makeorbrake wrote: » Let me stop you right there. I asked you did the world cave in when we didn't have KYC/AML - which is not that long ago. You have no answer for that...the reason being that it didn't!
banks are not law enforcement.
cnocbui wrote: » I seem to recall you saying you are a KYC enforcer, so I have a question:
Someone living in my house has a bank account linked to another address. They can't change the address on that account - I'm sure you will probably want to ask why, but please don't, just take it as a given - that is the situation. This person want's to open a new account with another bank, due to 'difficulties' related to the other account. KYC is preventing them opening an account due to their inability to provide proof of address. It's my house and all bills are in my name. They have no mail coming to this address that is acceptable to a bank for KYC. I would welcome your suggestions as to how they can open a bank account.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Yup I don't have an answer to that, because it's a subjectively loaded question. A better way to phrase it is: did banking work without KYC and AML, the answer is yes it did
Dohnjoe wrote: » What is your alternative solution? (as posed by my questions)
Dohnjoe wrote: » Am not, but I do work alongside compliance and regulators They'll probably need to give a valid reason as to why they have a bank account linked to another address that cannot be changed. That's probably the crux. I don't work on an underlying client account level, perhaps they can try their luck with other banks and see if they will accept. Anything that raises a red flag, a bank will typically pause and make sure to follow regulations rather than just please the client. Yes that can suck for anyone stuck in administrational purgatory, and I don't know the details of the case, but that's one of the unfortunate side effects of having to be compliant with regulators and the law
makeorbrake wrote: » There's nothing loaded about it - it's a perfectly straightforward question. And setting an entirely different question is not appropriate. You know well what was intended here. The question was - was there more criminality, etc. without KYC/AML? Did the world fall apart? The answer is that there is no material difference.
I answered your question already. Scrap it in its entirety.
cnocbui wrote: » As I thought document forging is the only viable solution. I think KYC should involve a mechanism whereby An Post could certify a person's address. AP could add it as another revenue stream and a lot of people could get out of the wretched KYC proof of address bind.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Well that's not the answer, it's your personal speculation I don't have the stats, do you?
Dohnjoe wrote: » 1. And you see absolutely no problem with that? correct?
Dohnjoe wrote: » 2. You are loathe to sign up for a bank account using your passport (which I presume I use to travel) for privacy reasons, but you have absolutely no problem with the bank knowing all your personal transactions, correct?
Dohnjoe wrote: » I wouldn't recommend forging documents. Without details we have no idea if your friend is dodgy or not.
makeorbrake wrote: » In testimony before the US Senate Judiciary Committee, John Casara - Treasury Special Agent - stated that "money laundering enforcement fails 99.9% of the time". Financial crime expert Raymond Baker has said that total failure is just a decimal point away.
Clearly you have something specific in mind here. Lets hear it.
Where did I say that I have no problem in banks knowing all my transaction information? What relevance has this in the context of this discussion? - please clarify.
cnocbui wrote: » I can guarantee my lodger is not dodgy.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Indeed, does John Cassara support the complete removal of AML as you propose? Or is he in favor of even more AML and more intrusive checks?
Dohnjoe wrote: » To clarify, I am trying to find out how far down the rabbit hole this goes
makeorbrake wrote: » You can't provide any stats/evidence/reports that confirms that the world is a far better place with KYC/AML.
You challenged me to substantiate the opposing view. I've done that. Accept it.
Don't be coy. Where is this line of questioning leading? If you have a point to make Dohnjoe, then kindly make it.
Dohnjoe wrote: » No I can't, I don't even know if those stats exist. Maybe they do.
