bawolff 3 days ago

> Starting around 2014, law enforcement discovered something remarkable: Bitcoin's blockchain was a permanent, traceable record.

It took them until 2014 to read the satoshi white paper?

  • snthpy 3 days ago

    They're still a decade ahead of most people. It seems only now that people are becoming aware of privacy coins. I go to a lot of crypto meetups and every time I bring up that bitcoins aren't fungible (because they carry full provenance and you might not be able to cash out tainted coins) I just get blank stares. FATF Travel Rule is turning up the heat on this.

    I haven't kept up with developments though. What are best privacy coins these days. ZCash seems to be the institutional favourite while Monero hasn't moved much.

    • stef25 3 days ago

      Trading privacy coins is set to banned in the EU as from 2027. Not sure how easy it will be to circumvent this rule.

      https://bitcoinblog.de/2025/05/05/eu-to-ban-trading-of-priva...

      • sph 3 days ago

        This will initially go the same way as the porn ban that's being enacted all over Europe — VPN usage will skyrocket, people will still do whatever they want.

        Then they will have to resort to the only other alternative: require a government ID and static IP allocation to access to the internet, for complete surveillance and traceability. You know it's coming.

        • mothballed 3 days ago

          A lot of people have bought real, legal, government IDs from places like Palau[] which sell them for like $300 and no crime is committed by doing so.

          [] https://rns.id/app/palauidinfo

          • csomar 2 days ago

            I guess what the parent is saying is that every user will be issued a private/public key pair to be able to access the internet. You can, maybe, buy one. But it’ll be easy for the gov. to ban it.

        • torlok 2 days ago

          "All over Europe" meaning UK, France, and Italy.

          • sph 2 days ago

            If you think it’s gonna be limited to those three you haven’t been paying attention.

        • epolanski 2 days ago

          Nobody cares about privacy coins but criminals.

          There's 0 real world cases for them except some extremely far fetched ones.

      • elcritch 2 days ago

        The US already cracked down on mixer Tornado Cash [1]. Wouldn’t surprise me if they (try to) follow suit on privacy coins as well.

        There’s a chance there’s enough political influence by libertarian/crypto folks in the US to push back though.

        On the other hand, the transparency of bitcoin could be a boon in ways as well. Currently only governments, large banks, some multinationals can track large transfers of money. Bitcoin levels the playing field and enables internet sleuths to uncover government or corporate corruption.

        1: https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0916

        • mothballed 2 days ago

          Old news, that's been reversed and Tornado cash is back off the sanctions list.

          https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sb0057

          • overfeed 2 days ago

            A reversal is indistinguishable from a scenario where Tornado was turned and is now cooperating with US LEO. Hypothetically, of course - US prosecutors wouldn't use this tactic to go after bigger fish.

      • csomar 2 days ago

        Europe lost on crypto. There are only users but no infra. providers based in Europe (and even the UK). So my guess is that this will do very little to nothing.

      • DANmode 2 days ago

        Paper wallets, so, trivial?

    • ta12653421 3 days ago

      This is not what "fungibility" means in terms of accounting & balancing:

      In fact, Bitcoin are fungible from a regulatory perspective: As every one USD is worth as another USD, every Bitcoin has same value as another Bitcoin and they are fully intechangeable without any change of value on both sides of the transaction.

      Thats the reason why there are NFT - these are not fungible in that sense, as they are not interchangeable one by one, since one 1 NFT may have another value than the next NFT.

      • Eddy_Viscosity2 3 days ago

        Echoing the other comments here, but because of the blockchain every bitcoin is effectively unique as it is defined by its history of transactions. As is pointed out by other commenters, a shadey transaction history could lead to lower value. A US dollar on the other hand is truly fungible. It doesn't carry that burden of knowing what transactions it was previously used for.

        • extraduder_ire 3 days ago

          I wouldn't say the US dollar is truly fungible. If you have one of those bills that DB Cooper got, you'll get into trouble if you spend it anywhere.

          • echelon_musk 2 days ago

            I watched A Simple Plan (1998) at the weekend and SPOILER ALERT: a large percentage of the bill's serials were recorded.

            I just don't understand in practice how this is an issue.

            Say you spend $100 on groceries with marked cash, how are you de-anonymised? The cash mixes in with all the rest of the cash from other registers and then gets picked up by Securicor and so on.

            Never made sense to me!

