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From: Orlin Grabbe <kalliste@delphi.com>
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Newsgroups: alt.2600
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Subject: money laundering & digital cash
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Date: Fri, 12 May 95 00:21:58 -0500
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Message-ID: <Ro98LwW.kalliste@delphi.com>
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[This is part II of The End of Ordinary
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Money. Part I was previously posted on
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the Internet, and will appear around
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June 1 in the July issue of Liberty,
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Box 1181, Port Townsend, WA 98368.]
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******************************************
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* Copyright 1995 J. Orlin Grabbe, 1280 *
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* Terminal Way #3, Reno, NV 89502. All *
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* rights reserved. Internet address *
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* <kalliste@delphi.com> *
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******************************************
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THE END OF ORDINARY MONEY
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Part II: Money Laundering, Electronic Cash,
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and Cryptological Anonymity
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by J. Orlin Grabbe
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It was bright lights and balmy action. Thomas
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Constantine, the head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement
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Administration (DEA), claimed we've entered a "new world
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order of law enforcement" [1]. He meant the cooperation of
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British, Italian, and Spanish authorities in setting up a fake
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bank in Anguilla, in the Caribbean. It was a sting to trap
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money launderers.
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Like all pirate organizations, the group calculated
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success by the amount of booty seized. And this cleverly
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code-named "Operation Dinero" added $52 million, nine
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tons of cocaine, and a number of paintings (including works
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by Reynolds, Reuben, and Picasso) to official coffers. There
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were also 88 arrests. In many ways it was a great scam in
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classic DEA style: government officials got to keep the
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goods, while taxpayers got to pay for the incarceration of up
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to 88 people.
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The British Foreign Office--those wacky guys who,
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you will recall, conveniently released a barrage of
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information about Nazis in Argentina at the outbreak of the
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Falklands (Malvinas) war, and who also helped coordinate
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Operation Dinero--have since made a propaganda video
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about this official foray into fraudulent banking. Among
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others it stars Tony Baldry, junior minister.
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Be prepared for more of the same. The nine tons of
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coke should enable the British Foreign Office and the nosy
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DEA to burn the midnight oil for months to come, planning
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other booty-gathering raids and video thrillers. After all, the
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FATF report of 1990 encouraged international banking
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stings like this one. But it isn't just the pseudo-bankers you
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should worry about.
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The Banker as Snitch: the Brave New World
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of Law Enforcement
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One of the precepts of the Church of the Subgenius
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is: *You will pay to know what you really think* [2]. But in
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the world of money-laundering, you will pay your thankless
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banker to turn you in to the government. In 1993 a Federal
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judge in Providence, Rhode Island, issued the longest
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sentence ever given for a non-violent legal offense: he
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sentenced a man to 600 years in prison for money
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laundering. The individual was fingered by his Rhode Island
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bankers, who then cooperated with federal agents in building
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a case against him, even while the same bankers received
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fees for banking services.
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American Express was recently fined $7 million for
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failing to detect money laundering, and agreed to forfeit to
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the U.S. Justice Department another $7 million. As part of
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the settlement, the bank will spend a further $3 million in
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employee education, teaching them recommended
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procedures for spying on customer transactions.
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In a book about banker Edmond Safra [3], author
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Bryan Burrough notes: "To truly defeat money launderers,
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banks must know not only their own customers--by no
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means an easy task--but their customers' customers, and in
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many cases their customers' customers' customers." (p. x).
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And then, as part of an argument clearing Safra's Republic
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National Bank of money laundering charges, Burrough
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recounts how he visited the office of the Financial Crimes
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Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and talked with one of its
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top officials. The official said that, on the contrary, Republic
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had made "some solid suggestions about new ways the
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government could track dirty money" (p. xii).
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Most have still not gotten the message that their
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banker is a spy. They are still stuck in yesterday's world,
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where legislation like the Right to Financial Privacy Act of
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1978 allowed banks, on the one hand, to monitor their own
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records and inform the government when there were
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suspicious transactions in an account. On the other hand, the
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bank was prohibited from identifying either the account
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number or the account's owner. But the Privacy Act was
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effectively gutted by the Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money
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Laundering Act of 1992, which gives protection from civil
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liability to any financial institution, director, officer or
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employee who makes a suspicious transaction report under
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any federal, state or local law. The latter Act essentially
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implies banks can reveal to the government any information
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they want to about their customers, without fear of
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prosecution. [4]
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Money Laundering--What Is It, Anyway?
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There's a specter haunting the international financial
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markets: the specter of crime by nomenclature, by
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theological semantics. To be sure, the faceless piece of
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transaction information that makes money "money"--a useful
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medium of exchange, whereby we exchange everything for
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it, and avoid the direct bartering of wheelbarrows for
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oranges--has been under attack before. The 60s brought us
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"euro"-dollars, and the 70s "petro"-dollars. Now we have
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"narco"-dollars, "terror"-dollars, and (who knows?) maybe
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"kiddie-porn"-dollars. For some of the data bits stored in
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banks' computers comprise "clean" money and others "dirty"
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money, the latter legalistically smitten with original sin.
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As Yoga Berra might say, it's digital voodoo, all over
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again.
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Since the governmental powers that be can't do much
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about drug-dealing or terrorism--if only because they
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themselves are the chief drug dealers and the chief terrorists-
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-they have transferred these and other (often alleged) sins to
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the money supply. And since every dollar is a potential
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"narco" dollar or "terror" dollar, they must track each one as
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best they can [5]. The fact that monetary monitoring has
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done nothing to diminish either drug-dealing or terrorism is
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treated of no importance, because it's all part of a larger
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game. All the players can easily see that this same financial
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tracking yields political side benefits in the form of social
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control and government revenue enhancement.
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Anyone who has studied the evolution of money-
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laundering statutes in the U.S. and elsewhere will realize that
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the "crime" of money laundering boils down to a single,
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basic prohibited act: *Doing something and not telling the
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government about it*. But since the real Big-Brotherly
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motive is a Thing That Cannot Be Named, the laws are
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bogged down in prolix circumlocution, forming a hodge-
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podge of lawyerly fingers inserted here and there into the
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financial channels of the monetary system.
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U.S. legislation includes the Bank Secrecy Act of
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1970, the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984, the
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Money Laundering Control Act of 1986, the Anti-Drug
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Abuse Act of 1988, the Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money
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Laundering Act of 1992, and the Money Laundering
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Suppression Act of 1994. International efforts include the
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UN Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and
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Psychotropic Substances of 1988; the Basle Committee on
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Banking Regulations and Supervisory Practices Statement of
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Principles of December 1988; the Financial Action Task
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Force (FATF) Report of April, 1990 (with its forty
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recommendations for action); the Council of Europe
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Convention on Laundering, Search, Seizure and Confiscation
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of Proceeds of Crime of September 8, 1990; the sixty-one
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recommendations of the Caribbean Drug Money Laundering
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Conference of June, 1990; the agreement on EC legislation
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by the European Community's Ministers for Economy and
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Finance of December 17, 1990; the Organization of
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American States Model Regulations on Crimes Related to
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Laundering of Property and Proceeds Related to Drug
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Trafficking of March 1992; and a tangled bouillabaisse of
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Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs).
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"Most economically motivated criminals always have
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wanted to appear legitimate," says attorney Kirk Munroe.
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"What is new is the criminalization of money laundering.
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The process itself now is a crime separate from the crime that
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produced the money" [6].
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Money laundering is said to be the "process by which
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one conceals the *existence*, illegal source, or illegal
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application of income, and then disguises that income to
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make it appear legitimate" (emphasis added) [7]. Notice the
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word "existence." The sentence could be construed to mean
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that simply disguising the existence of income is money
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laundering. But whatever money laundering is, in practice
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U.S. law purports to detect it through the mandatory
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reporting of cash transactions greater than or equal to a
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threshold amount of US$10,000. For countries in Europe
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the figure ranges from ECU 7,200 to 16,000.
