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Silk Road Bitcoins worth $1B transferred after seven years

Author: bloat

Score: 308

Comments: 245

Date: 2020-11-04 16:05:54

Web Link

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lawn wrote at 2020-11-04 18:32:25:

The title is a bit misleading as we don't know if the coins have changed hands. They probably just transferred them to a new address that they also control.

technion wrote at 2020-11-05 00:20:31:

When I opened my wallet for the first time in a few years, I found the only way to get the coins out of the old version of multibit was to send it to all to a new wallet with new keys running new software.

Given the age of this wallet, something like that could be involved.

https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/40963/upgrading-...

Edit: It was more painful than that, I used this process:

https://walletrecovery.info/how-to-transfer-bitcoin-from-a-m...

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 19:21:45:

And now we have to watch the Bitcoin Cash and other forks too.

kylebenzle wrote at 2020-11-04 21:57:12:

Arguably (by me) Bitcoin Cash is MUCH closer to "Bitcoin" than the current "BTC" chain. Bitcoin Cash coins were moved too though. It will be VERY interesting to see if they try and use Cash Fusion to effectively mix the coins on the BCH chain though.

dang wrote at 2020-11-04 20:46:36:

Thanks—we've modified the title above to leave that undecided.

jbverschoor wrote at 2020-11-04 19:37:42:

Can just be keyrotation

gruez wrote at 2020-11-04 19:48:12:

but why would you need to rotate a cold wallet (presumably) key? Key rotating makes sense for your password or tls keys, because they're used on a regular basis on networked computers that can possibly be compromised. But if the private key is stored on an airgapped computer (or paper wallet) there would be no advantage. If anything pulling the computer out to do the signing presents more danger because there's opportunity for your house to be raided (by police or rival criminals) while you're doing the signing.

vmception wrote at 2020-11-04 21:01:56:

many people have the encrypted key pair and have been trying to brute force access for years.

so either someone succeeded, or it got rotated by simply moving the coins to literally any other address. of course, both of these outcomes are indistinguishable which is part of the beauty of the system, especially if someone was actually trying to ride out statute of limitations or something else.

they can still obfuscate their destination either way. if the source is illicit its money laundering, if the source is not illicit its just obfuscation, if done right the illicit source is never discovered having been replaced with a licit source.

ineedasername wrote at 2020-11-05 01:53:05:

I don't think the statute of limitations applies once you've been found guilty. That applies to the time limit for prosecution, not the time limit for executing asset seizure that was declared forfeit. It is always forfeit, you don't get to protect your ill-gotten gains if you manage (or someone receiving them manages) to hide them long enough. They still have a seizure order on them if, presumably the FBI, can figure out how to get them.

ineedasername wrote at 2020-11-05 18:55:40:

And now we know that's what happened for certain: The DOJ seized these coins.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/akdgz8/us-feds-seize-1-billi...

xenadu02 wrote at 2020-11-05 18:29:34:

How would you obfuscate anything? The blockchain tracks every transaction. Not only can that money be traced forever the feds can claw it back from anyone who received it if they wanted to do that. Or follow it to the exit points if the owner tries to launder it via other means and apply pressure there.

angus-prune wrote at 2020-11-05 18:48:14:

There are services called tumblers which take bitcoins from multiple people (often multiple sources per person); mixes them up with bitcoins from lots of other people, transfers them about a lot randomly etc, then at the end spits out a series of transactions which add up to not quite the amount you submitted (different by a random amount).

Each of these transactions can be traced, but it can be difficult to track which output bitcoins relate to which input bitcoins.

simias wrote at 2020-11-04 21:14:12:

How did the encrypted keys leak?

vmception wrote at 2020-11-04 21:33:24:

I don't know

from this article and other articles I've seen:

> A file that some claimed was an encrypted bitcoin wallet containing the keys to the funds has been circulated in cryptocurrency communities for the past year, and – if it is what it was claimed to be – then a combination of brute computing power and good luck could have successfully decrypted the wallet.

3ahrbd43 wrote at 2020-11-05 00:59:56:

It likely didn’t really leak. It’s a trick/scam they play on the naive. One can replace the cleartext section in the wallet with a unrelated tx reference that doesn’t match the actual encrypted private key. The wallet will act like the real one (it will show the referenced tx in the UI) but even if you could decrypt the encrypted private key, it would be for the wrong pubkey.

WanderPanda wrote at 2020-11-05 05:56:45:

And then claim someone else stole them, when in reality they are just moving it to another address of their own

vmception wrote at 2020-11-05 01:09:19:

that's hilarious

whyrusleeping wrote at 2020-11-04 19:54:43:

Someone might want to take more precautions generating keys for $1 billion vs $1 million. I'm betting this person (or persons) generated keys in a more secure manner (potentially a sharded key, or using hardware wallets) than the original keys, which may have been generated on a non-airgapped device.