            • Eddy_Viscosity2 2 days ago

              If you just spent a few bucks on groceries once, then you are in the clear. But if you get doing it repeatedly, or worse, spent a whole bunch of cash to buy a car or something expensive, then when that money did get back to a bank then eventually those numbers will be identified and FBI will be notified. If you are trying to spend $20 or $100 in marked bills, you'd be fine. But try that with 4 million in $100 bills, it won't take long for them to find you. Not instantly, but eventually.

          • bookofjoe 2 days ago

            I'm assuming you're wrote this tongue in cheek. Cooper absconded with his bills in 1971 — 54 years ago. Do you really believe that spending one of them today would bring trouble?

            • extraduder_ire a day ago

              I should have wrote "will draw attention" rather than "you'll get into trouble". I also mistakenly thought there were already pre-photographed ransom bags by that time, those came later.

            • rtkwe 2 days ago

              I think there'd be a fair amount of interest though I'm not sure how tightly bills returned for destruction are monitored for known serial numbers like that so I'm not sure if anyone could notice. But if they are I think it'd trigger some interest at least just to figure out where you might have gotten it from.

              Anyone know if there's a monitoring program for serial numbers of interest?

              • bookofjoe 2 days ago

                51.years.ago.

                • rtkwe 2 days ago

                  It's just numbers in a database if they're doing automated scanning, it's basically free to keep an alert around, and if the bills show up new out of nowhere it means there's a decent chance you're relatively close to their original source.

                  The FBI gets out of bed for more inane things than maybe figuring out what happened to DB Cooper (he probably died during the jump or after landing) after all this time.

            • echelon_musk 2 days ago

              These arguments suppose there's an FBI agent with a printed list of serial numbers positioned nationwide at every store.

              In practice, if you spend less than $10,000 a time, you'd probably be fine?

          • Eddy_Viscosity2 2 days ago

            Well, yes you are correct. Physical bills have unique serial numbers and a small (effectively insignificant) percentage of these bills are flagged as stolen and can be seized.

        • chipsrafferty a day ago

          This is true of US dollars too, it's just a matter of scale.

          US dollars are certainly worth less if they have a shady transaction history. That's why money laundering exists - I will pay you $100,000 in dirty money if you give me $95,000 in clean money.

          Also, US dollars are non-fungible in a collectibles sense because certain id numbers on bills are valuable, older years are valuable (and condition matters). With coins there's a lot more, too - misprints and the like.

          So I reject your idea. Either they are both fungible, or neither are.

        • Rogach 3 days ago

          You mean this only for cash US dollar - i.e. physical bills? Not USD in bank accounts?

          • Eddy_Viscosity2 2 days ago

            USD in bank accounts is definitely fungible. They may track who sends what money to whom. But this transaction data is not tied to specific 'dollars' just to 'dollars' in general. So yes, perfectly fungible.

            • Rogach 2 days ago

              Inside a single bank - definitely. But if you have dollars in different banks then they suddenly start having very different value. Couple examples just in case:

              1. Spending dollars on US soil from an US bank account won't incur extra fees (at least visible to the person - I know about interchange fees, but they are borne by the merchant), while using card issued by a foreign bank can incur fees for cross-border transactions (at the level of 2-3% usually).

              2. Sanctions and KYC concerns also make different dollars have different value. Money in US bank account of an US company employee can be used at face value - money in some less-favored country bank, not so much.

              • Eddy_Viscosity2 2 days ago

                This examples don't mean the dollars aren't fungible only that where they are stored can make them less accessible or subject to fees. Its like the difference between a gold nugget in your hand and one that's buried deep in the ground. The gold itself is inter-changeable, one nugget is worth the same as the other if side by side. Only one is in a more inaccessible location and you'd have to pay the cost of retrieving it. If you magically switched the two nuggets, the situation would be exactly the same from a value perspective.

      • ekjhgkejhgk 3 days ago

        > In fact, Bitcoin are fungible from a regulatory perspective: As every one USD is worth as another USD, every Bitcoin has same value as another Bitcoin and they are fully intechangeable without any change of value on both sides of the transaction.

        They're not worth the same from a market perspective. When bitcoins are dirty they trade at lower price.

      • vasco 3 days ago

        They go to crypto meetups, they know all of this. Their point being that when provenance comes into play they are not fungible anymore because you may be able to spend a bitcoin but not another. So they are not all worth the same. You just repeated wikipedia, they were making a new point.

        • ta12653421 3 days ago

          I work in the field on the side of an institution, I know very well what people on "Crypto Meetups" are telling :-D

          • fasbiner 3 days ago

            [flagged]

            • ta12653421 3 days ago

              Thanks for coming here and thanks for your contribution.