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In the U.S., Section 5313 of the Banking Secrecy Act
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(BSA) requires a Currency Transaction Report (CTR) of
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cash deposits or transactions of $10,000 and above, which is
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IRS Form 4789, and a Currency Transaction Report by
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Casinos (CTRC), which is IRS Form 8362. Section 5316 of
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BSA also requires a Currency or Monetary Instrument
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Report (CMIR) for transport of $10,000 or more of currency
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in or out of the U.S. This is Customs Form 4790. Section
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5314(a) of BSA requires reporting of foreign bank or
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financial accounts whose value exceeds $10,000 at any time
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during the preceding year. This is called a Foreign Bank
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Account Report (FBAR) and is Treasury form TDR 90-22-1.
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Section 60501 of the IRS Code requires the reporting of
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business transactions involving more than $10,000 cash.
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These are reported on IRS Form 8300.
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Suppose you're an arms dealer in trouble and need a
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criminal lawyer. You've violated those pesky ITAR
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restrictions because you carried a copy of PGP on your
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portable computer when you drove over to Matamoros from
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Brownsville for the day, and you forgot to fill out those
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customs forms, and that girl you met said she just *had* to
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set up a secure channel to her cousin who works in Washington,
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D.C., as an undocumented maid for a potential Cabinet
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nominee . . . The lawyer charges a modest $200 an hour, so
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the first month you pay him $7,000 in cash. The next month
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you pay him $4,000 in cash. Under current U.S. law, the
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lawyer is required to report complete information about you,
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including the $11,000 total cash payment, on IRS Form
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8300, and ship it off to the IRS Computing Center in Detroit,
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Michigan, within fifteen days of receiving the second
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payment (which put the total above the reporting threshold).
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Never mind if either you or your lawyer thinks filing such a
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form violates attorney-client privilege, the Sixth Amendment
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right to counsel, or the Fifth Amendment right to be free
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from self-incrimination. For if the report is not made, and
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the IRS finds out about it and penalizes and/or prosecutes
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your lawyer, the courts will most probably back up the IRS.
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[8]
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The scope and arrogance of the money-laundering
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statutes knows no bounds. The Kerry Amendment to the
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Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988 demands that *foreign nations
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must also* require financial institutions to report deposits of
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US$10,000 or greater, and to make this information available
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to US law enforcement. Otherwise the President is directed
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to impose sanctions against non-cooperative countries. [9]
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Having extended the concept of evil to a vaguely
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defined practice called "money laundering," and having put
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in a detection system to help trace it, the laws have
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proceeded to make evasion of the monitoring system evil
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also. This tertiary evil may be found in the practice of
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"smurfing" or "structuring," which is basically any method of
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spreading cash among accounts or across time to avoid the
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$10,000 reporting threshold. Structuring is defined in a 1991
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amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act thusly: "Structure
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(structuring). . . . a person structures a transaction if that
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person, acting alone, or in conjunction with, or on behalf of
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other persons, conducts or attempts to conduct one or more
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transactions in currency in any amount, at one or more
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financial institutions, on one or more days in any manner, for
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the purpose of evading the reporting requirements . . . 'In any
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manner' includes, but is not limited to, the breaking down of
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a single sum of currency exceeding $10,000 into smaller
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sums, including sums at or below $10,000, or the conduct of
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a transaction or series of transactions, including transactions
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at or below $10,000. The transaction or transactions need
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not exceed the $10,000 reporting threshold at any single
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financial institution on any single day in order to constitute
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structuring within the meaning of this definition" [10].
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And what does the government do with the
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information it collects? When your lawyer's Form 8300
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reaches the IRS Computing Center in Detroit, it will be
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entered into the Treasury Financial Data Base (TFDB).
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Similarly, if you cross a U.S. border with more than $10,000
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cash, you will fill out Customs Form 4790. This form will
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be sent off to customs' San Diego Data Center, and it too will
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eventually show up in TFDB. These and other forms will
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now be available on-line in the Treasury Enforcement
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Communications System (TECS II). The TFDB data will
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also be processed through the FinCEN Artificial Intelligence
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(AI) System, which is trained to identify suspicious
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transaction patterns.
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So when you deal in cash, expect to give a note to the
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government, a crumb to the friendly FinCEN AI. But AI has
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a voracious appetite, so the reporting doesn't stop with cash.
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The heart of any modern monetary system is the digital
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transfer of electronic money through the telecommunication
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links among bank computers. Internationally, banks are
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connected by a computer messaging system operated by the
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Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
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Telecommunication (SWIFT). Domestically, banks within a
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country use equivalents of the U.S. clearing systems operated
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by the Federal Reserve (Fedwire) and the Clearing House
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Interbank Payments System (CHIPS). A Federal Reserve
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Policy Statement of December 23, 1992 asks financial
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institutions to include (if possible) complete information on
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the sender and recipient of large payment orders sent through
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Fedwire, CHIPS and SWIFT. "Historically, law enforcement
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efforts to curtail money laundering activities have focused on
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the identification and documentation of currency-based
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transactions; however, recent investigations have focused on
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the use of funds transfer systems," the statement notes.
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The focus on funds transfer brings in the resources of
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the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). The NSA has
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been monitoring civilian communications ever since it
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installed IBM computers at Menwith Hill in the U.K. in the
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early 60s to keep track of international telex messages. NSA
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tentacles are now ensconced not only in transatlantic
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communications, but also in Pacific satellite transmissions,
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the regional Bell System offices, the SWIFT messaging
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system, the CHIPS clearing computers in Manhattan, and
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Fedwire. In addition, a satellite surveillance system picks up
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high frequency transmissions of specially constructed
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computer chips which are activated by certain types of
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transactions-oriented financial software. U.S. agencies are
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not alone in financial monitoring. As a trivial additional
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example, the Council of Europe has recommended Interpol
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be given access to SWIFT to assist in money-laundering
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detection [11].
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PROMIS Land
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When they hear the term "money laundering," many
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automatically think of Miami, London, Hong Kong, or
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Panama City. How about Arkansas? According to what
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Money Laundering Bulletin calls The Greatest Story Never
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Told, an "archive of more than 2000 documents . . . allege
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that western Arkansas was a centre of international drug
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smuggling in the early 1980s--perhaps even the headquarters
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of the biggest drug trafficking operation of all time" [12].
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Perhaps that is why it was in Arkansas that modifications
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were made to the stolen PROMIS software system to enable
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it to spy on banking transactions. For where there are drugs,
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there must be money laundering, or so one can suppose.
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Curiously, however, some of the same set of characters were
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apparently involved on all sides: in drug running, money
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laundering, and also in the theft and modification of the
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PROMIS system. (I will leave it to someone with more
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money, guns, and lawyers than I have to bring that part of the
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story to light, and will not pursue it further here.)
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The PROMIS software was created by the
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Washington, D.C.-based software company Inslaw for a
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single purpose: to track people. It was initially designed for
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the use of federal prosecutors. Want to know who the judge
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was on a particular case? Ask PROMIS. Now want to know
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all the similar cases that same judge has heard? Ask
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PROMIS again. How about all the accused money launderers
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a particular attorney has defended? And so on. But after the
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Justice Department acquired the PROMIS software by
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"trickery, deceit, and fraud," and installed it in most of its
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regional offices, the system was modified and sold to
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foreign intelligence organizations, then modified again and
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sold to banks.
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To see the relationship among these different uses,
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apparently diverse as they may appear, consider the
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following items of information about Joe Blowup who lives
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in Sacramento:
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Item 1: Monday, June 3.
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Master Charge record of
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payment by Joe Blowup for
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lunch at the Cliff House in San
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Francisco.
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Item 2: Wednesday, June 5.
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Motor vehicle records
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show an automobile registered
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to Joe Blowup is involved in a
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minor accident in Barstow.
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Item 3: Saturday, June 8.
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Check for $3,000 made out
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to Pierre "C-4" Plastique is
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deposited in Pierre's account in
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Glendale Federal Savings, and
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clears against Joe Blowup's
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First Interstate account in
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Sacramento on Tuesday, June 11.
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Who might be interested in this computer-sorted
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chronology?
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Firstly, anyone wanting to track Joe Blowup's
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movements. He was in San Francisco on Monday and in
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Barstow on Wednesday. The sequence also generates
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obvious questions for further investigation. Did he meet
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Jacque in Barstow and give him the check there, or did he
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drive on to Los Angeles? What is the check payment for?
