I don’t really want to reveal my identity online and I’ve been trying to find how I can do that. It seems like Patreon is the only one that acts as a middleman between you and the donator but it only does monthly subscriptions which I don’t really want to have…

  • Corroded@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    There is crypto. You could take Bitcoin or if you want to be incredibly cautious Monero. It is an additional hurdle though for the average consumer.

      • Griseowulfin@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        the issue you’ll run into is the rules and regulations on the finance industry. To prevent fraud, terrorism, or crime, there’s know-your-client and anti-money-laundering rules that most financial services follow that require you to identify yourself.

        Kofi lets you use a PayPal business account, or Stripe, which you set what is shown on the donors bank statement (so it’d show up as what you set it to, rather than a personal name/email). So that might be an option to protect you from being identified by donors, if that’s your worry.

        • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.orgOP
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          1 year ago

          Right, Kofi does do that but to establish a Paypal business account, you need to have a registered entreprise as far as I can tell. To established a registered entreprise, I would need to, well, register it and then I might be liable for corporate tax and people will be able to simply look up the business and find my personal information there anyways. As for Stripe, as said in another document, it still leaked information about me which is quite annoying.

          • millie@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            I have a PayPal business account and don’t have any sort of registered business. They upgraded me at some point years ago when I was getting paid through them regularly. There might be a minimum that has to have gone through your account or something, but it shouldn’t incur any corporate taxes or anything.

          • jarfil@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            To established a registered entreprise, I would need to, well, register it and then I might be liable for corporate tax and people will be able to simply look up the business and find my personal information

            Drug trafficking rings use someone else to register the enterprise (family, friends, random guy they pay a token amount to, company in a tax haven) and use them as the fall guy to avoid revealing/linking their own name to the money.

        • averyminya@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Likely a combination of the energy consumption for something not entirely recognized as usable currency and its instability of price as a byproduct of it being a not entirely usable.

          Tech is also pretty dirty unfortunately, so while it’s morally ambiguous for us to buy/build computers ethically sourced we can at least use them in an effort to use them ethically (like using the parts of the animal). We’re currently in a place where we can’t really avoid computers, so using them respectfully should be the goal. Given the inefficiency of energy, immoderate conservation (i.e. using old hardware that would be landfilled) by over-purchasing everything available, and how these chips came to exist in the first place it does seem a little more difficult to happily engage in this particular form of currency.

          Not OP, and personally I’m not against the idea of digital currency and I would personally accept any form of currency given to me, but I can understand wanting to avoid it. It’s also not entirely private either, it’s just as public as anything else just with the “benefit of the doubt” that washing it has.

          • LootGoblin42@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            wow. it’s interesting to hear. I’ve been really into crypto since 2011. I see it as the best money humans have ever invented. It allows me to be my own bank. It eliminates the financial middle men that just make money off our money. The banking industry is corrupt and wastes a lot of energy. The only thing really missing in most crypto is privacy.

        • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.orgOP
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          1 year ago

          I think cryptocurrencies are largely inefficient, attract tons of scammers, generally propose deregulation of the finance sector and serve no real purpose.

          Largely, I don’t think they solve problems as much as they create them.

          • LootGoblin42@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            I’d argue that crypto is more efficient than the legacy fiat currency banking systems. The people/central banks that print money are some of the most corrupt on the planet. Scammers are attracted to money. There are plenty of fiat scammers too. Crypto doesn’t propose any kind of regulation or deregulation. It’s about decentralization and freedom to control your own assets. The fundamental driving force behind it is very much the same as the fediverse. It’s decentralized money.

            They serve the purpose of being able to quickly and easily send money around the globe without middle men that can censor your transactions. Anyone in the world can create a wallet for free. There are many places in the world where it’s difficult to even get a bank account.

            I don’t understand where you got the ideas that you have about cryptocurrency?

            • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.orgOP
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              1 year ago

              I’d argue that crypto is more efficient than the legacy fiat currency banking systems.

              I don’t believe this to be true.

              Scammers are attracted to money. There are plenty of fiat scammers too.

              Sure, but you don’t see fiat currencies being used to pump and dump.

              Crypto doesn’t propose any kind of regulation or deregulation.

              It does. A system where you can transfer money without giving the information that would be needed for a government to tax you or regulate transactions is one that encourages people to commit fraud and avoid financial regulations.

              The fundamental driving force behind it is very much the same as the fediverse. It’s decentralized money.