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 20:29:00:

Iunno, if I had $1b sitting around, I’d like it to be in 1000 different wallets each containing $1m.

With $1b, I’d rather risk losing 10% than having a 10% chance of losing all of it.

lacker wrote at 2020-11-05 07:08:25:

That sounds like such a pain to access, though. Better to just have it in 10 wallets of $100m, plus one wallet with a few mil that you use for actual transactions.

gchokov wrote at 2020-11-04 20:58:11:

Well, but you don’t.

ineedasername wrote at 2020-11-05 01:54:39:

I don't have a mansion but I can reasonably assert, in a productive conversation, how I might secure such a property.

robocat wrote at 2020-11-04 20:55:19:

> Key rotating makes sense for your password or tls keys, because they're used on a regular basis on networked computers that can possibly be compromised.

Surely key rotation only makes sense if the time between each rotation is much much less than the expected time between compromise and theft.

In high value situations, an attacker is highly motivated to ensure they steal Bitcoin very quickly after compromise. Especially becaus the clock is ticking until the compromise is discovered and mitigated.

lordnacho wrote at 2020-11-04 23:02:28:

Might just be a change of key infrastructure. If this was generated a long time ago, perhaps the owner wants something a bit more modern, like a HD wallet on hardware, something like that. More ergonomic and elegant than possibly holding on to a load of different keys.

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-05 03:52:37:

Agree with most, except the last bit: now they're managing the keys for their bitcoin, bitcoin cash and bitcoin gold (and maybe other forks?)

lordnacho wrote at 2020-11-05 09:33:21:

But with the HD wallets you can switch a field in the derivation path for each coin. Then one seed can give you different looking addresses for each chain, from the same device.

Robelius wrote at 2020-11-04 20:32:10:

Could you explain what key rotation is? First time I’ve seen this term.

_jal wrote at 2020-11-04 21:21:11:

Very briefly, secrets should have maximum lifetimes. This is for multiple reasons - someone could be brute-forcing it; algorithms are regularly found to be less secure than initially thought; keys leak over time.

Any secret protecting anything you care about should be rotated. The schedule is dictated by specifics.

benburleson wrote at 2020-11-04 20:40:53:

In general, just generating a new key to access the secure data.

ur-whale wrote at 2020-11-04 20:44:39:

txid or it didn't happen

[EDIT1]: Looks like this one:

https://blockchair.com/bitcoin/transaction/3f036ff88bb851b57...

[EDIT2]: and since these coins existed pre BCH fork, it's worth looking at the BCH coins ... TL;DR: they have moved as well:

https://blockchair.com/bitcoin-cash/transaction/00082718d96f...

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 22:12:07:

But but but, what about the Bitcoin Gold???

jonas21 wrote at 2020-11-05 00:08:28:

They appear to have been quite thorough:

https://bitinfocharts.com/bitcoin%20gold/tx/9ac265c90b7d5bb4...

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-05 03:09:10:

If it got sent to a marketplace/exchange, I wonder how many confirmations an exchange would wait for to sign-off that they can't be double spent.

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 17:05:03:

Given that these were worth $350k at the time 8+ years ago, my guess is on a vendor that got out of prison and was carefully planning for a day to move it around.

bromonkey wrote at 2020-11-04 17:47:02:

Hard to get out of jail when you're serving a double life sentence...

eternalban wrote at 2020-11-04 21:52:29:

I missed this. I can not believe ths kid got 2 life sentences + 40 and no appeal. It's like something out of a 19th century novel

There is a petition for Ross:

https://www.change.org/p/clemency-for-ross-ulbricht-condemne...

asdfasgasdgasdg wrote at 2020-11-04 21:54:50:

Let's not infantalize him. Twenty six years old is not a "kid." He was a grown ass man who attempted to have someone killed. That being said, a double life sentence is extreme, considering many actual murderers get out after less than twenty years. Our draconian drug punishment escalations are not good.

sillysaurusx wrote at 2020-11-04 22:53:46:

I think you should presume innocent until proven guilty, if you’re a fan of our court system. And he was not convicted of attempting to have anyone killed.

asdfasgasdgasdg wrote at 2020-11-04 23:31:29:

I do not acknowledge the authority of the legal system of the United States of America over my own beliefs and statements. However, if I did, I'd just call to your attention the fact he was sentenced partly based on this the transgression I named, even if he was not charged with it. That would be enough for me to drop the "alleged" verbiage, were I inclined to put it there in the first place.