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And who did Joe Blowup have lunch with in San Francisco?
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In order to generate relevant questions like these, federal
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agents, spies, and other detectives all want a copy of this neat
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software.
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Secondly, banks and other financial institutions.
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Notice that, in fact, most of the information is financial.
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That's because financial institutions keep carefully detailed
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transaction records, and over the years they've become
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increasingly sophisticated in doing so. There is nothing
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nefarious in this per se. If I go to a bank to get a loan, the
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bank has a right to make an evaluation as to whether I will
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repay it. They are principally concerned with 1) ability to
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pay, and 2) willingness to pay--and to make this evaluation,
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they rely on current and historical information. In the
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example here, none of the items is of interest to banks,
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unless that accident in Barstow created a financial liability
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which would affect Joe Blowup's ability to repay other loans.
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But if the (modified) PROMIS software organizes banking
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transactions in a nice way, then banks want a copy of it also.
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Thirdly, tax authorities. Do Joe Blowup's financial
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records indicate a pattern of rather more income than he has
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been reporting? Or, in the case of doubt (and this is the fun
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part), is there a record of assets the IRS can seize in the
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meantime? The IRS wants a copy of the software so they
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can better understand Joe Blowup's--and your--spending
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patterns, even though present IRS files already put private
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credit bureaus like TRW and Equifax to shame.
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In the decade of the 1980s, intelligence organizations
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around the world salivated over the ability of the PROMIS
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software to track terrorists, spies, political opponents, and
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attractive models. Aside from distribution to almost all the
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U.S. three-letter agencies, PROMIS was sold to intelligence
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organizations in Canada, Israel, Singapore, Iraq, Egypt,
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and Jordan among others. In addition, the DEA, through its
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proprietary company, Eurame Trading Company Ltd. in
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Nicosia, Cyprus, is said to have sold PROMIS to drug
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warrior agencies in Cyprus, Pakistan, Syria, Kuwait, and
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Turkey. PROMIS was also converted for use by the British
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Navy in connection with its nuclear submarine intelligence
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data base. [13]
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But there was more to these sales than the simple
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desire of the cronies of Ed Meese and Hillary Clinton to
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make a fast buck, important as the latter motive may be. The
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sale was itself an intelligence operation. As former Attorney
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General Elliot Richardson noted, "One important motive for
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the theft of Enhanced PROMIS may have been to use it as a
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means of penetrating the intelligence and law enforcement
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agencies of other governments. The first step in this scheme
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was the sale to the foreign government of a computer into
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which had been inserted a microchip capable of transmitting
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to a U.S. surveillance system the electronic signals emitted
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by the computer when in use. Enhanced PROMIS has
|
|
capabilities that make it ideally suited to tracking the
|
|
activities of a spy network. Several INSLAW informants
|
|
formerly affiliated with United States and Israeli intelligence
|
|
agencies claim that both the United States and Israel have
|
|
relied on 'cutout' companies to provide ongoing support for
|
|
the PROMIS software" [14]. Of course, what can be done
|
|
with foreign intelligence computers can also be done with
|
|
banking computers, and at least one of these "cutout
|
|
companies" is a major provider of banking software. [15]
|
|
|
|
The Gathering Storm
|
|
|
|
All of these efforts--the legal reporting mechanisms,
|
|
the spying by bankers, and the supplementary activities of
|
|
organizations like FinCEN, NSA and Interpol--fly in the face
|
|
of a contrary technological and social development:
|
|
*anonymous digital cash made possible by advances in
|
|
cryptology*.
|
|
|
|
The principal opponents of any contemplated system
|
|
of encrypted digital cash are the money-laundering laws and
|
|
the Leviathan that feeds off them. The edicts against money-
|
|
laundering represent a broader attempt to make all financial
|
|
transactions transparent, while the aim of anonymous digital
|
|
cash is to keep financial activities private. People-monitoring
|
|
systems such as those utilizing PROMIS track individuals by
|
|
the electronic trails they leave throughout the financial
|
|
system. But anonymous digital cash is specifically designed
|
|
to make such tracks virtually invisible.
|
|
|
|
Money laundering, Barry A. K. Rider frankly offers
|
|
as a definition, "amounts to a process which obscures the
|
|
origin of money and its source" [16]. On that basis, the
|
|
pursuit of anonymity in financial transactions *is* money
|
|
laundering.
|
|
|
|
At the beginning of the 90s, money laundering was
|
|
an offense in only four states of the (then) twelve members
|
|
of the European Union. Now all twelve have a law making it
|
|
a crime. In a scramble to justify continued large budgets,
|
|
intelligence organizations have hopped on the anti-money-
|
|
laundering bandwagon. The U.K. intelligence service MI5,
|
|
in an attempt "to justify its existence after reviewing its
|
|
future in the light of a probable reduction in counter-terrorist
|
|
operations in Northern Ireland," has been "pressing for a
|
|
change in the law which would see it involved in countering
|
|
drug-trafficking, money laundering, computer hacking,
|
|
nuclear proliferation and animal rights groups--a far cry, say
|
|
police, from its original remit to 'protect national security' "
|
|
[17]. Even accountants are getting in on the act. The
|
|
Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia has issued "a
|
|
set of guidelines on money laundering, including a
|
|
recommendation that client confidentiality take second place
|
|
to public interest if an accountant suspects laundering is
|
|
occurring" [18].
|
|
|
|
So the coming battle over financial footprints is
|
|
inevitable, and perhaps inevitably bloody. But in the end it
|
|
is the money-laundering regulations that will have to go.
|
|
Firstly, advances in the technology of anonymity are putting
|
|
financial privacy within the reach of everyone. Secondly,
|
|
there is a growing awareness that the existing laundering
|
|
statutes have little or no effect on terrorism or drug dealing,
|
|
but instead are related to an upswing in government-
|
|
sponsored harassment of targeted political groups.
|
|
|
|
Electronic Finance 101
|
|
|
|
Many of the basic features of electronic cash--
|
|
variously referred to as "ecash", "digital cash", "digital
|
|
money", and so on--may sound novel to those unfamiliar
|
|
with the financial markets. But much of the financial system
|
|
is already on an electronic basis, and has been so for years.
|
|
|
|
To see why, consider the foreign exchange market
|
|
[19]. This is a largely interbank market for trading the
|
|
currency of one country for the currency of another: dollars
|
|
for pounds, dollars for yen, and so on. But if I, as an
|
|
interbank trader, sell U.S. dollars for British pounds, what
|
|
are the actual logistics of the transfer? Consider the problems
|
|
that would be imposed by a cash-based market. The standard
|
|
transaction size in the foreign exchange market is an amount
|
|
of currency equivalent to US $1 million. A US $20 bill
|
|
weighs about 1 gram. So, if transacted in cash, the
|
|
$1,000,000 (50,000 bills) would weight approximately 50
|
|
kilograms or 110 pounds. Imagine the cost involved in such
|
|
a transaction if in order to sell dollars for pounds I had to fill
|
|
up a suitcase with $20 bills, lug the 110-pound suitcase to a
|
|
Manhattan taxi, take a long ride to Kennedy Airport, fill out
|
|
a CMIR form and check my baggage, arrive at Heathrow
|
|
seven hours later, retrieve my baggage, go through customs,
|
|
and catch a cab to the appropriate British bank in central
|
|
London. Once there I would pick up the equivalent in
|
|
pounds sterling and reverse the whole process.
|
|
|
|
There's a problem with this scenario: *transactions
|
|
costs*. Anyone trying to change dollars into pounds will go
|
|
to some other bank where he doesn't have to pay for my
|
|
plane tickets and cab fares, not to mention my courier salary
|
|
and that lunch I had at the Savoy before I headed back to
|
|
New York.
|
|
|
|
(In the present markets for cocaine and heroin it is
|
|
hard to reduce transactions costs, because the weight of the
|
|
drugs is less than the weight of the cash proceeds. In the
|
|
early 80s, cash bills were actually loaded into suitcases and
|
|
moved around. To save time and money, however, the cash
|
|
wasn't counted. After a spot check of bills for denomination
|
|
and authenticity, the suitcases were simply *weighed* to
|
|
determined the total value. This measurement was accurate
|
|
to within a few dollars--close enough. But foreign exchange
|
|
trading isn't illegal and doesn't, and can't, happen this way.)
