Bitcoin Forum

Bitcoin => Mining => Topic started by: larry_vw_1955 on December 28, 2023, 03:15:53 AM



Title: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: larry_vw_1955 on December 28, 2023, 03:15:53 AM
Carole House, a former White House director for cybersecurity and secure digital innovation, who is now executive in residence at Terranet Ventures, spoke at the DeCenter Spring Conference at Princeton University in April, proposing exactly that.

In her speech, House suggested that it would be great if miners, as well as validators of proof-of-stake blockchains, came together and agreed not to mine OFAC-blacklisted transactions, as well as not to build upon blocks with such transactions. She also noted that having as much hashpower as possible in the U.S., where miners have to comply with the sanctions, would help make that vision a reality.  


https://www.theblock.co/post/267759/bitcoin-faces-risk-of-protocol-level-censorship-as-miners-under-increasing-regulatory-pressure

so now they not only don't want people mining transactions on the OFAC list but if they happen to make it into a block they don't want miners to build on those blocks. just wow!  :o

OFAC is in the USA. The Office of Foreign Assets Control. They want to control everything especially about bitcoin.
 https://ofac.treasury.gov/



Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: ABCbits on December 28, 2023, 10:44:32 AM
What terrible news. But at least for Bitcoin (and other coin with diminished supply generation) where TX fee will become main miner's income, miner would rather move to different country or shut down their operation rather than operating at loss.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: FP91G on December 28, 2023, 02:49:58 PM
This cannot be controlled using the POW algorithm. Not all mining pools comply with US requirements, and for a good commission, prohibited transactions will be included in new blocks. In Russia, miners will not obey US requirements, so Russian miners will receive more profit.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: larry_vw_1955 on December 29, 2023, 03:37:11 AM
This cannot be controlled using the POW algorithm.
It doesn't really have anything to do with the algorithm. It has to do with OFAC and sanctions.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control ("OFAC") of the US Department of the Treasury administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions based on US foreign policy and national security goals against targeted foreign countries and regimes, terrorists, international narcotics traffickers, those engaged in activities related to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and other threats to the national security, foreign policy or economy of the United States.


Quote
Not all mining pools comply with US requirements, and for a good commission, prohibited transactions will be included in new blocks. In Russia, miners will not obey US requirements, so Russian miners will receive more profit.

https://ofac.treasury.gov/sanctions-programs-and-country-information/russia-related-sanctions



Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: philipma1957 on December 29, 2023, 03:56:03 AM
This cannot be controlled using the POW algorithm.
It doesn't really have anything to do with the algorithm. It has to do with OFAC and sanctions.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control ("OFAC") of the US Department of the Treasury administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions based on US foreign policy and national security goals against targeted foreign countries and regimes, terrorists, international narcotics traffickers, those engaged in activities related to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and other threats to the national security, foreign policy or economy of the United States.


Quote
Not all mining pools comply with US requirements, and for a good commission, prohibited transactions will be included in new blocks. In Russia, miners will not obey US requirements, so Russian miners will receive more profit.

https://ofac.treasury.gov/sanctions-programs-and-country-information/russia-related-sanctions



So you open a pool in El Salvador.  they say fuck you BTC is our currency we accept all transactions..

A usa mine would be banned from that pool.

Or would they mine to a proxy via tor. And let all coins sit in a virgin wallet address.

If anything smaller miners will be nimble and the big mines could suffer.

or Donald mother-fucking Trump gets in and the gov goes in another direction.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: Minermaxer on December 30, 2023, 05:23:19 AM
Carole House, a former White House director for cybersecurity and secure digital innovation, who is now executive in residence at Terranet Ventures, spoke at the DeCenter Spring Conference at Princeton University in April, proposing exactly that.

