Those responsible in governments know about Monero for years. In governments of most countries. They monitor development of cryptocurencies and also Monero closely. Now also 150 law students know about Monero.
I wonder if you put a proposal to advertise DASH to 150 Law students, how much would that cost?I LOL'd.
Over-promise and under-deliver is what we have seen from every Dash project so far, from Masternode blinding and the Lamassu ATM to Legal Research and 2MB blocks.
The Dash proposal would be passed right before a pump and wind up costing in terms of fiat twice as much as intended.
The DashHole in charge of contacting 150 Law students would fail to meet the goal, but won't care because he already got paid.
Based on
this failed Duffontology Evangelist's experience of "falling quite short" of his goal by 90%, we'd expect 15 Law students to be made more aware of Dash, at a cost per student 20X higher than budgeted.
100% of the future lawyers will be unimpressed with the Ponzi-like aspect of Dash's Masternode HYIP.
100% of the future lawyers will be surprised no regulatory action has been taken, despite Dash obviously triggering several prongs of the Howey Test's indicators for an illegal unregistered security.
https://www.strictlybusinesslawblog.com/2012/04/05/when-does-a-deal-involve-securities-regulation-part-2-the-howey-test/Under the Howey test, a contract or transaction is an investment contract if “a person invests his money in a common enterprise and is led to expect profits solely from the efforts of the promoter or a third-party.” Please note however that while the Supreme Court in Howey stated that the profit must arise “solely” from the efforts of others, later decisions by lower courts and the Supreme Court[1] have expanded this, so even if the investor has the power to be involved, the transaction may still be an investment contract if the efforts of others predominate. Therefore, there are three essential components for this test: (1) investing money in a common enterprise, (2) the expectation of profit, and (3) the profit arising primarily from the efforts of people other than the investor.