|
|
|
|
To see how international money transfers really
|
|
work, consider the case of a Greek immigrant, who has
|
|
opened a restaurant in Boston, has made a little money, and
|
|
wants to send some cash to the folks back home. In earlier
|
|
days he probably would have gone down to the Western
|
|
Union office and handed the attendant cash to "wire" to his
|
|
mother in Athens. The Western Union office in Boston
|
|
would put the cash in its safe, or perhaps deposit it in a
|
|
Boston bank, and would meanwhile send a message to the
|
|
Athens office: "Give so-and-so X dollars" (or, more likely,
|
|
"Y drachmas"). That is, the cash received was not the same
|
|
as the cash sent. All that was sent was a message. But no
|
|
one cared, because cash itself is *fungible*: the dollar that
|
|
is taken out is interchangeable with, but not the same as, the
|
|
dollar that was put in. The bills are also not *registered*:
|
|
no particular name is associated with any particular serial
|
|
number.
|
|
|
|
In this example, bills were put into the safe at one end
|
|
of the transaction, and different bills were taken out at the
|
|
other. Consider now a slight modification to this scenario:
|
|
Eurobond trading. Eurobonds are generally placed in the
|
|
depository systems operated by Euroclear in Brussels or
|
|
Cedel in Luxembourg. Once bonds are in the vault, they
|
|
generally stay there, because of transactions costs. If a trader
|
|
in Frankfurt sells a GM eurobond with a coupon of 7 1/8
|
|
percent and maturing in 2012 to a trader in London, they
|
|
both send messages to Euroclear. Euroclear compares the
|
|
two set of instructions, checks the cash balance of the
|
|
London trader, then switches the computer label of
|
|
ownership of the bond to the London trader, and the
|
|
ownership of the requisite cash to the Frankfurt trader.
|
|
Again, however, the bonds are not registered, and are
|
|
fungible within the parameters of a particular issue. There
|
|
may be several thousand GM eurobonds with a coupon of 7
|
|
1/8 percent and maturing in 2012, and the London trader
|
|
owns one of them, but his ownership is not attached to a
|
|
particular bond serial number. [20]
|
|
|
|
This is pretty much the way the foreign exchange
|
|
market works. If a New York bank deals dollars for
|
|
deutschemarks with a London bank, they send each other
|
|
confirmations through SWIFT. Then the New York bank
|
|
will turn over a dollar deposit in New York to the London
|
|
bank, while the London bank will turn over a deutschemark
|
|
deposit in Frankfurt to the New York bank. The Frankfurt
|
|
bank simply switches the name of the owner of the
|
|
deutschemarks from the London bank to the New York bank.
|
|
The New York bank now owns X-number of fungible,
|
|
unregistered (but completely traceable) deutschemarks at the
|
|
Frankfurt bank.
|
|
|
|
"I remember my shock when I learned that the fastest
|
|
way for two banks in Hong Kong to settle a dollar
|
|
transaction was to wire the money from Hong Kong to New
|
|
York and back again," said Manhattan assistant district
|
|
attorney John Moscow [21]. He was shocked because he
|
|
didn't understand how the process works. The "wired"
|
|
dollars were sitting in New York all along as numbers in a
|
|
bank computer, originally labeled as owned by the first Hong
|
|
Kong bank. After the transaction is completed, they are still
|
|
in the same place, but labeled as owned by the second Hong
|
|
Kong bank. There is nothing mysterious about this at all.
|
|
|
|
Now let's modify the basic scenario again: Yankee
|
|
bond trading. Yankee bonds are dollar-denominated bonds
|
|
issued by non-U.S. citizens in the U.S. bond market. Yankee
|
|
bonds are registered. If you buy a bond, your name is
|
|
attached to a particular bond with a particular serial number.
|
|
If someone steals the bond, he will not be able to receive
|
|
interest or principal, because his name is not attached to the
|
|
bond serial number. So when Yankee bonds are traded, the
|
|
seller's name is removed from the serial number of the bond
|
|
being sold, and the buyer's name is attached.
|
|
|
|
To this point we have talked about things that
|
|
potentially exist in physical form. I can take a bond out of
|
|
the vault, or I can cash in my electronic deutschemarks for
|
|
printed bills. The final modification to these various
|
|
scenarios is to get rid of the physical paper entirely. Such
|
|
purely electronic creatures already exist: U.S. Treasury bills-
|
|
-short-term debt instruments issued by the U.S. government.
|
|
You buy, for example, a $10,000 T-bill at a discount, and it
|
|
pays $10,000 at maturity. But you don't see printed T-bill
|
|
certificates, because there aren't any. T-bills are electronic
|
|
entries in the books of the Federal Reserve System. You can
|
|
trade your T-bill to someone else by having the Fed change
|
|
the name of the owner, but you can't stuff one in your pocket.
|
|
You can "wire" your T-bill from one bank to another,
|
|
because the "wire" is just a message that tells the Federal
|
|
Reserve bank to switch the name of the owner from one
|
|
commercial bank to another.
|
|
|
|
Smart and Not-So-Smart Cards
|
|
|
|
In the previous section we saw that most of the
|
|
financial system is already on an electronic basis. And we
|
|
understand that "wiring" money doesn't at all correspond to
|
|
the mental image of stuffing bills down an electrical wire or
|
|
phone line. To bring this story closer to home, let's consider
|
|
how most of us use a computer and a modem on a daily basis
|
|
to make financial transactions. Even if we don't own a
|
|
computer. Or a modem. Let's talk about smart and dumb
|
|
cards--ATM cards, credit cards, phone cards, and much
|
|
more.
|
|
|
|
Some "smart cards" have microprocessors and are
|
|
actually smart (and relatively expensive). They are really
|
|
computers, but missing a keyboard, video screen, and power
|
|
supply. Others, such as *laser optical* cards and *magnetic
|
|
stripe* cards, are chipless and only semi-smart.
|
|
|
|
Laser optical cards are popular in Japan, and can hold
|
|
up to 4 megabytes of data--enough for your tax and medical
|
|
files and extensive genealogical information besides. The
|
|
cards are a sandwich, usually a highly reflective layer on top
|
|
of a nonreflective layer. A laser beam is used to punch holes
|
|
through the reflective layer, exposing the nonreflective layer
|
|
underneath. The presence or absence of holes represents bits
|
|
of information. A much weaker laser beam is then used to
|
|
read the card data. You can later mark a file of information
|
|
as deleted, or turn it into gibberish, but you can't reuse the
|
|
area on the card.
|
|
|
|
Magnetic stripe cards, popular everywhere, doesn't
|
|
hold much information. An ATM card is one example. Data
|
|
is recorded on the magnetic stripe on the back of the card
|
|
similar to the way an audio tape is recorded. There are three
|
|
tracks--the first of which is reserved for airline ticketing [22].
|
|
This track holds up to 79 alphanumeric characters including
|
|
your name and personal account number (PAN). The ATM
|
|
doesn't actually use the first track for transactions, but it may
|
|
read off your name, as when it says, "Thank you, Joe
|
|
Blowup, for allowing me to serve you." The second track
|
|
contains up to 40 numerical digits, of which the first 19 are
|
|
reserved for your PAN, which is followed by the expiration
|
|
date. The third track will hold 107 numerical digits, starting
|
|
again with your PAN, and perhaps information related to
|
|
your PIN (personal identification number, or "secret
|
|
password"), along with other information, all of which
|
|
potentially gets rewritten every time the track is used.
|
|
|
|
The ATM machine into which you insert your card is
|
|
itself a computer. The ATM typically has both hard and
|
|
floppy drives, a PC mother-board which contains the
|
|
microprocessor, and a power supply--as well as drawers for
|
|
deposits, cash, and swallowed cards. If the ATM is "on-line"
|
|
(i.e. one that is connected to a distant central bank computer,
|
|
which makes all the real decisions), then it also has a modem
|
|
to communicate over phone lines with the central computer.
