• ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    There are more cashless options than using banks.

    In some countries you can use phones (and phone credit, more or less) as your payment option. Doesn’t even have to be a smart phone, though that makes it easier.

    Beggers on the street with QR codes printed out. Or their phone number on cardboard.

    And in other countries, you can use the local equivalent of the Uber app instead of a bank account.

    Cashless is good. Safer for the homeless (harder to rob) and still easy to give money to them.

    • eagertolearn@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 months ago

      To use phones people need to first buy them and regularly recharge them. Homeless people already have hard time to find other necessities.

      Also in some countries you don’t have any option to get any sim card and use it without first registering to your name and your address.

      For the safety aspect yes, it is harder to rob them of their money but the phones are very easy to steal.

      Cashless is only good if you already have some base level of comfort and do not care about your financial privacy. Every cashless transaction you make is recorded, tracked and sold via however many middle man you use.

      I am not saying everyone has to use cash but people should have the freedom to choose how they want to pay.

    • sandbox@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Congratulations! You’re the winner of today’s most delusional comment award!

    • prism@lemmy.one
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      5 months ago

      Username checks out.

      Let me just pull my phone out, download this money transfer app with an abysmal privacy policy. Now let me register an account and input every personal detail known to man. What’s this? I need my government issued ID? I’ll inform the beggar I’ll just pop to my house to grab it. Got my ID, now I’ll complete a liveness test because god forbid that I might be a robot. I may as well send them an ass swab because they need to “know their customer” so well. I just need to link my bank account and enter an OTP that’ll take 5 more minutes to arrive. Finally, I can donate to the beggar after messing around with a poorly printed QR code on a cardboard sign.

      OR I can just pull out my wallet and hand them a $10 note. I’m going to pick the 10 second process with fewer steps over the 30 minute process any day of the week. Having options is important, especially if your phone dies for whatever reason. A cashless society is just a way for card companies and payment processors to continue making a quick buck in the name of convenience. Both card and cash have their uses, and it should be up to the consumer to decide which to use.