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Author Topic: 2013-06-07 VICE — Guide to Avoiding the NSA (Using Bitcoin)  (Read 1043 times)
ksruictkesn (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 07:22:33 PM
 #1

The Motherboard Guide to Avoiding the NSA
by Daniel Stuckey

http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/the-motherboard-guide-to-avoiding-the-nsa

"Bitcoin: Now, this isn't the most stable way to store your money, but it can definitely serve the desire to remain anonymous. That is, if you buy your bitcoins carefully. You'd expect by way of popular belief that the 'untraceable cryptocurrency' is anonymous at every level. But if you're not careful, your transaction histories could be forked over to government agencies in the same complicit manner that produced the scenario we're dealing with right now.

You could send money from your bank account, but I already told you to get rid of those. If you've made it this far without closing them, then you're skipping ahead. But half-assed-NSA-dodging is better than none. In buying bitcoins, your most covert options are either a) buy a MoneyPak card (a hybridization between prepaid credit cards and gift cards) at a Walmart, Longs, 7-Eleven or RadioShack and then exchange it for bitcoins online, b) go through a broker like BitInstant, in which you send a cash wire transfer, or c), the most anonymous method, arrange to buy bitcoins in person through Bitcoin Talk Forum or Craigslist."
bb999
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June 07, 2013, 08:57:16 PM
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It's an interesting article but they don't address the fact that you can send coins from a place like Coinbase which does have you information to a software wallet that is not registered with anyone and from there on as many times as you want.
ksruictkesn (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 09:57:12 PM
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Actually, my article refers back to a previous article of mine about Coinbase giving up user-info here:

"if you're not careful, your transaction histories could be forked over to government agencies ( http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/if-youre-not-careful-bitcoins-arent-as-anonymous-as-you-think ) in the same complicit manner that produced the scenario we're dealing with right now."
ksruictkesn (OP)
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June 07, 2013, 10:01:55 PM
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Also I decided not to go into length about it here, but through analytics, by simply viewing blockchain/releases over time—as some veteran folks in the BTC community have explained—you can pretty much figure out where everyone and eventually whom everyone in the system is.
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