              And no, English is not my native language, as a lot of people in here. Sorry if you dont like that.

              Nontheless, impressive how you could assume my professional experience does not exist. Great.

              • fasbiner 2 days ago

                I did not say anything about your professional experience nor make any implicit assumption.

                You would benefit from using translation tools in order to participate more effectively with less frustration.

                This is not a personal attack, it is a factual statement about your level of English writing and reading proficiency. That you would interpret as such may not be a purely linguistic issue, but I am trying to be charitable and helpful.

      • victorbjorklund 3 days ago

        Not in practice. Would you trade a clean bitcoin for a bitcoin stolen by North Korean hackers? Knowing chances are big you might get your coin sized. If you take that trade you are not bright.

        • chipsrafferty a day ago

          If you take any trade that is supposedly 1:1 you are not bright because there is no reason to do it.

        • dahcryn 3 days ago

          but how do you know that before the swap?

          As long as this information balance exists, they are worth equal value

          • victorbjorklund 2 days ago

            You check the transaction history. So your argument is that they are worth equal as long as the buyer doesn’t have all the information? It’s like claiming that a new CPU is worth the exact same as an old broken one because you can trick someone to buy it for full price if they don’t check it before paying.

          • ta12653421 3 days ago

            good one!

            This brings to my mind: Chainalysis or the exchanges Co should offer such service like "bitcoin cleanyness lookup" or similar :-) (maybe some do already and Im not aware of...)

            But the thing is: These service work wallet-based.

      • beeflet 3 days ago

        Bitcoin associated with criminal transactions are worth less than "clean" bitcoin. so they are not fungible. All bitcoin outputs are naturally NFTs, for example see Colored Coins or Ordinals.

        • ta12653421 3 days ago

          Depends on how each individual institution handles it:

          Some exchanges and banks to trace lets say the last 20 hops, and if these are OK, then they accept the coin. I know also about institutions which trace ALL hops, meaning: At their desk you cant ever sell a coin that has been in the dark only one day since its existance.

          Most have a relaxed approach, like "if the coin wasnt in dirty hands for the last 5 or 6, its OK for us"

          • lxgr 2 days ago

            This seems like an absurd rule in the context of a blockchain that allows spinning up new addresses for free, and sending transactions between them almost for free.

          • beeflet a day ago

            So you just churn the outputs 10 times? You might as well have no protections at all

      • csomar 2 days ago

        Neither the USD nor Bitcoin are purely fungible. Lots of cash dollars are equal less than the equivalent USD in a US bank account.

      • Stevvo 2 days ago

        A dirty dollar with a blacklisted serial is not worth the same as a clean dollar. You can say the same about a dirty UTXO.

    • OutOfHere 3 days ago

      Zcash is not a privacy coin in the same way that Litecoin isn't. In both cases, their privacy is optional, which is to say that when you need to swap it, your recipient will likely not accept the private version. Monero is a privacy coin with default privacy.

      Institutional pumps and dumps are exactly the thing to steer clear of, and Monero is fortunate to not have become a huge victim of them. Monero has seen more organic growth.

      • godelski 3 days ago

        Monero also isn't tradable on coinbase and is much harder to obtain or spend. Zcash has been pushing Zashi which will reconvert coins to shielded ones. They seem to be trying to take the issue seriously and help make this trivial for those who actually want to use coins as cash. Not sure it really matters for those who are just holding on coinbase or daytrading, as traders don't care about privacy and if you have a custodial wallet the custodian already has access to the sending and receiving addresses, significantly reducing privacy.

        I'm with you, but it also seems like they have a better roadmap than Monero. If Silicon Valley can get monopoly status by selling things cheap and then jacking up the price after they have their network effect, why not get the coin embedded into the financial system first and then hard fork into private transactions only? Maybe it's not the right play, but at least we have people trying different things.

        • OutOfHere 2 days ago

          Monero is hard to obtain and spend if one doesn't know how. If one has an app like Cake Wallet, it's easy. Monero has a strong culture of self-custody, competitive DEX swappers, and P2P swappers, although a few service providers occasionally are scammy. Centralized exchanges are scammy too though in that they have a habit of going offline during a crash.

          I am not opposed to the existence of more privacy coins and features. Anything that loosens the grip of surveillance is good.