Dohnjoe wrote: » But contained within your argument is a notion along the lines of "money laundering exists, so AML doesn't work", which is the same logical fallacy as claiming "crime exists, so police don't work"
Dohnjoe wrote: » This will really bake your noodle - it's quite possible that the net amount money laundering has actually increased in the last 3 decades
Dohnjoe wrote: » That completely contradicts your view of "no checks"
Dohnjoe wrote: » In your world, anyone can open a bank account, and banks don't check any movements. So if you had a bank like that, you were the CEO, and a terrorist attack happened in Ireland, a lot of casualties, and the investigation linked the perpetrators to your bank - what would you do? how would you explain that you don't have their details? how would you justify that? that you have no anti-terrorism measures? no checks on their bank movements? I can think of countless scenarios, that have actually happened, I am just genuinely very curious as to how "your" style of bank would deal with them
Dohnjoe wrote: » I am getting you to confirm your position, because I believe you'll just change it and modify it in order to deflect from points.
makeorbrake wrote: » Meanwhile, I've provided you with evidence of it not working.
Lets get to your logical fallacy which appears to be lock everyone up and crime will plummet.
Away with your nonsense.
Dohnjoe wrote: » You provided a selective quote of an ex-professional who supports AML and increased checks.
Dohnjoe wrote: » You've also seem to have subjectively decided this individual represents a consensus on the issue
Dohnjoe wrote: » Not my view at all
Dohnjoe wrote: » You are repeatedly avoiding the questions
Dohnjoe wrote: » According to you, money laundering is a serious problem, so what should banks do about it right now?
Dohnjoe wrote: » You solution is less anti-money laundering measures. Correct? Fine, so what do you propose instead to combat money-laundering? (now, not in the future)
Dohnjoe wrote: » I'm not sure you'll address any of the current or previous questions, but to summarise, your current stance appears that banks shouldn't know the identity of their customers/clients, that basically anyone, including kids, criminals, terrorists, anyone can sign up
Dohnjoe wrote: » And that there shouldn't be any measures in place to stop tax evasion, money-laundering, fraud, financial crimes, terrorist financing, market malpractice (which is what AML targets)
Dohnjoe wrote: » Edit: and I forgot to mention, furthermore, you seem to believe that screening checks by banks and measures to stop financial crimes are actually part of a secret conspiracy by all governments to get more private info on people
makeorbrake wrote: » That's what I believe. Now, in establishing that you can't go trampling over the civil liberties of ordinary people YOU tell me what you're going to do about all these things? YOU come up with a solution for that - because screwing over ordinary people should never be one of them.
Yeah, you want to tar and feather matters with the 'conspiracy' line.
makeorbrake wrote: » Lets get back to this. How on earth are you lingering around here when its as clear as night and day you despise decentralised crypto? Our two resident trolls are becoming more credible comparatively as you go along in this discussion.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Over 300 hundred people have just been arrested in one of the largest cases of it's kind, they were identified through KYC. #
Dohnjoe wrote: » It's incredible observing someone arguing illogically against that
Dohnjoe wrote: » because having to provide a passport identify to open a bank account or join an exchange "annoys" them.
Dohnjoe wrote: » It's your personal conspiracy theory. The powers-that-be have nefariously "invented" bank checks and anti-crime measures as a secret ruse to, what is it again, spying on us and our financials? The regulators I work with are spying on our clients for the government or how does it work? Politicians are using it to spy on other politicians, or just those on the opposing party, or they are all "working together"?
Dohnjoe wrote: » Indeed, that's your personal opinion. I have plenty of decentralised crypto myself. Like anything it has pluses and minuses. Also it's a public forum, as long as it's within guidelines/rules, people can post their opinions. If this is deemed off-topic that's perfectly fine, I'd be more than happy to take it up on a finance/economics forum. This discussion is directly based on the case with people using Bitcoin and being identified via crypto exchanges.
makeorbrake wrote: » Firstly, see above - I'm quite happy to see the very same crime faught using other means - and there are a range of other means.
- It tramples over the rights of millions of people - their right to data privacy, their right to exchange value unimpeded.
- It compounds that - with data breaches that keep on coming....with data falling into the hands of those that you purport KYC/AML is combatting.
- It adds bureaucratic layers of regulation and compliance to banking - trying to make law enforcers of bankers - which they clearly are not and never will be.
- That layer of bureaucratic nonsense comes with an immense cost - that ordinary people are not fully aware of - but that they (ultimately) pay for.
- That layer of bureaucratic nonsense, with its associated costs - has led to a situation where millions of people globally are left unbanked.
