generally perpetrate domestic abuse!

      • Miaou@jlai.lu
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        This domestic abuse thing sounds to me like a “pull up yourself by the bootstrap” situation kind of myth. Are there women who can stash thousands away to prepare to flee, but cannot somehow have a bank account? That sounds so unrealistic, it seems to me more of an excuse to tell abused people they are just “not trying hard enough”.

        • Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          Yes. This only makes me think you’ve not had much experience with DV victims. Which, if true, isn’t your fault.

          Control is one of the big parts of DV. Take away their ability to get away.

        • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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          Are there women who can stash thousands away to prepare to flee, but cannot somehow have a SECRET bank account?

          ^ fixed your question - an important word was missing. And now to answer it, in some countries it is impossible to open a bank account without your spouse knowing about it. If you are married, your spouse must cosign.

        • ichbinjasokreativ@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          It doesn’t have to be and shouldn’t be. When a specific political entity makes anti-privacy plans, then it’s different ofc, but don’t bring politics into non-political posts.

          • Something Burger 🍔@jlai.lu
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            20 days ago

            This post is political. It is about how an aspect of society is organized and its effects. This is literally what politics are about.

                • Reddfugee42@lemmy.world
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                  19 days ago

                  Found you downvoted. As if there aren’t conservative Democrats. As if conservative Democrats don’t fill the DNC leadership positions 🤷‍♂️

    • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      well they can’t say the parts they’re actually angry about so we get this bullshit roll.

      it’s very much like racism, they won’t come out and say they don’t like people of color, they’ll simply come up with a dozen ways to discriminate against them but say it’s personal freedom, etc.

      they’re angry about not being able to pay people under the table, about not being able to skim the petty cash etc.

      downvoters, debate, show me I’m wrong lol

    • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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      21 days ago

      … but what if I was in a place without mobile phone reception and nanna wanted to buy a toy from a homeless person having a garage sale to give to my kid?!

      See… you just haven’t thought this whole cashless thing through.

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    21 days ago

    Not that I think society should be cashless but why couldn’t you donate to homeless people and do garage sales in a cashless society?

    Pretty much everyone has a phone here, including beggars and homeless people. It’s a necessity these days.

    My country is basically cashless (as in almost no one uses cash and quite a few stores don’t accept it at all) and we just send money with an app that almost everyone uses. It’s easier than cash, bank transfers, and cards. It’s also instant.

    Hell, I have even gotten some money from my grandparents that way a few years ago.

    • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      It might be theoretically possible where there is cell service, but keep in mind that a lot of homeless people do not have and are unable to get bank accounts. De-banking can be and is used as a tool to control people generally. Being cashless might be benign if you are in a situation where the banks, financial apps, and governments can be trusted not to weaponize their absolute control over everyone’s money, but in many places they cannot.

            • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              20 days ago

              Yes, US Banks, famously the picture of honesty. If you know one thing about the US banks it’s how honest they truly are. If you know two things the other is probably the depression or the 2008 financial crisis, don’t worry about that though, they’re as trustworthy as the CIA which has definitely stopped all those nefarious things they did as soon as Alan Dulles died.

              • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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                Not being from the US or Canada I don’t know the first thing about your banks or the CIA. That said, it just seems ridiculous to me that a bank would control you through the management of your money.

                • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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                  16 days ago

                  Visa, Mastercard, Amex, and Paypal famously colluded to block donations to wikileaks. That control was exercised at an international level.

                • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  To you, because you don’t know the first thing about our banks, no offense. If you did you wouldn’t trust them either lol. It seems absolutely plausible they’d do it imo. They already do it with criminals to an extent, which could be argued as fair I suppose, but I don’t want to see that expand at the very least.

        • englislanguage@lemmy.sdf.org
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          20 days ago

          I guess almost any country has (some) untrustworthy banks. So whatever country is planning to go cashless, they will have both.

        • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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          16 days ago

          Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium, France, and Spain. Banks in those places will freeze your account easily, like a doc on file expiring.

          US banks are more trustworthy with your money than European banks, but US banks are less trustworthy with your data. Exceptionally, there is a pitfall where you can lose your money: dormancy. I recall a woman in California who had a safe deposit box that she did not access for a number of years. The bank declared it “dormant”, drilled it, and gave the property to the state’s unclaimed assets, who then auctioned off her stuff.

      • Honytawk
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        21 days ago

        In a cashless society, everyone would have a bank account.

        Nobody wants to cut off people from the economy. Whether you want a cashless society or not.

        • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          You’re right, let’s switch to a cashless society, there’s no way someone like Trump could win again and decide to delist all his political enemies and of course “those dirty nwords and queers” to help his complete dictatorship style takeover of America. I mean, it’s not like the Nazis forced the Jewish population to report their wealth right after the anschluss so that they’d be able to steal it easier during aryanization which one legal advisor for the Nazi Ministry of Economics deemed the “forerunner to a complete and definitive removal of Jews from the German economy.”

          And of course it’s not like making all currency digital and controlled by the same government that would be taken over by said cult of personality would make that even easier to do this time around or anything. Don’t worry though of course “that could never happen here.”

  • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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    All of these reasons are why the corporations want to force us all to use digital currency completely controlled by them.

    They could make the digital money invalid at stores they don’t like, they could make it invalid for buying something they don’t want you to buy and they can make it expire after awhile, forcing you to spend it instead of saving it.

    • Zess@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      They could make the digital money invalid at stores they don’t like, they could make it invalid for buying something they don’t want you to buy

      Credit card companies already do this.

    • velvetThunder
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      Well I think banks have a few laws that prevent those things. But remembering the Pornhub incident where MasterCard and Visa stopped their partnership to strongarm them. In that case the motivation was child safety and not greed. But it was a display of power.

      • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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        Pornhub does everything they can to remove nonconsensual stuff from their platform as quickly as possible

        The boomers in the executive room just listened to the media sensationalizing the story and hit the nuclear option without taking any objective looks at what was actually going on

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        Yeah, it’s popular among the crypto folks. But GNU Taler has advantages over Monero. Buyers are also untraceable, but sellers are not. So they are taxable, which is pretty neat. The EU and Swiss governments are experimenting with it and for them the taxation part is kind of valuable.

        Edit: Ah, and it also doesn’t rely on a blockchain, so offline transactions are feasible etc.

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    20 days ago

    If you deposit your money at a bank, or PayPal, or some online digital bank transfer service,** you do not have your money anymore.** They have your money.

    Now you have some kind of contract that says they’ll give you your money on demand. But sometimes they won’t give it to you when you want it. If any judge or cop wants to see every person or business I’ve ever transacted with the bank will happily give it over.

    On the other hand, cash is cash. If I possess it, then I have it. And nobody gets to know how much, or how suspicious, or with whom I’m transacting.

    • Dempf
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      On the other other hand, in the U.S. if you are pulled over by the police with cash, they can choose to seize that cash just because carrying cash looks suspicious. They don’t need to charge you with a crime. If the cash was in a bank, they’d need to go through a lot more process to seize it – the cops typically can’t just walk into the bank and demand it.

    • miridius@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      If you deposit money at a bank, it is covered by federal deposit protection insurance (up to some limit that varies by country but generally in the range of $100k-$250k), so you are guaranteed to be able to get it back no matter what. Even if the bank fails. Banks are subject to extremely strict regulation to protect consumers and make sure you have access to your funds

      PayPal is not a bank, it’s an EMI (e-money institution), but those are heavily regulated to protect consumers. Your funds are not covered by deposit protection insurance, but as an EMI they have to keep your money in a safeguarding account at a real bank and they can’t use it themselves, so in case PayPal fails you will still get your money back. Revolut in the UK is another example of a non-bank EMI

      • freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz
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        If you deposit money at a bank, it is covered by federal deposit protection insurance (up to some limit that varies by country but generally in the range of $100k-$250k), so you are guaranteed to be able to get it back no matter what.

        Time matters. Those insurance claims take months to process and they only cover bankruptcy (which is the least likely reason a bank denies you access to funds).

        The copy of my ID card that the bank had on file expired. I renewed it on time but did not think to update the bank with a new copy. The bank’s way of communicating to me that their records of my card were out of date was to freeze my account. Boom, just like that, I have no money all of the sudden. I don’t recall the time of day it happened, but if it had happened on a Friday night I would not have access to my money until I appear in person at the bank Monday morning — assuming it’s even possible to get off work. At that time, I kept an empty fridge… only eating on the go. Had I not had cash on hand, getting food could have been a struggle.

        Even if the bank fails. Banks are subject to extremely strict regulation to protect consumers and make sure you have access to your funds

        LOL! Those so-called strictly enforced banking regs are not for us. Banks are scared shitless of AML/KYC shit hitting the fan. Banks laugh at the consumer protection variety of regs with reckless disregard. It’s a joke. I’ve reported banks in breach of consumer rights. The bank’s regulators do fuck all. One reculator responded to me and said “why don’t you switch banks”. I shit you not. That came from a regulator who’s job it was to enforce a law that the bank was breaking.

        PayPal is not a bank, it’s an EMI (e-money institution), but those are heavily regulated to protect consumers. Your funds are not covered by deposit protection insurance, but as an EMI they have to keep your money in a safeguarding account at a real bank and they can’t use it themselves, so in case PayPal fails you will still get your money back.

        No, that’s not how it is. PayPal has a reputation for copious extremely out of whack “anti-fraud” false positives. I was burnt by it. Paypal blocked my acct and kept my money. There are many similar complaints.

        https://git.disroot.org/cyberMonk/liberethos_paradigm/src/branch/master/rap_sheets/paypal.md

        • miridius@lemmy.world
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          What country are you in? If it’s the USA, then yeah my understanding is that regulations are a lot worse/weaker there. The stuff you described wouldn’t fly if it was a UK or EU bank I believe. SVB failing wouldn’t have happened here either (nor would it have in the USA before Trump)

          Yeah PayPal are terrible lol, I’ve got some horror stories of my own