In her speech, House suggested that it would be great if miners, as well as validators of proof-of-stake blockchains, came together and agreed not to mine OFAC-blacklisted transactions, as well as not to build upon blocks with such transactions. She also noted that having as much hashpower as possible in the U.S., where miners have to comply with the sanctions, would help make that vision a reality.  


https://www.theblock.co/post/267759/bitcoin-faces-risk-of-protocol-level-censorship-as-miners-under-increasing-regulatory-pressure

so now they not only don't want people mining transactions on the OFAC list but if they happen to make it into a block they don't want miners to build on those blocks. just wow!  :o

OFAC is in the USA. The Office of Foreign Assets Control. They want to control everything especially about bitcoin.
 https://ofac.treasury.gov/



Thats not how it works. You can operate the machines to different locations. Also, Group B can still mine txns if Group A decided to not mine. Group B will get the rewards.

Learn how mining works


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: ABCbits on December 30, 2023, 09:13:17 AM
--snip--
So you open a pool in El Salvador.  they say fuck you BTC is our currency we accept all transactions..

A usa mine would be banned from that pool.

Or would they mine to a proxy via tor. And let all coins sit in a virgin wallet address.

If anything smaller miners will be nimble and the big mines could suffer.

or Donald mother-fucking Trump gets in and the gov goes in another direction.

That would work for time being. But for U.S. miners, they have to hope government won't create new law which prevent them from doing that.

--snip--
Thats not how it works. You can operate the machines to different locations. Also, Group B can still mine txns if Group A decided to not mine. Group B will get the rewards.

Learn how mining works

You missed OP's point. He emphasize about U.S. government idea not to build block on top of block which include blacklisted TX/address which possible if 51% hashrate comply with U.S. government idea.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: larry_vw_1955 on December 31, 2023, 07:00:22 AM

You missed OP's point. He emphasize about U.S. government idea not to build block on top of block which include blacklisted TX/address which possible if 51% hashrate comply with U.S. government idea.

yeah, i mean, that's kind of a new idea of attacking bitcoin is to try and make people criminals who build on top of a block that has a blacklisted address. since bitcoin is only pseudoanonymous, usa-based bitcoin miners would need to either build on the usa government's recommended chain or figure out a way to launder their BTC through monero or something so they don't get caught. i guess it all depend on how much hash power they could get under their control as to if bitcoin could survive that or would it split into 2 chains?  :o

Quote
That would work for time being. But for U.S. miners, they have to hope government won't create new law which prevent them from doing that.
they could make a rule preventing that in one sentence. "If you contribute hashing power to a pool that mines on top of a block that has a blacklisted address, then you are breaking the law." simple as that. not that they would even need to because that would be completely understood. not every law is spelled out in all the things that you are not allowed to do. some of them are just common sense.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: Yamane_Keto on January 01, 2024, 07:19:50 AM
In short, they are nicely asking for a hard fork, as the current hashrate percentage is not enough for them to make the OFAC list mandatory. However, if the United States puts pressure on all countries of the world, the percentage of unknown mining pools is less than 2%. If all governments were united, passing such regulations would be easy.

https://talkimg.com/images/2024/01/01/I0OcC.png


The big question remains: If governments do not unite at the climate summit, something that harms humanity, will they unite in creating a blacklist of addresses for Bitcoin?


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: philipma1957 on January 01, 2024, 11:53:51 PM
In short, they are nicely asking for a hard fork, as the current hashrate percentage is not enough for them to make the OFAC list mandatory. However, if the United States puts pressure on all countries of the world, the percentage of unknown mining pools is less than 2%. If all governments were united, passing such regulations would be easy.

https://talkimg.com/images/2024/01/01/I0OcC.png


The big question remains: If governments do not unite at the climate summit, something that harms humanity, will they unite in creating a blacklist of addresses for Bitcoin?

yes of course they will cause it hurts their own pockets.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: larry_vw_1955 on January 06, 2024, 05:57:25 AM
In short, they are nicely asking for a hard fork,
probably. although they don't just want their own version of bitcoin, they want to kill the other version of it so that there is only one bitcoin and it is firmly under their control. then expect them to put in some type of "freezing function" so they can freeze any bitcoin address they want.