|
|
When you make a request for cash, the ATM machine
|
|
compares your password to the one you entered. If they are
|
|
the same, it then takes your request and your PAN, encrypts
|
|
(hopefully) the information, and sends it on to the central
|
|
computer. The central computer decrypts the message, looks
|
|
at your account information, and sends an encrypted message
|
|
back to the ATM, telling it to dispense money, refuse the
|
|
transaction, or eat your card.
|
|
|
|
In between the ATM and the authorizing bank is
|
|
usually a controller, which services several ATMs. The
|
|
controller monitors the transaction, and routes the message
|
|
to the correct authorization processor (bank computer).
|
|
Some transactions, for example, will involve banks in
|
|
different ATM networks, and the transaction will have to be
|
|
transferred to a different network for approval. The
|
|
controller would also generally monitor the status of the
|
|
different physical devices in the ATM--to see that they are
|
|
operating properly and that the ATM is not being
|
|
burglarized.
|
|
|
|
Consider some of the security problems in this
|
|
framework. The first duty of the local ATM is to verify
|
|
you've entered the correct PIN. A typical way of doing this is
|
|
to recreate your PIN from your card information and then to
|
|
compare it to the one you entered.
|
|
|
|
Here is a general example of how PINs are created
|
|
(there are many variations). The bank first chooses a secret
|
|
16-digit "PIN key" (PKEY). This key will be stored in the
|
|
ATM's hardware. The PKEY is then used as a DES-
|
|
encryption key to encrypt 16-digits of your account number,
|
|
which the ATM reads off your card. The result of the
|
|
encryption is a 16-digit hexadecimal (base 16) number.
|
|
Hexadecimal numbers uses the digits 0 to 9 and also the
|
|
letters A to F (the latter standing for the decimal numbers 10
|
|
to 15). Next a table is used to turn the 16-digit hexadecimal
|
|
number back into a 16-digit decimal number [23]. The first
|
|
four numbers of the resulting 16-digit number are the
|
|
"natural PIN". (If you are allowed to choose your own PIN,
|
|
a four digit "offset" number is created, and stored on the
|
|
third track of your ATM card. This offset will be added to
|
|
the natural PIN before it is compared to the one you entered
|
|
at the ATM keyboard.)
|
|
|
|
Since this comparison between the natural and
|
|
entered PIN is done locally in the ATM hardware, the
|
|
customer's PIN is not transmitted over phone lines. This
|
|
makes the process relatively more secure, assuming no one
|
|
knows the PKEY. But if an evil programmer knows the
|
|
PKEY, he can create a valid PIN from any customer's
|
|
account number. (Customer account numbers can be found
|
|
by the hundreds on discarded transaction slips in the trash
|
|
bin.) He can easily and quickly loot the ATM of its cash
|
|
contents.
|
|
|
|
The security problems worsen when the ATM gets a
|
|
"foreign" card. A foreign card is essentially any card from
|
|
any bank other than the one that runs the ATM. The local
|
|
ATM does not know the PKEYs of these other banks, so the
|
|
PIN which is entered at the ATM must be passed on to a
|
|
bank that can authorize the transaction. In this process, the
|
|
account number and PIN will be encrypted with a
|
|
communication key (COMKEY), and then passed from the
|
|
ATM to the ATM controller. Next the account number and
|
|
PIN will be decrypted at the controller, and then re-encrypted
|
|
with a network key (NETKEY) and sent on to the proper
|
|
bank.
|
|
|
|
Foreign PINs give the evil programmer three
|
|
additional possibilities for defeating security. The first way
|
|
is to get hold of the COMKEY. He then taps the line
|
|
between the ATM and the controller, and siphons off
|
|
account number/PIN pairs. A second possibility is to get
|
|
access to the controller, because the account number/PIN
|
|
pairs may be temporarily in the clear between encryptions.
|
|
The third possibility is to obtain the NETKEY, and tap the
|
|
line between the controller and the foreign network. [24]
|
|
|
|
The COMKEY and NETKEY are generally
|
|
transmitted over phone lines, so the chances of acquiring
|
|
them are pretty good. These two encryption keys are
|
|
themselves usually transmitted in an encrypted form, *but the
|
|
keys used to encrypt them are sometimes sent in the clear*.
|
|
Thus while banks are generally somewhat careful with their
|
|
own customers, they are often quite helpful in giving rip-off
|
|
artists access to the customers of other banks. The evil
|
|
programmer simply reads off the encryption keys, uses them
|
|
to decrypt the COMKEY and NETKEY, which are in turn
|
|
used to decrypt account numbers and PINs.
|
|
|
|
The way to solve these security problems is to use
|
|
smart cards and public key cryptography. Banks can transmit
|
|
their public keys in the open without worrying about evil
|
|
wire-tapping programmers. Customer messages encrypted
|
|
with a bank's public key can only be decrypted with the
|
|
bank's private (secret) key. Digital cash issued by the bank
|
|
can be signed with the bank's private key, and anyone will be
|
|
able to check that the cash is authentic by using the bank's
|
|
public key. In addition, the bank will not be able to
|
|
repudiate cash signed in this way, because only the bank had
|
|
access to its own secret key. Communications between ATM
|
|
machines and bank computers can also take place with
|
|
randomly-generated encryption keys that can be determined
|
|
by each of the two parties, but which cannot be discovered
|
|
by someone who listens in on both sides of the traffic. [25]
|
|
|
|
Are Smart Cards the Mark of the Beast?
|
|
|
|
Besides optical and magnetic stripe cards, there are
|
|
two types of "chip" cards. Chip cards are basically any cards
|
|
with electronic circuits embedded in the plastic. One type of
|
|
chip card, called a memory (or "wired logic") card, doesn't
|
|
have a microprocessor and isn't any smarter than the cards
|
|
we discussed previously. Prepaid phone cards are of this
|
|
type. They may have about 1K of memory, and can execute
|
|
a set of instructions, but can't be reprogrammed.
|
|
|
|
Then there are the truly smart cards that have a
|
|
microprocessor and several kilobytes of rewritable memory.
|
|
Smart cards allow for greatly increased security, since access
|
|
to their data is controlled by the internal microprocessor.
|
|
And there can be built-in encryption algorithms. This
|
|
versatility has made smart cards controversial.
|
|
|
|
The negative reputation arises from certain cases
|
|
where smart cards were imposed by force, as well as from
|
|
smart-card storage of biometric data. The use of smart cards
|
|
became a prerequisite for Marines to receive paychecks at
|
|
Parris Island, S.C. Finger-print based smart-card ID systems
|
|
were implemented by the Los Angeles Department of Public
|
|
Social Services and the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
|
|
Service. The "Childhood Immunization" bill, introduced by
|
|
Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA), would have tracked vaccination
|
|
of all children under six years of age, together with at least
|
|
one parent, across geographical areas through smart cards
|
|
Access control at the U.S. Department of Energy Hanford
|
|
Site requires smart card badges which store the cardholder's
|
|
hand geometry. Security access through retinal scan patterns
|
|
stored in smart card memory have been tested at the Sandia
|
|
National Laboratory.
|
|
|
|
Visa recently announced plans for creating an
|
|
"electronic purse." The purse would be a reloadable spending
|
|
card. You would charge the card up at an ATM machine,
|
|
where it would suck some cash value out of your account,
|
|
and store it in memory. You would then use the card instead
|
|
of cash to make small purchases. Visa is attracted by the
|
|
estimate that consumer cash transactions in the U.S. are
|
|
about five times the size of bank-assisted transactions (those
|
|
that use checks, credit cards, and debit cards). Visa has been
|
|
joined in this endeavor by a consortium that includes
|
|
VeriFone, the leading supplier of point-of-sale transaction
|
|
systems, and Gemplus, the leading manufacturer of smart
|
|
cards.
|
|
|
|
There may be increased security in the use of an
|
|
electronic purse, but it is not clear how replenishing one's
|
|
card balance at an ATM is any more convenient for the user
|
|
than getting cash at an ATM. Since Visa is not advertising
|
|
the privacy aspects of electronic purse payments, one must
|
|
assume this feature was omitted in the planning. Hence a
|
|
cynic could conclude that the "electronic purse" is little more
|
|
than a Rube Goldberg device which, by substituting for cash,
|
|
will create a better set of PROMIS-type transaction records.
