Damus
L0la L33tz profile picture
L0la L33tz
@L0laL33tz
Good morning! It's January 3rd, which means its not your keys, not your coins day.

Unfortunately, this year the EU has decided to make withdrawing from exchanges a hell of a lot harder by extending FATF's Travel Rule to digital assets.

The FATF Travel Rule is not just a remarkable shitshow for your financial privacy and security – it's also a law to which authorities appear to have no data on its effectiveness to prevent financial crime.

What this means for you: If you want to withdraw funds exceeding €1.000, you'll need to prove that you own the address you are intending to withdraw to to your custodian.

It also means that exchanges are required to forward your personal information, including things like your name and address, to any custodian you are transacting with, and that an exchange may collect information on whom you are sending funds to and whom you are receiving funds from.

The Travel Rule does not just make withdrawing from exchanges harder, as custodians will need to employ third party software, employ a signing protocol like AOPP, or have you conduct a micro transaction to the custodian before making your transfer.

It also poses an incredible risk to your financial privacy and security, as your KYC info will not just be stored with a custodian you trust, but with any custodian you transact with – increasing the risks of hacks and identity theft.

In its current form, the Travel Rule has been mandatory in tradfi in the EU since 2012 – But nobody seems to know whether it actually works to prevent money laundering or not.

That's why I filed a FOIA request with German authorities last month, requesting data on all money laundering convictions in Germany since 2008.

Interestingly, the Ministry of the Interior responsible for national security and overseeing Germany's law enforcement, responded that it had no such information - instead asking me to file FOIA Requests with the German Ministry of Finance, the German Customs Authority, as well as with every public prosecutors office...

...which means that the updated Travel Rule is the extension of a law to whichs effectiveness law enforcement appears to have no data.

(FOIA Response in picture translated with ChatGPT)



Full Story:

https://www.therage.co/travel-rule-crypto-surveillance/
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𝕞ptf · 69w
It is more surveillance state terror.
Deleted Account · 69w
Wow, these clowns. Thank you for investigating and keeping us informed on this
Humble Bitcoiner · 69w
Tell me why self custody is harder? You just need to make a screenshot that it’s your wallet… nothing too difficult about that If you don’t want to dox yourself you just send your sats to a lightning wallet and back to self custody. Fixed it
VictorieeMan · 69w
If anything this just implies that bitcoiners in EU member states, must involve themselves politically. Suggestions: 1. Vote, vote, vote - for privacy & decentralization 2. Get involved in political orgs & affect them 3. Write articles & talk about privacy online and IRL IRL 4. Find & promote suita...
Ape Mithrandir · 69w
#DontRiskItBisqIt
BitLo · 69w
Criminal mafia
Sovereign · 69w
Does it mean withdrawing less than 1000€ won’t get me flagged? In such case I can just stack them back again at the destination?
djmeistro✝️ 🍊💊⚡️ · 69w
Good morning
Sven · 69w
Fuck that shit! Mafia EU!
Horszt · 69w
Followed! Ich brauche dringende Updates zu deiner Nachfrage und weiß nicht mehr wie ich mich im neuen Jahr verhalten soll. Habe Strike benutzt und war sehr zufrieden, habe jetzt aber sehr Angst um meine Privatsphäre.
Tom · 69w
“We’re ruling—Do not disturb!” There is a book in Czechia on a ruling party closing a deal with the opposition to not oppose. Which seems to be somehow happening in the EU since we’re withnessing decades of turning the screws more and more with no friction at all. https://app.thestorygra...
LeviJohnson.net · 69w
Guilty until proven innocent is always bad because it's based on a lie and not the truth.
Alex · 69w
Use Swiss services when in EU...