Thieves drain 2FA-protected bank accounts by abusing mobile networks

“The unidentified attackers exploited weaknesses in Signalling System No. 7, a telephony signaling language that more than 800 telecommunications companies around the world use to ensure their networks interoperate. SS7, as the protocol is known, makes it possible for a person in one country to send text messages to someone in another country. It also allows phone calls to go uninterrupted when the caller is traveling on a train.  The same functionality can be used to eavesdrop on conversations, track geographic whereabouts, or intercept text messages.”

Read more: https://arstechnica.com/security/2017/05/thieves-drain-2fa-protected-bank-accounts-by-abusing-ss7-routing-protocol/

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I never knew how screwed up global banking was until I started my own bank

“You can imagine my surprise when I found out that SWIFT runs on Windows Vista – an obsolete operating system that Microsoft no longer supports.  When my bank received its SWIFT code, we were told that we had to have a computer running Vista in the office in order to connect to SWIFT.  It was such an absurd exercise to find an obsolete computer running an obsolete operating system to connect to the supposedly most advanced and important international payment network in the world.  Unsurprisingly, SWIFT has been hacked numerous times, both by the NSA as well as private hackers who have stolen a great deal of money from their victims.”

Read more: https://www.sovereignman.com/trends/i-never-knew-how-screwed-up-global-banking-was-until-i-started-my-own-bank-21494/

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IRS deliberately targeted innocents for civil forfeiture program

“The Treasury Inspector General released a report this month that reveals that the IRS deliberately targeted people they knew were not engaged in structuring for millions of dollars’ worth of seizures, such that 91% of seizures were made in error, taking money away from people engaged in lawful activity.  These seizures were ‘quick hits’ that allowed IRS enforcers the rack up impressive resolution stats because the victims were happy to negotiate a settlement, as opposed to actual criminal acts.  The result: for the IRS, depositing $10,000 or more was an inherently suspicious act; but so was depositing $10,000 or less.”

Read more: http://boingboing.net/2017/04/14/innocents-make-easy-marks.html

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IRS Seized $17 Million From Innocent Business Owners Using Asset Forfeiture

“The full scope of the cash seizures—and the overwhelming amount of cases involving innocent people—have not been revealed until now.  The inspector general found money seized and forfeited by the IRS was legally obtained in 91 percent of a sample of 278 structuring investigations it reviewed occurring between fiscal years 2012 and 2014. Altogether, those funds totalled $17.1 million and involved 231 cases.”

Read more: https://reason.com/blog/2017/04/04/irs-seized-17-million-from-innocent-busi

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Bringing back the Somali shilling

“One famous answer to the riddle of fiat money is that governments use force to ensure that fiat money is valued. But this can’t be the case in Somalia: it hasn’t had a government since 1991, yet shillings continue to be accepted.”

Read more: http://jpkoning.blogspot.ca/2017/03/bringing-back-somali-shilling.html

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The War on Money Laundering Is Causing the Wrong Kind of Casualties

“To the extent that AML policies have had an impact, it’s been negative. In addition to high costs and inefficiency, the laws and regulations have disproportionately harmed poor people.”

Read more: https://danieljmitchell.wordpress.com/2017/01/31/the-governments-war-on-money-laundering-is-causing-the-wrong-kind-of-casualties/

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WeChat introduces gold-backed mobile micropayments in China

“With the gold hongbao (not official translation), like the cash hongbao, a sender can either send packets to certain persons or let the system randomly divide a certain amount into certain parts and send it to a chat group for group members to try their luck.   Tencent Micro-Gold (not official translation), the online gold investment service jointly launched by Tenpay, the online payment arm of Tencent (WeChat’s parent), and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), one of the largest state-owned banks, in late January 2017, is so far the only supplier of gold for the new hongbao service.”

Read more: http://technode.com/2017/02/03/wechat-gold-hongbao-mini-gold/

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Europe Proposes “Restrictions On Payments In Cash”

“Having discontinued its production of EUR500 banknotes, it appears Europe is charging towards the utopian dream of a cashless society. Just days after Davos’ elites discussed why the world needs to ‘get rid of currency,’ the European Commission has introduced a proposal enforcing ‘restrictions on payments in cash.’  The Action Plan states that ‘Payments in cash are widely used in the financing of terrorist activities.'”