          Besides default privacy, one other thing that Monero has is constant emissions, making it sustainable for transactions in the long term beyond the next century. To my understanding, both Bitcoin and Zcash will in contrast shift toward pretty high transaction fees, keeping them relevant as a store of value, but irrelevant for small transactions. Bitcoin will survive via an efficient layer 2, e.g. Lightning, but will Zcash? Switching to PoS and other such gimmicks won't fix the core issue.

          • godelski a day ago

            I'm hesitant to respond. Maybe just skip to [^]

              > Monero is hard to obtain and spend if one doesn't know how.
            
            So is writing python. Hell, so is writing bash. So is literally anything.

            What matters is not how difficult something is once you know how, what matters is how difficult something is when you don't know how.

              > If one has an app like Cake Wallet, it's easy. Monero has a strong culture of self-custody, competitive DEX swappers, and P2P swappers, although a few service providers occasionally are scammy.
            
            So you expect average people to

              - Download an app they have little to no familiarity with
              - Buy a different currency like LiteCoin
              - Perform a swap to Monero
              - Reverse the process to spend their XMR since essentially no service allows direct purchase by XMR
            
            You're right, it's not hard, but we're two people talking on a tech form who are familiar with tech. If I tell my partner with a PhD in econ to do this they'll be confused even if they will have no problem with the process after doing it a few times.

              > Monero has is constant emissions, making it sustainable for transactions in the long term beyond the next century.
            
            My understanding is that ZEC and XMR have similar transaction fees[0]. ZEC has a cap but I'm sure they'll deal with that when it starts to be an issue. You can vote on their policies, including the governance fund.

            While XMR has a larger block size they're still longer times than ZEC. That still presents an issue as well[1,2]

            [^]Again, I want to repeat myself because I want to make this part abundantly clear

              >>  Maybe it's not the right play, but at least we have people trying different things.
            
            I'm not trying to say "switch from XMR to ZEC" I'm saying "It's nice that we have multiple attempts to solve the problems here as there is yet to be a coin that solves all problems." We can go back and forth all day pointing out problems with both XMR and ZEC. They're both far from perfect lol. That's not what matters, what matters is that there's competition and people are working on finding solutions. The reason I'm pointing out the problems with XMR is because you're painting a picture as if ZEC is foolish and XMR is obviously right. Maybe this was the wrong response and ignore all that until this point. But it is also crypto and there's a lot of cult like attitudes around this that prevent the technology from actually progressing. I like ZEC, but that also doesn't mean I have to dislike XMR. Me, Godelski, wants a private and secure coin that is easy to use (by every day people), fast, and solves a wide number of problems. But currently the union of XMR and ZEC doesn't begin to get there. Are we techies or evangelists? As a techy I want the problems solved and I'm going to recognize that neither XMR nor ZEC has solved them. As an evangelist? I've been in more than enough cults in a lifetime, I really don't want to be an evangelist. My advice to most people is don't buy any crypto. Have some for fun or interest, but the cult mentality and hype hinder their development ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

            [0] https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/transactionfees-zec-xmr...

            [1] https://bitinfocharts.com/zcash/

            [2] https://bitinfocharts.com/monero/

            • OutOfHere 11 hours ago

              > ZEC has a cap but I'm sure they'll deal with that when it starts to be an issue.

              They will try, but as per my understanding, due to the cap, there is no mathematically conceivable solution that doesn't require escalating the transaction fees dramatically once the supply diminishes.

        • beeflet 3 days ago

          The development of zcash is entirely controlled by Electric coin company, and they use this to control the zcash supply by taking a fraction of the coinbase outputs.

          Even if zcash is technologicially superior, why not just fork it exactly and start over from genesis? Zcash is not the next bitcoin, but the next bytecoin.

          Cryptocurrency needs to be a community-led project like bitcoin or monero.

    • ekjhgkejhgk 3 days ago

      > Monero hasn't moved much.

      If something works very well, I'd rather it doesn't move much.

      • DANmode 2 days ago

        It’s the lack of speculative interest that keeps it stable, simply tracking relative value of other assets up and down.

        Crazy how that works!

        • ekjhgkejhgk 2 days ago

          I actually thought the person I was talking meant in terms of the technology changing.

    • akimbostrawman 3 days ago

      Monero is vastly superior and desirable compared to zcash with its weak optional privacy, centralization and corporate/government ties.

    • rtkwe 2 days ago

      You're probably getting weird looks if you're phrasing it that way because there's not actually tracking of coins at an individual level, it's all balances that are fungible but the nature of the ledger allows tracking of interactions with 'tainted' wallets. NFT's were partially named non-fungible tokens because that was part of their main difference from other items/coins on the blockchain at the time.