Quote
The big question remains: If governments do not unite at the climate summit, something that harms humanity, will they unite in creating a blacklist of addresses for Bitcoin?
the list will just get bigger and bigger, having more categories of what a bad person is. got too many speeding tickets that are unpaid then they might put your addresses on the list. that type of thing. they don't care about the environment as much as you might think. what they really care about is controlling the people and you can't do that without controlling their access to money or its equivalent.

in the usa government's version of bitcoin, there will be 2 types of bitcoin addresses: KYC addresses and no-KYC addresses. they'll want an ID for every bitcoin address. the ones that don't comply will just be frozen.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: BTCResearch on February 09, 2024, 10:12:35 PM
If this is enacted, it certainly beats the main purposes behind Bitcoin (to some extent some partially happened already):
- decentralization
- no censorship
- and maybe... pseudonymity (not anonymity)

The especially chilling part is where with over 51% hash power, banned (or approved, as you like) transactions will not get
approved days and maybe weeks. As well as not building new blocks above the block containing banned transactions.

Wow, just wow.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: ABCbits on February 11, 2024, 12:15:07 PM
In short, they are nicely asking for a hard fork, as the current hashrate percentage is not enough for them to make the OFAC list mandatory.

Even actual hard fork is hard to pull since it require Bitcoiner to update/change their full node software and some business to update their custom software.


The especially chilling part is where with over 51% hash power, banned (or approved, as you like) transactions will not get
approved days and maybe weeks. As well as not building new blocks above the block containing banned transactions.

Wow, just wow.

And that's when Bitcoin might die.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: paid2 on February 22, 2024, 12:39:55 AM
This is a very interesting topic, as I've been discussing a catastrophe scenario like "Block Compliant Vs Block not Compliant" and the repercussions this would have on Bitcoin as a whole with others in the local section for a long time.

Unfortunately I'm sad to see that this is the direction it's going to take potentially.

I wonder what role Stratum V2 could play, and if it were to be used, whether pools (US pools for example) could decide to not pay for "not compliant" blocks etc...


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: ololajulo on February 22, 2024, 12:50:50 AM
In short, they are nicely asking for a hard fork, as the current hashrate percentage is not enough for them to make the OFAC list mandatory. However, if the United States puts pressure on all countries of the world, the percentage of unknown mining pools is less than 2%. If all governments were united, passing such regulations would be easy.

https://talkimg.com/images/2024/01/01/I0OcC.png


The big question remains: If governments do not unite at the climate summit, something that harms humanity, will they unite in creating a blacklist of addresses for Bitcoin?
Perhaps some individuals desire a complete economic overhaul, wishing they could participate from the outset to influence asset distribution like Bitcoin's supply. Given its current value and widespread ownership, however, achieving such control seems unlikely.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: ex_emarking on February 22, 2024, 04:22:20 PM
cant the validators refuse to change the version of bitcoin they are running if it has some bullshit like that in it?


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: ABCbits on February 23, 2024, 08:43:52 AM
cant the validators refuse to change the version of bitcoin they are running if it has some bullshit like that in it?

There's no thing such as validator on Bitcoin. All nodes Bitcoin perform verification, but none of them have authority to tell all other nodes that certain block must be ignored.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: Crypto Panter on February 26, 2024, 07:55:12 AM
Carole House, a former White House director for cybersecurity and secure digital innovation, who is now executive in residence at Terranet Ventures, spoke at the DeCenter Spring Conference at Princeton University in April, proposing exactly that.

In her speech, House suggested that it would be great if miners, as well as validators of proof-of-stake blockchains, came together and agreed not to mine OFAC-blacklisted transactions, as well as not to build upon blocks with such transactions. She also noted that having as much hashpower as possible in the U.S., where miners have to comply with the sanctions, would help make that vision a reality. 


https://www.theblock.co/post/267759/bitcoin-faces-risk-of-protocol-level-censorship-as-miners-under-increasing-regulatory-pressure

so now they not only don't want people mining transactions on the OFAC list but if they happen to make it into a block they don't want miners to build on those blocks. just wow!  :o

OFAC is in the USA. The Office of Foreign Assets Control. They want to control everything especially about bitcoin.
 https://ofac.treasury.gov/



