Paypal, Visa/Mastercard block Mega.co.nz for using encryption.
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Sounds suspiciously like a certain lobbying group had a hand in this...
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@JaredBusch said:
/sigh
Crypto currencies are going to profit on this.
Yeah, there's nothing better to push bitcoin on people than forbidding them from doing business with someone.
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@scottalanmiller said:
This suggests that either all hospitals do not encrypt data, or that they cannot take credit cards or that this is discrimination.
Nah - it indicates that hospitals do not use user controlled end to end encryption (which of course they don't).
But this is definitely discrimination. The NSA and FBI, etc, etc are all pushing hard to force vendors to provide secondary access that is 'supposed' to be for law enforcement use only. Unfortunately if you aren't the only one in control of your keys, you have no way of knowing who else does or doesn't access your data.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
This suggests that either all hospitals do not encrypt data, or that they cannot take credit cards or that this is discrimination.
Nah - it indicates that hospitals do not use user controlled end to end encryption (which of course they don't).
But this is definitely discrimination. The NSA and FBI, etc, etc are all pushing hard to force vendors to provide secondary access that is 'supposed' to be for law enforcement use only. Unfortunately if you aren't the only one in control of your keys, you have no way of knowing who else does or doesn't access your data.
Yeah but, without warrent's what right do they have to it? I don't think most people using encryption are really doing illegal or illicit activities, just they like to make it sound like that so the public will want people to give them up to the government.
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Jeeves! Warm up the litigation cannon!!!!!!!
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
This suggests that either all hospitals do not encrypt data, or that they cannot take credit cards or that this is discrimination.
Nah - it indicates that hospitals do not use user controlled end to end encryption (which of course they don't).
But this is definitely discrimination. The NSA and FBI, etc, etc are all pushing hard to force vendors to provide secondary access that is 'supposed' to be for law enforcement use only. Unfortunately if you aren't the only one in control of your keys, you have no way of knowing who else does or doesn't access your data.
Yeah but, without warrent's what right do they have to it? I don't think most people using encryption are really doing illegal or illicit activities, just they like to make it sound like that so the public will want people to give them up to the government.
They have no right to it, of course! But as you mention the NSA and other three letter agencies don't give a shit about legal vs illegal. The sim card data theft is proof of that, not to mention the countless other violations.
The sad thing is either the media is bought and paid for, or completely uneducated (ok probably both) and they aren't making a big enough deal out of this. Couple that with the mass public's complete lack of care about anything that doesn't directly effect them and you have a government that only cares about keeping itself in and it's cronies in power and the situation we have today.
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@Nic The problem with Bitcoin is they're probably going out. I don't remember if it was China or somewhere in Europe they ran away with several Millions from customers.
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@sjohnsonsc said:
@Nic The problem with Bitcoin is they're probably going out. I don't remember if it was China or somewhere in Europe they ran away with several Millions from customers.
Bitcoin made off with the money? I've not heard anything about that. People have lost their own bitcoins, are you referring to Mt. Gox?
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The Mt. Gox loss was pretty small compared to recently uncovered losses of traditional currency to Russian hackers.
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@scottalanmiller I might be slightly confused it was a news article that a currency shop supposedly run by BitCoin suddenly closed and ran with customers money. I'll try to find the article and post it.
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@scottalanmiller Thank you for calling me out. I did some further research and found it was not BitCoin but MyCoin which was not proven to have any ties with BitCoin that fraud customers out of $400M. I apologize to all the readers of this feed, for not double checking my facts first. Again thank you Scott for calling it.
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Ah, that explains why I hadn't heard about it
Definitely a risk, small unregulated financials handling a lot of these transactions.
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And welcome to MangoLassi, by the way!
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That's the problem with keeping your currency (any currency) in someone else's control. Sadly I don't there there is a way to get away from this.
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@Dashrender said:
That's the problem with keeping your currency (any currency) in someone else's control. Sadly I don't there there is a way to get away from this.
That's how any currency is. It's always in "everyone's" control.
I did currency trading for a decade
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Yeah I realize I was digging myself into a bad statement, but still decided to post it, probably should have just deleted it.