              No. Distributed systems are fundamentally incompatible with federated systems. They are both decentralized but the way they are decentralized is very different.

              They serve the purpose of being able to quickly and easily send money around the globe without middle men that can censor your transactions.

              This is true but there are often reasons why transactions might be blocked. Some might be right and some might be wrong. If we’re talking about fraud, blocking transactions is good. If we’re talking about sex work, blocking transactions is bad. There is not an inherently bad value to blocking transactions.

              There are many places in the world where it’s difficult to even get a bank account.

              I’d love to see information about that.

              I don’t understand where you got the ideas that you have about cryptocurrency?

              I’ve seen cryptocurrency spaces and have informed myself on the subject. I don’t believe it solves real problems.

              • LootGoblin42@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                I guess there is no convincing you. You seem very set in your ways. Edit: but I’ll try…

                Let’s forget about “crypto” and just discuss Bitcoin and Ethereum. Those are the only two that have real value.

                Ethereum switched to proof of stake, which dropped the energy used by the network by 99%. Bitcoin is still proof of work, but we waste electricity on lots of silly things. A lot of bitcoin mining is already done with renewable sources of energy.

                There are a lot of cryptos that are used for pump and dumps. That’s doesn’t take away from the utility and value of crypto that isn’t used for that.

                Blockchains are public ledgers. They are terrible for avoiding taxes!

                There is a lot of overlap in the culture of distributed centralization and federated systems. Many people that are into Bitcoin are really into the fediverse too.

                There may be “good” reasons to block someone from making transactions, but who gets to decide what is good? like you said, sex workers should have access to financial transactions just as much as any other worker.

                Andreas Antonopoulos has done some good talks on banking the unbanked: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-Y_F3PS4JE

                I use Bitcoin and Ethereum to store my wealth. From my perspective it solves the problem of needing to trust someone else with my money. It’s not unheard of for banks to fail and take your money. Look at the debt crisis that happened in Cypress and Greece. They just took money from people’s bank accounts. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012–2013_Cypriot_financial_crisis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_government-debt_crisis

                • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.orgOP
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                  1 year ago

                  Ethereum switched to proof of stake, which dropped the energy used by the network by 99%.

                  Well, proof of stake is less power hungry for sure but it also has a big con : The people who control most of the currency can now fake money. Considering our capitalist society with very big gaps in wealth, this is not an acceptable thing.

                  A lot of bitcoin mining is already done with renewable sources of energy.

                  That’s not great. These sources of energy could be used more productively. There’s also nonetheless tons of it is done on coal.

                  Blockchains are public ledgers. They are terrible for avoiding taxes!

                  Public ledgers which do not contain the information needed for taxation - pointless.

                  There is a lot of overlap in the culture of distributed centralization and federated systems. Many people that are into Bitcoin are really into the fediverse too.

                  There is some but I think most people who want a distributed system will go for a distributed social service like Aether for example.

                  There may be “good” reasons to block someone from making transactions, but who gets to decide what is good? like you said, sex workers should have access to financial transactions just as much as any other worker.

                  The people should through the government that establishes regulation. I don’t believe workarounds to be solutions to these problems. After all, a sex worker can still not solicit work through social media and would be unlikely to look for help from the government if they need it because their work is prosecuted. Cryptocurrency does not solved that.

                  I use Bitcoin and Ethereum to store my wealth. From my perspective it solves the problem of needing to trust someone else with my money. It’s not unheard of for banks to fail and take your money.

                  Again, I believe in the government needing to bring good laws to solve these problems. I don’t believe that deregulation solves these issues. I also think that you have to trust an infinite number of people to trust in a blockchain system, people who are not regulated by law.

                  • LootGoblin42@beehaw.org
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                    1 year ago

                    You have far too much faith in governments and laws created by humans. Laws change as society changes, and society is usually far ahead of laws in terms of evolution. They aren’t real unless people agree on them. Like with weed being illegal federally in the US, but individual states not giving a fuck about federal laws. All governments are corrupt, and will never help solve the wealth gaps. The US government is bought and paid for by corporations. Places like china just control the population through fear. We need separation of money and state to have real freedom.

                    There is no need to trust people when using Bitcoin. it’s a trustless system that uses a consensus algorithm. I would rather accumulate large amounts of wealth and help people than stay poor.

                    Did you watch the talk by Andreas?