Definitely all states and governments will try to censor Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies as much as they can, through whether incentivies or penalties!...But tech cannot be stopped...There are currently Bitcoin-related solutions being worked on in the Bitcoin community, so that it brings high level of privacy into the Bitcoin TXs. For example ZK-rollups for Bitcoin is one solution. It's just matter of time and advocate of the community that make this happen sooner or later. Bitcoin layer-2 solutions are what we really need to support and promote in crypto space bcuz they can bring new set of solutions and tools that will help other developers to innovoate more in this space and even help them enhance the privacy of TXs....So a lot of hope in the space!  8)
If Zk-rollups can be settled on Bitcoin ecosystem then you cannot easily distinguish TXs and labeling them!....Privacy is not a crime!(It's not dodging law/regulations!).. And it's people right to deploy any tools to keep their privacy as mush as they can.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: FP91G on February 28, 2024, 11:32:52 AM
Carole House, a former White House director for cybersecurity and secure digital innovation, who is now executive in residence at Terranet Ventures, spoke at the DeCenter Spring Conference at Princeton University in April, proposing exactly that.

In her speech, House suggested that it would be great if miners, as well as validators of proof-of-stake blockchains, came together and agreed not to mine OFAC-blacklisted transactions, as well as not to build upon blocks with such transactions. She also noted that having as much hashpower as possible in the U.S., where miners have to comply with the sanctions, would help make that vision a reality. 


https://www.theblock.co/post/267759/bitcoin-faces-risk-of-protocol-level-censorship-as-miners-under-increasing-regulatory-pressure

so now they not only don't want people mining transactions on the OFAC list but if they happen to make it into a block they don't want miners to build on those blocks. just wow!  :o

OFAC is in the USA. The Office of Foreign Assets Control. They want to control everything especially about bitcoin.
 https://ofac.treasury.gov/



Definitely all states and governments will try to censor Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies as much as they can, through whether incentivies or penalties!...But tech cannot be stopped...There are currently Bitcoin-related solutions being worked on in the Bitcoin community, so that it brings high level of privacy into the Bitcoin TXs. For example ZK-rollups for Bitcoin is one solution. It's just matter of time and advocate of the community that make this happen sooner or later. Bitcoin layer-2 solutions are what we really need to support and promote in crypto space bcuz they can bring new set of solutions and tools that will help other developers to innovoate more in this space and even help them enhance the privacy of TXs....So a lot of hope in the space!  8)
If Zk-rollups can be settled on Bitcoin ecosystem then you cannot easily distinguish TXs and labeling them!....Privacy is not a crime!(It's not dodging law/regulations!).. And it's people right to deploy any tools to keep their privacy as mush as they can.
There are a lot of miners, and when there are enough transactions with high commissions in the mempool, the miners will organize a solo pool to mine such a block, and then switch back to the main pools. This is a crappy POS algorithm, where everything is decided by the consensus of validators.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: kano on March 19, 2024, 10:26:50 PM
A few simple points:

1) Even if it does happen, it wont be Bitcoin, so it wont matter.
A fork of Bitcoin is not Bitcoin.
Bitcoin works no matter what the price, and even a large drop in hash rate has no real effect on that - as expected, and as we saw, when china shutdown mining.

2) The magic 51% number rears it's head yet again :)
Pools mining against lower points in the active chain will be obvious.
So it would become immediately clear what pools not to mine on.
Excluding higher paying transactions means less mining reward in your block.
Excluding the lowest paying transactions, when block space is at a premium, is how Bitcoin works.
Messing with that means less bitcoin reward for mining.
(Which is what StratumV2 is trying to make happen - stay away from V2 - they're probably backed by the gov't since they are helping to do this)

3) It's the current us gov't that's trying to damage Bitcoin, not sure why anyone in Bitcoin would want to keep them in power :) lol


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: shield132 on March 20, 2024, 11:19:52 AM
1) Even if it does happen, it wont be Bitcoin, so it wont matter.
A fork of Bitcoin is not Bitcoin.
Bitcoin works no matter what the price, and even a large drop in hash rate has no real effect on that - as expected, and as we saw, when china shutdown mining.
I can't agree with you because it matters. If the majority of miners and nodes support a new Bitcoin fork, then that Bitcoin fork will become a standard Bitcoin. That new Bitcoin fork will be supported, adopted and the most traded. Old Bitcoin fork, the ones that we use now, will not be supported and it will become dead compared to some altcoins and supported fork.