|
|
|
|
These and other examples suggest possible uses of
|
|
smart cards for more general surveillance and social control.
|
|
The truly paranoid envision the use of a single smart card for
|
|
every financial transaction, medical visit, and telephone call.
|
|
This information would be sent directly to a common
|
|
PROMIS-like data base, which would constitute a record of
|
|
all your activities. In addition, "your card could be
|
|
programmed to transmit its identification code whenever you
|
|
use it. So you (or your card, anyway) could be instantly
|
|
located anywhere on earth via the satellite-based Global
|
|
Positioning System" [26].
|
|
|
|
But smart cards don't have to be used this way.
|
|
Recall that mainframe computers once appeared destined to
|
|
turn the average citizen into Organization Man, a creature to
|
|
be folded, spindled and mutilated in lieu of IBM's punched
|
|
cards. The advent of the personal computer, however,
|
|
showed the same technology could be a tool of individual
|
|
freedom and creativity.
|
|
|
|
There is nothing intrinsically evil in storing a great
|
|
deal of information about ourselves, our finances, and our
|
|
current and future plans. That is, after all, exactly why some
|
|
of us carry around portable computers. But in this case the
|
|
use of the computer is voluntary, and we ourselves control
|
|
both access to, and the content of, the information. The same
|
|
principle applies to smart cards. It is smart cards more than
|
|
any other aspect of banking technology, I believe, that will
|
|
allow for financial privacy through cryptology, for
|
|
anonymous and secure digital cash transactions. It's simply a
|
|
matter of taking control of the technology and using it to
|
|
enhance personal freedom.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Electronic Cash the Way It Ought To Be
|
|
|
|
Suppose we had it our way. Suppose we sat down to
|
|
create digital cash that had all the right properties. What
|
|
would these be? Think of the attractive properties of
|
|
currency--physical cash. [27]
|
|
|
|
1) Physical cash is a portable medium of exchange.
|
|
You carry it in your pocket to give to people when you make
|
|
purchases. The digital equivalent of this process could be
|
|
provided by smart cards, which would have the mobility of
|
|
physical cash and even improve on it. The weight of
|
|
$1,000,000 in digital money is the same as the weight of $1.
|
|
|
|
2) You would want the ability to make digital cash
|
|
payments off-line, just like you can with physical cash. A
|
|
communication link between every store you shop at and
|
|
your bank's authorization computer shouldn't be required.
|
|
Moreover, if digital cash is to have all the desirable qualities
|
|
of physical cash, you should be able to transfer digital cash
|
|
directly to another smart-card-carrying individual. Smart
|
|
cards that could connect directly to other smart cards would
|
|
be ideal in this respect, and would represent an improvement
|
|
over physical cash. Even if everyone observed two smart
|
|
cards communicating, they would have no way of knowing
|
|
whether the transaction involved $5 or $50,000. There
|
|
would be no need to slide money under the table.
|
|
|
|
3) Digital cash should be independent of physical
|
|
location--available everywhere and capable of being
|
|
transferred through computer and other telecommunication
|
|
channels. So we want a smart card that can jack into the
|
|
communication nodes of the global information network.
|
|
One should be able to pop into a phone booth to make or
|
|
receive payments.
|
|
|
|
4) Got change for a dollar for the quarter slots in the
|
|
pool table? Just as we "make change" or divide physical
|
|
currency into subunits, so should electronic cash be divisible.
|
|
Is this a problem? Hmm. Electronic calculators can perform
|
|
an operation know as division, and so can third-graders. So
|
|
smart cards ought to be able to handle this also, even if it
|
|
presents a few difficulties for theoretical cryptology.
|
|
|
|
5) To be secure against crooks and rip-off artists,
|
|
digital cash should be designed in such a way that it can't be
|
|
forged or reused. We wouldn't want people spending the
|
|
same money twice, or acting as their own mini-Federal
|
|
Reserve Systems and creating money from nothing. This
|
|
cryptological problem is different between on-line and off-
|
|
line cash systems. In on-line systems the bank simply checks
|
|
whether a piece of cash has been spent before.
|
|
|
|
Proposed off-line systems rely on a framework
|
|
developed by David Chaum. Chaum has been the preeminent
|
|
cryptological researcher in the field of digital cash [28]. In
|
|
his framework for off-line systems, one can double-spend the
|
|
same piece of digital cash only by losing one's anonymity.
|
|
This has considerable value, because the bank or the person
|
|
defrauded, knowing the identity of the devious double-
|
|
spender, can send out a collection agent.
|
|
|
|
But I consider this way of enforcing the "no double-
|
|
spending" rule a serious flaw in Chaum's framework.
|
|
Catching thieves and rip-off artists is not the comparative
|
|
advantage of either banks or the average citizen. (Banks are
|
|
usually only good at providing transactions services, and
|
|
charging interest and fees.) Would you really want to see,
|
|
say, The First Subterranean Bank of Anonymous Digital
|
|
Cash merge with the Wackenhut Corporation? Luckily,
|
|
however, there are alternative approaches that will prevent
|
|
double-spending from ever taking place [29].
|
|
|
|
6) The most important requirement for individual
|
|
freedom and privacy is that digital cash transactions should
|
|
be untraceable, yet at the same time enable you to prove
|
|
unequivocally whether you made a particular payment.
|
|
Untraceable transactions would make impossible a PROMIS-
|
|
type data sorting of all your financial activities. In Joe
|
|
Blowup's financial chronology, discussed previously, you
|
|
wouldn't be able to connect Joe Blowup's name to any of his
|
|
purchases. Similarly, no one would know about the money
|
|
you wired to Lichtenstein, your purchase of Scientology e-
|
|
meters and the banned works of Maimonides, or your
|
|
frequent visits to the Mustang Ranch. Privacy-protected off-
|
|
line cash systems can be made nearly as efficient as similar
|
|
systems that don't offer privacy.
|
|
|
|
Parallel Money Systems
|
|
|
|
To set up a digital cash service meeting these
|
|
requirements, you would need to buy the rights to use patents
|
|
held by David Chaum and RSA, or equivalent rights, and
|
|
then set up a bank to issue accounts and smart cards in a
|
|
legal jurisdiction where the service won't run foul of the local
|
|
banking and money-laundering laws. Of course, in many
|
|
other countries the money-laundering statutes will be quickly
|
|
amended in an attempt to apply the same reporting
|
|
requirements to anonymous digital cash transactions as
|
|
currently apply to currency transactions. Such laws will
|
|
probably generate little compliance. [30] Since the
|
|
transactions in question are unconditionally untraceable,
|
|
there won't be any evidence of wrong-doing.
|
|
|
|
The system of anonymous digital cash will arise as a
|
|
parallel system to the existing one of ordinary money.
|
|
Therefore there will be a record of the initial entry into the
|
|
anonymous system. For example, you might write a $10,000
|
|
check drawn on Citibank to The First Subterranean Bank of
|
|
Anonymous Digital Cash. This check will be recorded, but
|
|
no subsequent transactions will be traceable, unless you
|
|
make transfers back out into the ordinary banking world.
|
|
Over time, as more people begin to use the anonymous cash
|
|
system, some wages will be paid in anonymous digital cash.
|
|
This will enable all income transactions, as well as
|
|
expenditures, to take place entirely outside the ordinary
|
|
monetary system.
|
|
|
|
Since the anonymous cash system will exist parallel
|
|
to the existing system, a floating exchange rate will be
|
|
created by market transactions between ordinary money and
|
|
anonymous money. Think, by analogy, of a currency board.
|
|
Such a board issues domestic currency through the purchase
|
|
of foreign "hard" currencies. In the same way, anonymous
|
|
digital cash will be issued through the purchase of ordinary
|
|
cash or bank deposits. That is, when you make a deposit at
|
|
The First Subterranean Bank of Anonymous Digital Cash,
|
|
First Subterranean will issue you an anonymous digital cash
|
|
account, and will in turn acquire ownership of the ordinary
|
|
money. The exchange ratio will not necessarily be one-for-
|
|
one. Anonymous digital cash that does not meet some of the
|
|
ease-of-use requirements listed previously may exchange for
|
|
less than 1 ordinary dollar. On the other hand, digital cash
|
|
that meets all those requirements will trade at a premium,
|
|
because anonymous digital cash has enhanced privacy
|
|
aspects. Money launderers, for example, currently get about
|
|
20 percent of the value of money that is made anonymous.