    • Gud 3 days ago

      I don’t know about best, but when buying drugs, Monero is the preferred choice.

      Or so I’ve heard.

    • nkrisc 2 days ago

      All US bills have a unique serial number, so the same applies. Coins, however, do not. But their weight makes them impractical for use with large amounts, much more so than notes.

    • charcircuit 3 days ago

      >tainted coins

      All you have to do is make a single transaction using all of them. You will receive a freshly minted UTXO. Each bitcoin block involves burning a set of UTXO and then minting a new set of clean UTXO.

      • wmf 3 days ago

        Nope, taint flows through transactions. If the input(s) are tainted so will be the outputs.

        • charcircuit 3 days ago

          By that definition everyone in the same block is tainted. Maybe the bitcoins from your output came from someone else's input. And you tainted input may have entirely gone to the miner as their reward UTXO. You can't really trace an individual bitcoin / satoshi because in reality it's just a bunch UTXOs constantly being created and destroyed. Maybe you can distribute a percentage of the taint among all the outputs, but at that points its like most US dollars have traces of cocaine on them.

          • wmf 3 days ago

            That isn't how Bitcoin works at all. All the transactions in a block are not CoinJoined together.

            • charcircuit 3 days ago

              Maybe this example will help. Let's say a user has 1 bitcoin UTXO that is tainted and then 1 bitcoin UTXO that is not tainted. They create a transaction that takes both UTXO as an input and as an output creates 2 UTXO of 0.5 bitcoin.

              In this scenario, is the first output UTXO of the transaction tainted? The second? The miner's reward UTXO? Someone else's output UTXO?

    • Ferret7446 3 days ago

      That's not fungibility, that's just an association issue. If someone denies doing business with you because you bought (or sold) a Trump hat, that doesn't make cash non-fungible.

      (Incidentally, banknotes all have unique serial numbers and can be traced to criminal transactions by either the serial or by more mundane taints/markings)

      • walletdrainer 3 days ago

        Fungibility is the term that has been used in this space for more than a decade, it’s a bit late for you to try to change that.

        • bawolff 3 days ago

          Fungability as a term goes back hundreds of years.

          I get that specialized communities use specialized jargon, but it seems like it would be less confusing to use the word "tracable" here.

          • walletdrainer 3 days ago

            Fungibility accurately describes the main problem here, right now some bitcoins are worth significantly less than others because they’re tied to hacks and you can’t send them to any normal exchange without immediately getting your account frozen.

            You will have to spend more than 1 “dirty” bitcoin to get 1 “clean” bitcoin. Almost nobody will accept the dirty bitcoin, whereas basically everyone will accept a bank note no matter the history of said bank note (cops might show up at your door later, yeah).

            But sure, eliminating traceability inherently solves this issue too.

      • NoMoreNicksLeft 3 days ago

        If you want to buy something and the guy says "I'd love to sell that to you, but your $100 was stolen in a bank robbery two years ago and it's on a list with its serial number"... well, that $100 isn't fungible, is it? Has little to do with the association, it's not you, it's the money itself. That said, my example is one that proves this happens for cash too. Extreme corner cases are funny like that.

        • DANmode 2 days ago

          You think this is how Bitcoin trading will die?

          Legal and or financial liability by association?

    • pertsix 3 days ago

      Why would Bitcoin purists care about off ramping onto fiat?

      This seems awkwardly unnecessary for a technology that has only prioritized deflationary economics and economic sovereignty through private key encryption.

      • cperciva 3 days ago

        Serious answer: Because they have to eat. Being a purist doesn't mean they can afford to ignore the world they live in; even if they believe that USD is fundamentally worthless and keep all their wealth in Bitcoin, they still need to occasionally pay bills to people who don't take Bitcoin.

      • wmf 3 days ago

        There are virtually no actual purists. And criminals are generally more opportunistic than ideological.

      • red-iron-pine 3 days ago

        95% of the world is still on fiat.

        outside of a few san fran tech bros, how many people you know ever bought a house with BTC?

        you gonna gift your mom monero for x-mas?

  • dyauspitr 3 days ago

    You used to be able to convert to monero and then back into bitcoin to make it completely untraceable. Suspiciously all exchanges stopped offering monero in a coordinated way at the same time.