- It puts privacy data in the hands of governments and corporates - both of whom are well capable of abusing said data.
- It causes friction for ordinary people. The amount of time expended on this whole process is bonkers.
- That friction has led to a retarded rate of uptake of innovations in finance/fintech - inclusive of cryptocurrency. There is no doubt that thousands more would have dipped their toes in crypto if it wasn't for this nonsense.
You're trying to denegrate my position with lies - sheer lies. I have presented nothing that resembles a conspiracy theory.
KYC is a ruse to enable financial surveillance
KYC was racheted up post 9/11 at the behest of the yanks. They've been using it as a weapon in their geo-political nonsense - and trampling over peoples rights and civil liberties in the process.
Edward Snowden and Andreas Antonopoulos recognise KYC/AML for what it is -> Mass Surveillance
Once again, would you care to tell us what the hell you're doing discussing crypto when it's as clear as night and day that you are diametrically opposed to it?
Dohnjoe wrote: » Financial crimes. Okay, what other means? And to address the below
Dohnjoe wrote: » According to your personal opinion. I haven't seen any legal cases or challenges to KYC upheld, so no.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Yup, data breaches happen. There have been e.g. private medical data breaches, that doesn't mean that medical data cannot be stored from now on, nor it it an argument against storing that private data. The only argument is how to store the information more securely.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Yes it does. And they are responsible for the security of their services and their clients up to a certain extent. That's law and regulation.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Indeed, compliance is very expensive. But no one has come up with a cheaper alternative. And no compliance whatsoever (which you seem to propose) is unfeasible.
Dohnjoe wrote: » HSBC Mexico had virtually no compliance and is famous for being abused by drug traffickers. Which is the reason why they had to go and spend vast sums on upgrading their compliance and AML departments.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Hmm, a bit tenuous. If they have identification and access, they can typically open an account or access a third party payment style system. Otherwise it's more of a question of economics, geography (remote), social mobility, access to technology and so on
Dohnjoe wrote: » Yeah it does, but we have rights. Your ISP could abuse your data, your workplace could abuse your data, your phone company could abuse your data - it doesn't mean automatically they will.
Dohnjoe wrote: » I'm on at least 15 crypto exchanges, it's not that bad. I take a photo with my passport, send it in, wait to be approved. Not sure why you are creating such a fuss over that.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Maybe, maybe not.
Dohnjoe wrote: » If I were "diametrically opposed" to it, I or anyone else has every right to discuss it.
makeorbrake wrote: » You're free to use whatever means available once we take the abuse of peoples privacy and privacy data off the table.
Dohnjoe wrote: » I'll ask again, in your world with no customer details and no anti-money laundering measures, how do they combat money laundering?
Dohnjoe wrote: » How do they combat terrorist financing? evasion of sanctions? tax evasion? all financially-related crime? Am very curious to know your solution to that.
makeorbrake wrote: » Bitcoin was established - not to tackle and fight nonsense like this - but to build an alternative system entirely so people can opt out of it.
sabat wrote: » Seeing as you don't even know the identity of the person who invented it, how can you possibly claim to know their true motivation? All you know is this supposed lone libertarian cyberpunk spiel with a hint of techno-orientalism in their alias. If some group or organisation wanted to create a bull**** narrative designed to con a certain demographic who experience life mainly via their PCs, it would probably sound a lot like the Satoshi Nakamoto story...
sabat wrote: » Seeing as you don't even know the identity of the person who invented it, how can you possibly claim to know their true motivation?
sabat wrote: » If some group or organisation wanted to create a bull**** narrative designed to con a certain demographic who experience life mainly via their PCs, it would probably sound a lot like the Satoshi Nakamoto story...
Deleted User wrote: » Just repeating this for emphasis..
makeorbrake wrote: » It seems you're not getting this.
Dohnjoe wrote: » So when I ask how we deal with money laundering without anti-money laundering measures .. you have no solution (I've asked you several times now)
Dohnjoe wrote: » Here's another question: if a bank doesn't know it's customers, how can it provide a mortgage to someone it doesn't know? How can they give a loan if they don't know who they are giving a loan to, or what their ability to repay is?