3) It's the current us gov't that's trying to damage Bitcoin, not sure why anyone in Bitcoin would want to keep them in power :) lol
Those who are into Bitcoin because of the US gov or are supported by US gov, will benefit from damaging Bitcoin.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: takuma sato on March 23, 2024, 03:42:44 PM
A few simple points:

1) Even if it does happen, it wont be Bitcoin, so it wont matter.
A fork of Bitcoin is not Bitcoin.
Bitcoin works no matter what the price, and even a large drop in hash rate has no real effect on that - as expected, and as we saw, when china shutdown mining.

2) The magic 51% number rears it's head yet again :)
Pools mining against lower points in the active chain will be obvious.
So it would become immediately clear what pools not to mine on.
Excluding higher paying transactions means less mining reward in your block.
Excluding the lowest paying transactions, when block space is at a premium, is how Bitcoin works.
Messing with that means less bitcoin reward for mining.
(Which is what StratumV2 is trying to make happen - stay away from V2 - they're probably backed by the gov't since they are helping to do this)

3) It's the current us gov't that's trying to damage Bitcoin, not sure why anyone in Bitcoin would want to keep them in power :) lol

Im not into politics but it evident now that whoever is from the US and supports bitcoin while voting for Biden has some sort of massive cognitive dissonance of Stockholm syndrome going on, otherwise I don't get it. This people have a clear agenda to tie Bitcoin and crypto as something that funds terrorism and "white supremacy" while forgetting about how everyone that lives in countries where inflation is making everyone poor uses BTC to survive. They don't care, they are mad that people got rich from getting in early and they didn't, so now they want to ban it.

If anyone wants BTC to survive at a mainstream level, then pro-Bitcoin lobbying is non negotiable. We need people supporting BTC and miners at the political level, otherwise we are going to see Biden, Warren, AOC and co make Bitcoin unusable for US citizens and miners kicked out of the country, again, at a mainstream level. Obviously BTC will survive no matter what, but if we want huge valuations, we need institutional support. The ETFs are a good step in this direction, but don't forget that the ETFs can be used against self-sovereign BTC users that do self-custody, since they can concentrate the funds there then ban BTC from the hands of individuals. Stay alert because that is coming. It just happened in the EU.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: philipma1957 on March 23, 2024, 10:50:05 PM
A few simple points:

1) Even if it does happen, it wont be Bitcoin, so it wont matter.
A fork of Bitcoin is not Bitcoin.
Bitcoin works no matter what the price, and even a large drop in hash rate has no real effect on that - as expected, and as we saw, when china shutdown mining.

2) The magic 51% number rears it's head yet again :)
Pools mining against lower points in the active chain will be obvious.
So it would become immediately clear what pools not to mine on.
Excluding higher paying transactions means less mining reward in your block.
Excluding the lowest paying transactions, when block space is at a premium, is how Bitcoin works.
Messing with that means less bitcoin reward for mining.
(Which is what StratumV2 is trying to make happen - stay away from V2 - they're probably backed by the gov't since they are helping to do this)

3) It's the current us gov't that's trying to damage Bitcoin, not sure why anyone in Bitcoin would want to keep them in power :) lol

Im not into politics but it evident now that whoever is from the US and supports bitcoin while voting for Biden has some sort of massive cognitive dissonance of Stockholm syndrome going on, otherwise I don't get it. This people have a clear agenda to tie Bitcoin and crypto as something that funds terrorism and "white supremacy" while forgetting about how everyone that lives in countries where inflation is making everyone poor uses BTC to survive. They don't care, they are mad that people got rich from getting in early and they didn't, so now they want to ban it.

If anyone wants BTC to survive at a mainstream level, then pro-Bitcoin lobbying is non negotiable. We need people supporting BTC and miners at the political level, otherwise we are going to see Biden, Warren, AOC and co make Bitcoin unusable for US citizens and miners kicked out of the country, again, at a mainstream level. Obviously BTC will survive no matter what, but if we want huge valuations, we need institutional support. The ETFs are a good step in this direction, but don't forget that the ETFs can be used against self-sovereign BTC users that do self-custody, since they can concentrate the funds there then ban BTC from the hands of individuals. Stay alert because that is coming. It just happened in the EU.