    • vintermann 3 days ago

      Very suspiciously, almost like someone working with preventing money laundering noticed and sent them a letter reminding them about 18 U.S. Code §1956, which makes it a crime to assist in obfuscating the origin of proceeds from crime.

      If you know about anyone using Monero for that purpose, you can't use Monero, since obfuscating the origin of transactions is something you do as a condition of participating in Monero (either as a miner or through paying transaction fees).

      • ifwinterco 3 days ago

        This is all US (and Western Europe) centric perspective. Last time I was in HK you could cash out basically any kind of crypto to cash easily, no questions asked. There will always be somewhere like that in the world

        • datadrivenangel 3 days ago

          Eventually interpol does their thing and most people stop participating in distributed organized crime when their plausible deniability loses plausibility.

          And if you have to go to north korea to cash out, then the convenience is much lower.

          • ifwinterco 2 days ago

            Yeah, I can see both sides of this argument. We're certainly already in a situation where Monero in particular is very much persona non grata in a lot of countries and the only way to cash it out to fiat is P2P (which is risky).

            Having said that, if you are a crypto proponent, you would argue that cashing out to fiat will become less and less necessary as time goes on and simply swapping to USDT/USDC and spending that will become easier. The jury is still out on that one

      • dyauspitr 2 days ago

        Isn’t gold just like that? Why aren’t gold sellers beholden to those rules?

        • ifwinterco 2 days ago

          Gold and banknotes also have the property of being bearer assets but they're less worrying if you're the authorities because they're physical.

          You can (and people often do especially with banknotes) do crime and tax evasion with them, but you can't transport them across borders in large quantities easily.

          Something like monero has the potential to be almost as fast and convenient as a fiat bank transfer but able to be done in any size and be untraceable - that's a combination that doesn't win you many friends in western governments

    • TrackerFF 2 days ago

      In the grey areas of business, it is not uncommon to be allowed to keep doing gray area shit if and only if you're willing to play ball with authorities. Once you start making their work impossible, they'll bring down the hammer.

      Everyone should just assume that if they're trying to hide themselves via some service, that said business will provide your information/data to the authorities, if asked to.

  • Anamnesiac 2 days ago

    Satoshi is/was an American asset. Bitcoin is so transparently a play by American intelligence it's a joke.

  • AndrewKemendo 3 days ago

    Three years is pretty good for police to get through a paper.

    First they had to learn how to read…

hereme888 3 days ago

How is this a secret? It's literally a feature: transparent ledgers.

  • kragen 3 days ago

    Because in clickbait "journalism" everything is a "secret".

    • LexiMax 3 days ago

      Anecdotally, I don't think that this is widely understood by people who use crypto for illicit purposes, which isn't exactly uncommon.

      • somenameforme 3 days ago

        It's a mixture of private and public. For instance anybody can create an infinite number of wallets and cycle transactions through those wallets infinitely, subject to time and/or transfer fees. And wallets are the only stored identifier - it doesn't lead to e.g. an IP or whatever, and even if it did - those could also be endlessly proxied. On top of this there are 'tumblers' that do this as a service.

        So while it's completely traceable in theory, in practice it's vaguely akin to trying to track money by the serial numbers in that you can probably figure out a few points in a dollar's lifetime, but tracing it point by point to a specific entity is generally not realistic. Of course most criminals are stupid and doing something like using CoinBase hosted crypto to try to do something illicit is as good as leaving your license and phone number at the scene of a crime.

        • vintermann 3 days ago

          > On top of this there are 'tumblers' that do this as a service.

          and using these makes no sense, since it's readily noticeable that you've used one, and using them is basically always illegal. The crypto currency ecosystem keeps reminding me of https://xkcd.com/1494/ .

          • somenameforme 3 days ago

            This is incorrect. Things are legal unless criminalized, and tumblers are not inherently illegal, and have plentiful legitimate uses. However, money laundering or offering a money laundering service is illegal and so using one in an effort to money launder, or facilitate such, would be illegal. It's akin to something like a jimmy bar. Owning or manufacturing/selling them is 100% legal, but they're going to be used pretty regularly for illegal purposes which is, rather tautologically, illegal. Similarly, intentionally selling them for illegal purposes would be illegal.

          • kragen 3 days ago

            Using tumblers is legal in countries like the USA. You may be living in a country that does not observe the legal principle that everything is permitted unless it is explicitly prohibited, but that is the foundation of the US legal system.

            • vintermann 3 days ago

              Sure. Using tumblers is legal, if you've done your due diligence and made sure no one puts money made from crime into there.

