:: Re: [unSYSTEM] Coinbase Class 2 Acc…
トップ ページ
このメッセージを削除
このメッセージに返信
著者: JINDQ1
日付:  
To: unsystem
題目: Re: [unSYSTEM] Coinbase Class 2 Accounts
What I'm committed to is asking questions when I don't understand, and despite being unhealthily overactive in the bitcoin community, I still have yet to see anything positive from anonymity. Scams, thefts, evasion, trolling, and no one's voice was silenced, no one's opinion was ignored the whole time. I'm just wondering what the answer to this problem is and I've already asked if anyone knew-- how can you guarantee someone is just *one* person without verifying their real identity?




Sent from my Samsung Galaxy TabCody R Wilson <codywilson@???> wrote:I'm not sure you're even committed to this rhetoric. We know intuitively that there are a stable of advantages in maintaining a recognizable face in social and business relationships. Anonymity/pseudonymity are capacities. Often alternative, but often default capacities.

To argue for the disclosure an expressive/political capacity on a cost basis is stodgy conservatism.




On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 9:57 AM, JINDQ1 <jindq1@???> wrote:
If you extend on that principle, you'll see that we only trust family because we can tell them apart. What if your mother and father were anonymous? How would that change your world? What if all people were completely faceless and could change names and appearance at any moment? I'm having a hard time believing that's in the best interest of a society that seeks to protect itself in numbers. Maybe DNA will be the answer to that, not bitcoin.




Sent from my Samsung Galaxy Tab

Cody R Wilson <codywilson@???> wrote:
That's kind of breathtaking, Matthew.

Might I offer that political economy isn't the only grid by which we should evaluate the concept?


On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 8:36 AM, JINDQ1 <jindq1@???> wrote:
I'd love to mock them (because it's easy), but if you want to play the game created by old dudes who still think IP address = single person, you'll have to follow all the rules.

The real question is, is being anonymous good for society? I haven't seen a single benefit of anonymity (lacking any verification documents) that isn't highly outweighed by it's ability to enable abuse. Human beings may be nameless, but they're not non-quantifiable. Is there a way to remove the names and keep the verifiable quantity that doesn't make the libertarians twitch and squirm?

Matthew




Sent from my Samsung Galaxy Tab

Cody R Wilson <codywilson@???> wrote:
Thought I'd just mark the occasion. Coinbase is now requiring identity documents to verify class 2 account holders.

Glorious compliance!

--
Sincerely,

Cody R. Wilson  
codywilson@???

The University of Texas School of Law
Class of 2014

_______________________________________________
unSYSTEM mailing list: http://unsystem.net
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/unsystem




--
Sincerely,

Cody R. Wilson  
codywilson@???

The University of Texas School of Law
Class of 2014

_______________________________________________
unSYSTEM mailing list: http://unsystem.net
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/unsystem




--
Sincerely,

Cody R. Wilson  
codywilson@???

The University of Texas School of Law
Class of 2014