|
|
That represents an exchange rate of 1.25 "dirty" dollars for
|
|
one "clean" dollar. The market will similarly determine the
|
|
exchange ratio between ordinary and anonymous digital
|
|
money.
|
|
|
|
In the 1960s various tax and regulatory burdens, and
|
|
political risk considerations, gave rise to a new international
|
|
money market, the eurodollar market, which was created
|
|
specifically to get around these regulatory and political road-
|
|
blocks [31]. When a junior staff member of the Council of
|
|
Economic Advisors named Hendrik Houthakker discovered
|
|
the eurodollar market's existence, he thought it was an
|
|
important development, and recommended that some
|
|
discussion of it be included in the annual Economic Report of
|
|
the President. "No, we don't want to draw attention to it," he
|
|
was told. When Houthakker himself later became a member
|
|
of the Council under Nixon, he made sure the Report
|
|
included a discussion of the euromarkets. But it was only
|
|
much later, in the mid-70s, that the Report said, in a burst of
|
|
honesty: "The emergence and growth of the Eurodollar
|
|
market may be viewed as a classic example of free market
|
|
forces at work, overcoming obstacles created by regulations,
|
|
and responding to market incentives to accommodate various
|
|
needs" [32].
|
|
|
|
In a similar way it will be said in some future Report,
|
|
that "the emergence and growth of anonymous digital cash
|
|
may be viewed as a classic example of free market forces at
|
|
work, overcoming obstacles created by surveillance
|
|
technologies and money-laundering regulations, and
|
|
responding to market incentives to accommodate the public's
|
|
need for financial privacy."
|
|
|
|
|
|
[Part III: The Technology of Anonymous Digital Cash]
|
|
|
|
[Don't inquire about this article for a few months. If you
|
|
don't want to see any mathematics, don't inquire at all.]
|
|
|
|
Footnotes
|
|
|
|
[1] Quoted in Money Laundering Bulletin, January 1995, p.
|
|
3.
|
|
|
|
[2] Some may view this as a trade secret of the Church of the
|
|
Subgenius, so let me cite two sources of publicly available
|
|
information. Firstly, I heard it in a sermon by David Meyer,
|
|
Pope of All New York, at the Kennel Club in Philadelphia in
|
|
the fall of 1985. Secondly, it is similarly proclaimed in
|
|
Subgenius Recruitment Tape #16, which may be rented from
|
|
Kim's Video in the East Village of Manhattan.
|
|
|
|
[3] Bryan Burrough, Vendetta: American Express and the
|
|
Smearing of Edmond Safra, HarperCollins, New York, 1992.
|
|
|
|
[4] Sec. 1517 (c) states: "Any financial institution that
|
|
makes a disclosure of any possible violation of law or
|
|
regulation or a disclosure pursuant to this subsection or any
|
|
other authority, and any director, officer, employee, or agent
|
|
of such institution, shall not be liable to any person under
|
|
any law or regulation of the United States or any
|
|
constitution, law, or regulation of any State or political
|
|
subdivision thereof, for such disclosure or for any failure to
|
|
notify the person involved in the transaction or any other
|
|
person of such disclosure."
|
|
|
|
[5] "A completely cashless economy *where all transactions
|
|
were registered* would create enormous problems for the
|
|
money launderers" (emphasis added), Report of the
|
|
Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering, Paris,
|
|
February 7, 1990.
|
|
|
|
[6] Kirk W. Munroe, "Money Laundering: the Latest
|
|
Darling of the Prosecutor's Nursery," law firm of Richey,
|
|
Munroe & Rodriguez, P.A., Miami, FL, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[7] President's Commission on Organized Crime, The Cash
|
|
Connection: Organized Crime, Financial Institutions, and
|
|
Money Laundering, U.S. Government Printing Office,
|
|
October 1984. This definition is certainly more coherent
|
|
than Michael Sindona's circular statement that "laundering
|
|
money is to switch the black money or dirty money . . . to
|
|
clean money."
|
|
|
|
The U.S. definition of money laundering is found in 18
|
|
U.S.C. 1956, which was enacted in 1986, and strengthened
|
|
in 1988, 1990, and 1992. It sets out three categories of
|
|
offenses: transaction offenses, transportation offenses, and
|
|
"sting" offenses.
|
|
|
|
Transaction Offenses: It is a money laundering transaction
|
|
crime for any person to conduct, or to attempt to conduct, a
|
|
financial transaction which, in fact, involves the proceeds of
|
|
specified unlawful activity, knowing that the property
|
|
involved in the transaction represents the proceeds of some
|
|
crime, and, while engaging in the transaction, with either a)
|
|
the intent to promote the carrying on of the specified
|
|
unlawful activity, or b) the intent to commit certain tax
|
|
crimes, or with the knowledge that the transaction is
|
|
designed at least in part a) to conceal or disguise the nature,
|
|
location, source, ownership, or control of the proceeds, or b)
|
|
to avoid a cash reporting requirement.
|
|
|
|
Transportation Offenses: It is a money laundering
|
|
transportation crime for any person to transport, transmit or
|
|
transfer, or to attempt to transport, transmit or transfer, a
|
|
monetary instrument or funds into or out of the U.S., and,
|
|
while engaging in the act, with either a) the intent to promote
|
|
the carrying on of specified unlawful activity, or b) the
|
|
knowledge the monetary instrument or funds represent the
|
|
proceeds of some crime, and the knowledge that the
|
|
transportation, etc., is designed, at least in part, (i) to conceal
|
|
or disguise the nature, location, source, ownership, or control
|
|
of the proceeds, or (ii) to avoid a cash reporting requirement.
|
|
|
|
"Sting" Offenses: It is a money laundering crime for any
|
|
person to conduct, or to attempt to conduct, a financial
|
|
transaction which involves property represented to be the
|
|
proceeds of specified unlawful activity, or property used to
|
|
conduct or to facilitate specified unlawful activity, said
|
|
representation being made by a law enforcement officer or
|
|
by another person at the direction of, or with the approval of,
|
|
a federal officer authorized to investigate or to prosecute
|
|
'1956 crimes, and, while engaging in the transaction, with
|
|
the intent to a) promote the carrying on of specified unlawful
|
|
activity, or b) conceal or disguise the nature, location, source,
|
|
ownership, or control of the property believed to be the
|
|
proceeds of specified unlawful activity, or c) avoid a cash
|
|
reporting requirement.
|
|
|
|
[8] See Samuel J. Rabin, Jr., "A Survey of the Statute and
|
|
Case Law Pertaining to 26 U.S.C. 60501 (Forms 8300)," in
|
|
Money Laundering, Asset Forfeiture and International
|
|
Financial Crimes, by Fletcher N. Baldwin, Jr., and Robert J.
|
|
Munro, 3 vols., Oceana Publications, New York, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[9] Section 4702 of P.L. 100-690.
|
|
|
|
[10] 31 C.F.R. 103.11(p) (1991).
|
|
|
|
[11] "The means should, in fact, include access by Interpol
|
|
to the telecommunications system SWIFT . . .," Draft
|
|
Explanatory Report on the Convention on Laundering,
|
|
Search, Seizure and Confiscation of the Proceeds from
|
|
Crime," September 8, 1990.
|
|
|
|
[12] Money Laundering Bulletin, March 1995, p. 3.
|
|
|
|
[13] U.S. Congress, Committee on the Judiciary, The Inslaw
|
|
Affair, House Report 102-857, September 10, 1992.