              • somenameforme 2 days ago

                This is, again, not how things work. A server operator can be charged for intentionally facilitating e.g. money laundering but you as a customer have 0 obligation whatsoever, besides ensuring that the service you're using is not going to simply run off with your money.

                • vintermann 2 days ago

                  That's your legal theory, but I think the way things actually work in the US is quite different from how you think they should work according to libertarian principles, or even according to the laws as they are written. Being a fence, buying from a fence, even selling to a fence can land you in trouble.

                  Any sort of economic dealings with a person you should reasonably have known to be engaging in criminal activity, is a legal risk.

                  I don't think you find very many registered companies whose stated purpose is running a tumbler or otherwise "providing economic anonymity" - at least not in the west.

                  • somenameforme 2 days ago

                    It's not libertarian principles, it's principles of US law, and in most places in the world for that matter. The reason being or buying from a fence is illegal is because it's explicitly criminalized. You can read the legalese here: https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2315 Without that law it'd be 100% legal.

      • kragen 3 days ago

        I have often been astounded at the level of ignorance of people who use cryptocurrency —not knowing the difference between Binance and Bitcoin, for example, or between Tether and Bitcoin, or not knowing that an on-chain Bitcoin transaction will take several minutes to post.

      • evolighting 3 days ago

        Because people who hype Bitcoin claim that its value comes from it: Bitcoin is anonymous, secure, and private, and therefore can be used for illegal transactions without fear of being traced.

    • senectus1 3 days ago

      also the uninformed mix up "crypto" with encryption with privacy.

      I STILL encounter people that get this confused.

  • mrtksn 3 days ago

    People believed that it is anonymous in a sense that its untraceable to them, this is why early adopters often used it in drugs and weapons trade.

  • mrunix 3 days ago

    Because crypto bros market Bitcoin as "anonymous" and "untraceable"

Ms-J 3 days ago

Use privacy preserving coins such as Monero instead of Bitcoin as it is much more safe. Not bulletproof, but much better.

Monero also complicates any type of investigation much more than Bitcoin. It is very hard for investigators. They also don't want to burn techniques unless the case is absolutely massive.

Also make sure to never use an exchange that forces KYC.

  • rajamaka 3 days ago

    Seems to be the case that the conversion to fiat is the part that is difficult to do while staying anonymous

    • Ms-J 3 days ago

      As long as one takes moderate measures to stay anonymous on the network level, an exchange that is P2P or doesn't force KYC can be used to convert. There are many of them out there.

      Fees may be higher is a note.

      • chistev 3 days ago

        But without p2p there is greater risk of scam?

    • arevno 3 days ago

      You can do it on Kraken just fine. As long as you're ok paying taxes on it (since Kraken is KYC), you're still shielding the source of the funds, which is the primary utility of Monero.

      Or to put it another way, it's good for "money laundering", but not "tax evasion".

      • stef25 3 days ago

        Why would Kraken just accept 100K worth of Monero coming in and sent out as fiat to a bank account ?

        • red-iron-pine 2 days ago

          cuz they get their cut and there is nothing anyone can do to unmask that transfer or prove that it's, fundamentally, fraudulent.

          IRS or CRA is getting their cut, so it's the regulator or the FBI's problem

  • idiotsecant 3 days ago

    Monero is great so long as you don't care about conversion to cash. That part is ... tricky.

    • SchemaLoad 3 days ago

      Of course it's difficult. Even if you could convert it to cash you wouldn't be able to deposit in any bank or meaningfully use it. The moment you do anything with it you'll trigger anti money laundering laws and have to explain where the money came from.

      • Ms-J 3 days ago

        It isn't very difficult, see my earlier post. Once successfully converted the cash can be used in a multitude of different ways.

        With an imagination and taking proper anonymity safeguards, the possibilities are endless.

      • solumunus 3 days ago

        Well yeah, you also have to launder the money if you’re a criminal enterprise…

        • wmf 3 days ago

          From a criminal perspective you may not have to launder it. Just deposit your XMR/ZEC into an exchange and sell it. If they ask, say you bought it years ago at $10.

      • metadat 3 days ago

        Hot-dog sales outside NY stadium.

        Seriously though, the days of easy tax avoidance are long gone at this point. Welcome to The Matrix of America.. and China.

        • epolanski 2 days ago

          Your post is a spot pro matrix, not against it.