KMag wrote at 2020-11-05 08:23:47:

I believe the GP was attempting to draw attention to the fact that the majority of Ross's sentence was based on mere allegation of a crime. (Granted, with good evidence, but without due process.) The probable reason charges were dropped on the conspiracy to commit murder charge was it probably would have fallen to an entrapment defence. Hiring a hitman was suggested and pushed by someone acting on behalf of the government at the time.

Ross is no hero, but also, let's not pretend the court system acted reasonably here. If they had even a 50/50 chance of getting him on conspiracy to commit murder, they would have brought the charge to trial. The prosecutor didn't drop the charge to be nice. The evidence of entrapment probably would have hurt the case as a whole, so they dropped the conspiracy to commit murder charge. Yet, it appears this strong suggestion that he committed a serious crime played the majority role in his sentencing.

This should scare anyone around the world, given the long reach of US law enforcement. The prosecutor kept embarrassing entrapment details out of the trial and still got a heavy sentence for just the allegation of a crime. The prosecutor got to have their cake and eat it too.

zucker42 wrote at 2020-11-05 03:44:35:

The fact that he was sentenced based on a crime he was not convicted for is a travesty and in my opinion unconstitutional (violates the rights to a public jury trial and to due process).

ktm5j wrote at 2020-11-05 13:26:32:

> the fact he was sentenced partly based on this the transgression I named, even if he was not charged with it

Do you have a source for that? IANAL but as far as I know that is not the way the US legal system caries out sentencing.

zucker42 wrote at 2020-11-05 16:07:30:

The petition for the Supreme Court to hear Ross Ulbright's case discusses some of the legal background in the second section

https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/17/17-950/24860/20171...

Apparently there has been a long standing practice of judges finding facts to justify a longer second, but it's questionable whether the practice is Constitutional.

wpietri wrote at 2020-11-05 05:24:15:

Are you asserting he did not attempt to have anybody killed? Or just saying that a court never determined it?

Regardless, court convictions correctly use a very high standard of proof:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burden_of_proof_(law)#Legal_st...

That's appropriate because a) it's important to be very careful when assigning criminal penalties, and b) they spend a lot of time and money getting at the truth.

But when discussing things casually, as here, neither is true. I'd say HN runs somewhere between "reasonable to believe" and "balance of probabilities". And that's about right. If I'm wrong about Ulbricht, no particular harm comes to him; if more information comes to light and I change my mind, there's no damage to undo.

BeetleB wrote at 2020-11-05 06:20:39:

The whole thread is about a harsh court sentence, so yes - it is very appropriate here.

> And that's about right. If I'm wrong about Ulbricht, no particular harm comes to him; if more information comes to light and I change my mind, there's no damage to undo.

Would you not agree that what you said is equally true for one who judges people at roughly the same high standard as courts?

wpietri wrote at 2020-11-05 21:09:34:

If you want to use a court-like standard, sure, go wild. Although I think it's a mistake in that you don't have a court's powers. You're guaranteed to err on the side of the guilty even more than a court, even though you have much less reason to bias your judgment that way.

pmachinery wrote at 2020-11-05 07:03:51:

You should see what people say about tax evader Al Capone.

kylebenzle wrote at 2020-11-04 22:01:20:

Please stop repeating lies about a man who can't defend himself.

Those charges were dropped and there is no reason to believe that the state was not lying when they laid them on him.

etc-hosts wrote at 2020-11-05 06:11:46:

Ulbricht kept very detailed records of everything he did, sorted by year/month/day, stored on his Windows laptop.

He definitely thought he had ordered the death of at least one, possibly more, errant employees.

I am aware that the errant employee and the hitman he hired were all FBI cutouts.

part1of2 wrote at 2020-11-04 22:05:46:

> Those charges were dropped

Dropping charges doesn't mean it's not true, just that the prosecutor did not want to pursue the case, in light of other prosecution available.

bawolff wrote at 2020-11-04 22:37:23:

Regardless, we don't punish people on the basis of dropped charges.

If he wasn't convicted, then we shouldn't talk about the punishment he deserves to get for those charges.

FireBeyond wrote at 2020-11-04 22:49:36:

Courts do not. We however can express opinions as we see fit.

bawolff wrote at 2020-11-05 01:21:45:

Indeed, "can" and "should" are very different

part1of2 wrote at 2020-11-06 00:58:42:

We know Kings of England have committed murders. We know dictators have committed atrocities. We know Germany attempted to get Mexico to attack the US. Should we not talk about those things just because they haven’t been tried in court? No, that would be crazy. We should talk about those things because they did happen and there is evidence.