Trump is anti bitcoin bigly.

While you rip biden and bitcoin all ath were done during his administration.


personally I wish that the two of them would stroke out tonight and not run at all.

they are 158 years old between them. a mother fucking joke


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: larry_vw_1955 on March 23, 2024, 11:19:59 PM

Trump is anti bitcoin bigly.
how do you figure that?

Quote
While you rip biden and bitcoin all ath were done during his administration.
that wasn't intentional. the biden administration has tried to put more controls on bitcoin than any government in any country in history i would guess. the ath is because of INFLATION of the us dollar becoming more worthless thanks to biden's bailing out student loans, supporting illegal immigrants, etc. just a side affect of a socialist regime...

Quote
personally I wish that the two of them would stroke out tonight and not run at all.

they are 158 years old between them. a mother fucking joke
i definitely agree biden does not belong running the us government. but who would you rather see in power? what person?


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: philipma1957 on March 23, 2024, 11:50:27 PM

Trump is anti bitcoin bigly.
how do you figure that?

Quote
While you rip biden and bitcoin all ath were done during his administration.
that wasn't intentional. the biden administration has tried to put more controls on bitcoin than any government in any country in history i would guess. the ath is because of INFLATION of the us dollar becoming more worthless thanks to biden's bailing out student loans, supporting illegal immigrants, etc. just a side affect of a socialist regime...

Quote
personally I wish that the two of them would stroke out tonight and not run at all.

they are 158 years old between them. a mother fucking joke
i definitely agree biden does not belong running the us government. but who would you rather see in power? what person?

he ended like kind exchange policy which is just about as anti crypto as you can get.

I file two hundred page returns because he passed that law that only allows like kind exchanges for real estate. no other thing for that alone he should stroke out as I am typing this.

btw biden sucks for a long list of reasons but none of them touch the trump like kind law.


to edit this liz warren is far more anti btc then biden maybe she could stroke out too. as she is not very young.  edit she is 74.

still quite a bit older then me at 67.

I have never had the disgust of american politicians that I do  now.


Title: Re: Bitcoin faces risk of protocol-level censorship as miners under increasing regul
Post by: larry_vw_1955 on March 24, 2024, 01:20:18 AM

he ended like kind exchange policy which is just about as anti crypto as you can get.
so that's whose administration it happened under. that was about as harmful a thing you could do to the crypto ecosystem as anything. so i think i understand your issue. that's my main issue too is how they want to tax it even though you didn't cash it out. that was when holding crypto became alot less attractive to me. if you can't even do like exchanges WITHOUT REPORTING IT AND PAYING TAXES ON THE "EXCHANGE". Do i have to pay taxes when i exchange a $100 bill for 5 $20s ? I don't think so.  :'(

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I file two hundred page returns because he passed that law that only allows like kind exchanges for real estate. no other thing for that alone he should stroke out as I am typing this.
that's insane. i can't imagine people abiding by something that ridiculous. i bet alot of them just don't do it. period.

Quote
btw biden sucks for a long list of reasons but none of them touch the trump like kind law.
yeah i do agree. that like kind law was kind of the death blow to using crypto.

Quote
to edit this liz warren is far more anti btc then biden maybe she could stroke out too. as she is not very young.  edit she is 74.

still quite a bit older then me at 67.

I have never had the disgust of american politicians that I do  now.
me too. the only thing you can hope for is for these geezers to get put away into their nursing homes and some new young people who see things differently to revert the laws back to how they should be. but that's another thing that sucks about the usa, is how they can't stop making new laws. you would think that every law that should be on the books already would be but that's not the case, they are constantly trying to make more and more laws on EVERYTHING. to make society more and more restrictive.

some laws i understand come about because of new technologies and thats not what i'm talking. it's like they think that by making more and more laws about issues that have existed since the dawn of man, they can make a perfect society. and the only solution is to make more laws.

next step will be trying to tax unrealized capital gains on crypto. that's when holding bitcoin will really become a pain the ass...