    • chipsrafferty a day ago

      It's not actually that tricky - because obtaining Monero anonymously is also tricky, the only way to do so is to put on a pair of rubber gloves, and anonymously send cash from a mailbox that can't be traced to your identity. The other side of that transaction is the party interested in converting to cash. Because there's so much demand on both ends, there are many reputable vendors with a long and trusted history of those transactions.

    • arctanJimmy 3 days ago

      > Monero is great so long as you don't care about conversion to cash. That part is ... tricky.

      Make no mistake, this is not coincidence. It's hard because non auditable financial transactions would undermine the fiat issuers authority.

  • cheschire 3 days ago

    I also noticed on a darkweb site that keeping monero in an escrow account is used to further muddy the trail. Not sure how effective that actually is though.

sph 3 days ago

What I’m most interested in is: are there proof-of-concepts or any work done on making Bitcoin actually more private and untraceable? Does Lightning suffer from the same traceability issues?

There is a constant flux of papers and prototypes that are not mentioned anywhere (least of all this website) unless you delve deep into technical forums (such as delvingbitcoin) - which I never find the time to stay abreast of.

  • wmf 2 days ago

    Everyone's probably keeping their heads down after Samourai.

  • sph 3 days ago

    Still no answer 7 hours later.

    It is amazing to see that there is no overlap of communities between such a large tech forum, and open-source tech work being done on cryptocurrencies, so strong is the anti-crypto bias in here. I wonder what other tech blind spots does HN have.

    • red-iron-pine 2 days ago

      1) they either have ways, which would be incredibly valuable and worth keeping secret

      or

      2) there isn't a way or its not worthwhile; just use Monero instead, dawg.

      "why hasn't anyone made, like, a secure Telnet?" because they created SSH and VPNs, same idea.

    • Karrot_Kream 2 days ago

      HN is pretty strongly focused along a particular dev culture that has at best a deep distrust of and at worst disdain for finance. I appreciate that, as a long time poster, you're posting this but I personally have given up that HN will ever become anything more than r/hackerculture.

econ a day ago

Someone one time wrote a great filesharing application. Then one day I asked him about caching what other clients downloaded and offered. A few exchanges later he concluded that one could reconstruct what someone downloaded. The problem was clients that didn't run very often. They needed some time to catch up with deleting things no longer available. They tended to wait for a good while for the other client to come back online so that they could get a new list. In the mean time you could ask them what a user had to offer and they would provide the outdated channel info.

The next day he released an update that erased the application and all data.

patchtopic 3 days ago

this kind of blockchain analysis for the non-privacy oriented coins has been well known at least for a decade.. I don't see how it's a secret weapon except against the naive or uninformed

  • ozim 3 days ago

    Duh, most criminals are naive and uninformed.

    • stef25 3 days ago

      They tend to learn pretty quickly though

notepad0x90 2 days ago

I think most opsec sensitive people, if they do use BTC it is one wallet per transaction. That said, BTC is still cash-like because your wallet isn't associated with your identity, cops still have to work out that detail.

The NSA was using this sort of tricks long before all this when people tried to use PGP encrypted email.

Either way, if governments allowed payment cards that don't do KYC, it would be more convenient for everyone involved. I don't know how governments suddenly took it upon themselves that in addition to controlling commerce, they get to monitor lawful commerce between law abiding citizens with no suspicious of criminal conspiracy.

Privacy wasn't taken from us, they asked nicely and we shrugged.

ionwake 3 days ago

Bitcoin , the greatest decentralised centralised payment record.

Ms-J 3 days ago

There seems to be a coordinated effort to down vote technical insight in this thread.

Some entity does not want this type of info out there.

1317 3 days ago

password management?

damion6 2 days ago

Um obvious. Good article though, good to tell people.

hoppp 3 days ago

It was never a secret, it was a design choice from the start. People don't actually pay attention to what powers the pyramid scheme they participate in?

  • beeflet 3 days ago

    It was a design flaw from the start, that satoshi agreed was an issue but did not have the tools to fix

    • hoppp 3 days ago

      So far only monero solved it, its not an easy problem and xmr is pretty much delisted everywhere now because it works well. Quite funny

Ethan312 3 days ago

Fascinating how blockchain’s transparency has flipped the script on crypto anonymity. Law enforcement now uses forensic tracing to dismantle criminal networks, from dark web markets to ransomware rings. The real challenge remains jurisdictional reach, not technical capability.

  • ikmckenz 3 days ago

    Is this comment AI written?

    • mabedan 3 days ago

      You’re absolutely right, that’s a great catch /s