And there is evidence in this scenario too, is there not?

bawolff wrote at 2020-11-06 06:25:19:

> And there is evidence in this scenario too, is there not?

Not all evidence is created equal and the situation here where there was a functioning fair court system is quite different from situations where there isn't one. There was definitely some irregularities in the investigation, and a possibility of entrapment.

Regardless, i don't take issue with talking about it, i just take issue with saying he deserves to be punished for it when the allegations were never proven in court. He should be punished for the things its proven he did, not the things he might have done.

colinmhayes wrote at 2020-11-04 22:39:30:

I didn't realize people were sentenced based off dropped charges?

KMag wrote at 2020-11-05 08:34:12:

Yes. This should scare us all. Hiring a hitman was both suggested and pushed by someone acting on behalf of the government, and an entrapment defence had better than a 50/50 chance of working, or they wouldn't have dropped charges.

Ross is no moral hero, but let's not pretend he was treated fairly or reasonably by law enforcement or the court.

reshie wrote at 2020-11-05 00:25:11:

socially guilty or innocent. there are some that all it takes is accusations but legally absolutely.

hndamien wrote at 2020-11-04 22:38:50:

I thought we were presumed innocent until proven guilty? Or should I just allege some charges against you?

bigwavedave wrote at 2020-11-05 15:47:59:

In truth, that really depends on where you fit into the legal/court system. Spurious allegations can be libelous, so make sure you have the right kind of clout, position, and justification before alleging anything serious, especially if you fall into the "private citizen" camp when making the aforementioned claims.

shard972 wrote at 2020-11-04 23:35:54:

Hey that's your opinion, apparently that's just fine.

zucker42 wrote at 2020-11-05 03:42:28:

He was never convicted of trying to kill someone.

eternalban wrote at 2020-11-06 19:15:26:

YMMV, but good grief, at 26, you haven’t [yet] lived. Kid was not intended to patronize him, so try “young man” if you prefer.

blunte wrote at 2020-11-05 02:30:01:

That's the first and hopefully last time I've seen "grown ass man" on HN. This isn't Reddit (although a tiny bit of Reddit humor and wordplay is nice from time to time).

But good news! The US draconian drug punishment laws are changing as we speak... for users, that is. Sellers are probably still at significant risk.

usui wrote at 2020-11-05 03:40:24:

I do cringe at the sight of reading "grown ass man" considering that it does not really add much to what "grown man" could have accomplished. Thanks, I am glad to know I am not the only one who feels this.

trhway wrote at 2020-11-04 18:48:06:

may be the transfer of that $1B is exactly the way out of jail. Giving that the fed agents in the case so easily succumbed to the sub-$1M temptation, one can only imagine what $1B can buy you there.

admn2 wrote at 2020-11-05 02:46:55:

Ulbricht and El Chapo are probably the two richest people in US jails right now, no?

tsjq wrote at 2020-11-05 07:53:56:

Maddox ?

badocr wrote at 2020-11-05 23:14:06:

If you mean Bernie Madoff, no.

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 18:11:51:

The operator didn’t stash every Bitcoin that came in. A few vendors here or there may have withdrawn their funds. These were withdrawn from the main account, but who knows who owns it.

Element_ wrote at 2020-11-04 18:46:28:

If you had access to this wallet how would you actually convert that many bitcoins to hard currency anonymously?

unnouinceput wrote at 2020-11-04 19:36:20:

Prepare crapload of wallets on different exchanges for monero cryptocurrency. Prepare same amount of crapload of wallets for bitcoin as well. Split this new wallet into those bitcoins wallets. Use them to exchange to monero on your most convenient exchanges - preferably outside US so coindesk/Coinbase is out of question here. Use monero mules to mix them with other cryptocurrencies - this is the point where you lose your FBI/NSA tail. Get them out on crapload of hard currency bank around the world. By the time somebody will finish tracking to a single person a century would've passed and you're dead. End of game.

marcosdumay wrote at 2020-11-04 20:27:39:

One needs to track only one such conversions, and investigate each involved party.

There is a limit here, because there are not that many cryptocurrency transactions. So each transaction chain must be small, or the number of chains must be small. Anyway, the restrictions on international investigations are probably a much larger issue than any splitting and washing that one can effectively do.

bowmessage wrote at 2020-11-04 20:49:12:

> monero

gruez wrote at 2020-11-04 19:50:33:

>so coindesk/Coinbase is out of question here

coindesk is a blog, not an exchange.

agilob wrote at 2020-11-04 20:49:23:

Yes, he said it's out of question :D

bawolff wrote at 2020-11-04 22:38:34:

Lol, this is one of the funniest "technically the truth" posts i've seen in a while.

zucker42 wrote at 2020-11-05 03:50:15:

One potential problem is that $1B is so huge that you'd have to do this slowly to avoid a major crash.

buryat wrote at 2020-11-04 20:07:01:

every exchange is going to ask verification if you want to deal with more than $1k

lawn wrote at 2020-11-04 20:36:43:

There are a bunch of shady exchanges that don't.