Read more:  http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-01-27/europe-proposes-restrictions-payments-cash

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Global elite to criminalize “unexplained wealth” in crackdown on e-cash

Bureaucrats drawing tax-free salaries from various global government organizations met in January and advised all countries to create the crime of “unexplained wealth”, to augment the existing global financial thoughtcrime of “money laundering”.  Additional actions against digital currency exchanges and wallet providers were urged, and the group stated that the existence of digital currency mixers “should not be tolerated”.

Read more: https://www.finextra.com/pressarticle/67781/crime-agencies-turn-up-the-heat-on-virtual-currencies

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Australia Joins The War On Cash While Venezuela Backtracks Cash Ban

The Venezuelan government, amid looting, protests, shootings, and extremely long lines at banks, decided that its ban on the most circulated 100-bolivar note was ill-advised at this time.

The Indian government caused its own outbreak of chaos and deaths by banning 500- and 1000-rupee bank notes, worth about $7 and $14 respectively.  Amid the ensuing long lines and protests, in at least 6 cases bank employees were arrested aiding their customers in the conversion of banned notes.  Indians have been employing a number of workarounds to get their cash converted to the new notes, but others have been simply buying gold from vendors.  The government’s response is to now push for the income-tax office’s raids on families to target not only cash holdings, but gold as well.

An article in The Economist enumerates the failures of the India demonetization initiative:

  • 98% of economic transactions in India are done in cash
  • Four-fifths of India’s workers are paid in cash
  • Estimates of annual GDP growth now include a 2% decline due to payments drag
  • The new notes are smaller and only a subset of ATMs can handle them
  • $22 billion in notes are to be replaced; only $3 billion worth can be printed per month
  • The flood of deposits into banks were used to buy bonds, depressing interest rates

The cash ban has also caused a diplomatic row, as a flight to the safety of US dollar notes and the ensuing shortage of dollars has left Pakistan unable to pay its diplomatic staff in India.

Turning a blind eye to the chaos in other countries that are banning their own citizens’ cash, the head of the Australian tax office suggested banning the Australian $100 note in an explicitly stated attempt to raise tax revenue.  Earlier in the year, a surprise $34 billion increase in the Australian budget deficit over four years had been acknowledged.

Developed-world governments are joining their developing-world counterparts in governing by surprise and openly placing their citizens’ wealth at risk through anti-cash messaging and actions.

The stated reasons usually range from fighting the drug black market (created by global drug prohibition) to fighting terrorists (often created, funded, and armed by developed-world governments) to fighting tax avoidance, which could be fought more effectively by lowering tax rates and eliminating burdensome paperwork and reporting requirements.

However, regardless of the stated reasons, the underlying motivation is to move cash-based activity into banks.  This benefits the global ruling class in several ways.

The banks and other financial middlemen win, because every transaction will subsequently have fees attached.

After all, depositors at a bank are no longer the bank’s true customers, thanks to privileged credit facilities at the central bank, state-sponsored deposit and loan guarantees, and myriad banking regulations erecting barriers to entry and thereby fostering consolidation of bank ownership.  Banks can survive without customers’ deposits, thanks to state backing, but they cannot survive without regulatory compliance.  In the cashless society, the banks will have an army of new unwilling customers from whom to extract fees, without being subject to the otherwise countervailing market force of consumer choice.

And the state wins, because all depositors’ economic activity is transparent to it through its control over the banks, making tax collection more thorough and dragnet surveillance more comprehensive.  The state can also, through its control over the banks, order accounts frozen at will.  This could prevent, for example, a defendant in a government action from retaining a specialist lawyer that could mount an effective defense, which wouldn’t be a problem if he had cash.

Other than control, the state can directly profit from cash bans: notes that are not turned in can be cancelled and converted into a ‘fiscal stimulus’ windfall for the state, a strategy openly floated during India’s cash ban.

Workers and savers lose; who else loses?  As a Telegraph article describes, a cashless society would be a nightmare for the homeless, who generally do not possess the proper paperwork to satisfy the state’s requirements to open a bank account.  Suddenly the class warfare inherent in cash bans comes into focus, and not in a way that was expected.

As The Economist states:

India is not the first country to introduce abrupt, drastic reform of its currency. But the precedents—including Burma in 1987, the former Soviet Union in 1991 and North Korea in 2009—are not encouraging. Burma erupted in revolt, the Soviet Union disintegrated and North Koreans went hungry.

Governments that now seek to ban cash in partnership with banks should consider whether they wish to be in the company of the above countries, whether in their motivation or in the outcome.

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