|
|
|
|
[14] Memorandum to Judge Nicholas Bua from Elliot
|
|
Richardson, p. 34. The NSA, naturally, is not
|
|
acknowledging the existence of such a chip, much less
|
|
providing technical information. But in order to avoid
|
|
detection of the chip's transmission signal by the
|
|
organization being spied upon, the chip would be designed
|
|
so its broadcast would be masked by the general--or some
|
|
characteristic--electronic noise of the computer. This could
|
|
imply a low-probability-of-interception digital spread
|
|
spectrum (SS) communication system with a broad
|
|
bandwidth, perhaps in the range of 1 to 10 gigahertz. As a
|
|
related example of this technique, a "low level wideband SS
|
|
signal, can easily be hidden within the same spectrum as a
|
|
high power television signal where each signal appears to be
|
|
noise to the other" ("Spread Spectrum Techniques," in Geoff
|
|
Lewis, Newnes Communications Technology Handbook,
|
|
Oxford, 1994). The broadcast power requirements of such a
|
|
chip would not be large, but rather similar to a walkie-
|
|
talkie's. The information broadcast by the chip could then
|
|
either be monitored locally and re-transmitted to satellite, or
|
|
transmitted directly to a geosynchronous signals-collection
|
|
satellite such as Magnum. The Magnum and other U.S. spy
|
|
satellites are operated by the Air Force on behalf of the
|
|
National Reconnaissance Office, while NSA does the signal
|
|
processing. (I am grateful to John Pike, Director of Space
|
|
Policy & CyberStrategy Projects, Federation of American
|
|
Scientists, for advice on the information in this footnote. He
|
|
is not responsible for any errors or the specific content of any
|
|
statement.)
|
|
|
|
[15] I have in mind an NSA operation. But after Part I of
|
|
The End of Ordinary Money was circulated, the CIA
|
|
approached my own former company (which sells banking
|
|
software) and proposed that it provide cover for their agents
|
|
to enter foreign banks. The CIA also separately offered to
|
|
pay $100,000 for the customer list of a particular bank
|
|
among the Swiss big four.
|
|
|
|
[16] Barry A. K. Rider, "Fei Ch'ien Laundries--the Pursuit of
|
|
Flying Money," in Money Laundering, Asset Forfeiture and
|
|
International Financial Crimes.
|
|
|
|
[17] Money Laundering Bulletin, April 1995, p. 2.
|
|
|
|
[18] Ibid, p. 4.
|
|
|
|
[19] Details of the foreign exchange, eurocurrency, and
|
|
eurobond markets are covered at length in J. Orlin Grabbe,
|
|
International Financial Markets, 3rd edition, Simon &
|
|
Schuster, New York, 1995.
|
|
|
|
[20] Eurobonds are bearer bonds. So if you have the bond in
|
|
your pocket, you own it, in the same way you own the dollar
|
|
in your pocket. The same goes for interest coupons--they are
|
|
to be paid to bearer. Most eurobond-issuing companies pay
|
|
interest to Euroclear, which distributes the payments to the
|
|
owners of the bonds stored in its depository vaults. But the
|
|
companies are afraid that if the bonds are stolen, they will
|
|
have to pay the same coupons again. Hence they insist
|
|
coupons be clipped and destroyed as they are paid. When I
|
|
visited Morgan Guaranty (which operates Euroclear) in
|
|
Brussels in 1982, there were 20 employees whose full-time
|
|
job was clipping coupons.
|
|
|
|
[21] John W. Moscow, "The Collapse of BCCI," in Money
|
|
Laundering, Asset Forfeiture and International Financial
|
|
Crimes.
|
|
|
|
[22] Details of the card size, layout, coding, and recording
|
|
are laid out in ISO standards 7810 to 7813. The first track is
|
|
sometimes called the International Air Transport Association
|
|
(IATA) track, the second the American Bankers Association
|
|
(ABA) track, and the third the Mutual Institutions National
|
|
Transfer System (MINTS) track.
|
|
|
|
[23] This may be as simple as assigning the numbers 0 to 5
|
|
to the letters A to F. If this assignment is made, the
|
|
probability is three-fourths that a digit in the resulting
|
|
decimal number is one of 0 to 5, while there is only one-
|
|
fourth probability that a digit is 6 to 9.
|
|
|
|
[24] Computer logs are often kept for each part of a
|
|
transaction. So the evil programmer doesn't have to tap lines
|
|
if he can get hold of the logs instead.
|
|
|
|
[25] Public key encryption is implemented in the Datakey
|
|
smart card of the National Institute of Standards and
|
|
Technology. This card uses the Hitachi H8/310 processor.
|
|
Atmel and Phillips chips also include public-key encryption
|
|
hardware, and allow algorithms to be implemented by the
|
|
card's application designer. Smart and other chip card
|
|
standards are laid out in ISO 7816. (More on smart cards can
|
|
be found in Jose Luis Zoreda and Jose Manuel Oton, Smart
|
|
Cards, Artech House, Boston, 1994.) The recent ANSI X9F
|
|
standards include those for using public key systems to
|
|
secure financial transactions. The communication link would
|
|
involve two-way authentication using Diffie-Hellman key
|
|
exchange.
|
|
|
|
[26] Clark Matthews, "Tomorrow's 'Smart Cards': Technical
|
|
Marvels That Give Government Fearful Power," reprinted
|
|
from The Spotlight, undated.
|
|
|
|
[27] Some of the following points were broached in a
|
|
different way by T. Okamoto and K. Ohta, "Universal
|
|
Electronic Cash," Advances in Cryptology--Crypto 91,
|
|
Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1992.
|
|
|
|
[28] See David Chaum, "Achieving Electronic Privacy,"
|
|
Scientific American, August 1992, pp. 96-101; "Blind
|
|
Signatures for Untraceable Payments," Advances in
|
|
Cryptology-- Crypto 82, D. Chaum, R.L. Rivest, & A.T.
|
|
Sherman (Eds.), Plenum, pp. 199-203; "Online Cash
|
|
Checks," Advances in Cryptology--Eurocrypt 89, J.J.
|
|
Quisquater & J. Vandewalle (Eds.), Springer-Verlag, pp.
|
|
288-293; "Efficient Offline Electronic Checks," with B. den
|
|
Boer, E. van Heyst, S. Mjxlsnes, & A. Steenbeek, Advances
|
|
in Cryptology--Eurocrypt 89, J.-J. Quisquater & J.
|
|
Vandewalle (Eds.), Springer-Verlag, pp. 294-301;
|
|
"Cryptographically Strong Undeniable Signatures,
|
|
Unconditionally Secure for the Signer" with E. van Heijst &
|
|
B. Pfitzmann, Advances in Cryptology--Crypto 91, J.
|
|
Feigenbaum (Ed.), Springer-Verlag, pp. 470-484; "Numbers
|
|
Can Be a Better Form of Cash than Paper," Smart Card
|
|
2000, D. Chaum (Ed.), North Holland, 1991, pp. 151-156;
|
|
"Privacy Protected Payments: Unconditional Payer and/or
|
|
Payee Untraceability," Smart Card 2000, D. Chaum & I.
|
|
Schaumuller-Bichl (Eds.), North Holland, 1989, pp. 69-93;
|
|
"Security Without Identification: Transaction Systems to
|
|
Make Big Brother Obsolete," Communications of the ACM,
|
|
vol. 28 no. 10, October 1985, pp. 1030-1044; "Smart Cash:
|
|
A Practical Electronic Payment System," J. Bos & D.
|
|
Chaum, CWI-Report CS-R9035, August 1990; "Untraceable
|
|
Electronic Cash," with A. Fiat, & M. Naor, Advances in
|
|
Cryptology--Crypto '88, S. Goldwasser (Ed.), Springer-
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Verlag, pp. 319-327.
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[29] "[P]rior restraint of double-spending can be achieved by
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using a tamper-resistant computing device that is capable of
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merely performing a signature scheme of the Fiat-Shamir
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type (of one's own choice), such as the Schnorr signature
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scheme" (Stefan Brands, "Highly Efficient Electronic Cash
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Systems," March 17, 1994.)
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[30] I highly recommend Henry David Thoreau's essay Civil
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Disobedience.
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..
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[31] These included the interest ceilings set by the Federal
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Reserve's Regulation Q, Kennedy's Interest Equalization
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Tax, and the Foreign Credit Restraint Program. See
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International Financial Markets, Chapter 1.
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[32] Economic Report of the President, 1975.
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***********************************************************
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* Copyright 1995 J. Orlin Grabbe, 1280 Terminal Way #3, *
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* Reno, NV 89502. Internet address: kalliste@delphi.com *
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***********************************************************
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