TedDoesntTalk wrote at 2020-11-04 20:56:43:

Can you name any? I’ve seen this claim repeatedly but never been able to find one myself.

dyingkneepad wrote at 2020-11-04 21:29:37:

The ones secretly controlled by the FBI.

edm0nd wrote at 2020-11-05 18:30:26:

https://kycnot.me

zucker42 wrote at 2020-11-05 03:50:52:

Nice try FBI.

hndamien wrote at 2020-11-04 22:41:02:

Bisq

edm0nd wrote at 2020-11-05 18:30:03:

No, they wont.

https://kycnot.me

asdff wrote at 2020-11-05 00:36:17:

So parallelize your scripts and create 1 million accounts across many platforms.

root_axis wrote at 2020-11-04 19:21:26:

Trade it for a cryptocurrency with stronger anonymity properties and then slowly launder that through a self-owned digital service that ostensibly accepts cryptocurrency payments or donations.

stock_toaster wrote at 2020-11-05 02:02:34:

Just ask HSBC[1]!

[1]: relatively famous for aiding and abetting money laundering on a large scale.

ref:

https://www.icij.org/investigations/fincen-files/hsbc-moved-...

kls wrote at 2020-11-05 02:45:36:

I would say wash it thru Monero and then mix it, from there if I were the illicit type I would try to do offline exchanges with gold bugs who are also crypto enthusiast to get it into hard assets. 1 Billion in gold is actually only about a half a semi-load full, it would take some time but assuming you fractured it into a bunch of different monero wallets, you have time on your side. If one get's compromised you take what you have and run. Because it would be safe to assume at that point that there are tools monitoring the chain by state level actors that none of us are privy to. If you are going to live that life paranoia is key.

sp332 wrote at 2020-11-04 20:05:53:

Private auction. You wouldn't be anonymous to your broker, but no one else needs to know who you are.

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 20:29:39:

Sucks for the buyer to get such tainted coins!

kobalsky wrote at 2020-11-04 21:42:23:

someone who buys millions in crypto in a private auction at a fraction of its price knows what they are getting

nmlnn wrote at 2020-11-04 20:36:47:

They went from being worth $350K to $1B. What currency could you possibly convert them to that is harder than that?

ojnabieoot wrote at 2020-11-04 20:51:51:

If the commodity in question was anything other than Bitcoin nobody would be saying something like that with a straight face. I think “Beanie Baby” is too strong a term for Bitcoin since they are much more “inherently” valuable ($5 of Bitcoin is much more useful than a $5 stuffed animal). Bitcoin will very likely never be worthless.

But a large chunk of Bitcoin’s 2020 wealth comes from it being a speculative instrument - as your comment indicates! I hope this dies down eventually but obviously Bitcoin is objectively high-risk. We are still in the first year of a serious recession, and significant political turbulence, and a pandemic. It’s not irrational to put that money into dollars / euros / etc.

nmlnn wrote at 2020-11-04 21:22:09:

Speculation about the (unknowable) future is how we allocate all resources in the present. A lot of people on HN seem to lump the "buy because price is rising" speculators in with the "buy because Bitcoin will become the foundation of the financial internet" speculators.

Investors who understand Bitcoin's potential do it an indispensable service. They inform the public (through price information) of that which most of the public is unable or unwilling to figure out on their own: that Bitcoin has tremendous potential to change the world and warrants serious attention, both currently for certain people as a hideable, unconfiscateable, transportable, no-third-party-risk store of wealth and in the future for everyone as a transactional currency (and as the cornerstone of the financial internet).

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 21:46:51:

What can you buy with your Bitcoins? Can you pay your rent with them? Can you pay your electric bill, or internet? Can you buy gas? Can you buy groceries?

gbear605 wrote at 2020-11-04 22:10:08:

I don’t own any Bitcoins and I never have, but if I did, I could at least buy some goods with them. Not most of those, but I have in fact seen real life stores that accept Bitcoin as currency.

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 22:13:18:

I have as well, but not many. Certainly not enough to call it a "hard currency" (of which the entire point is that it's widely, almost universally, accepted).

therein wrote at 2020-11-05 01:00:09:

bitrefill.com is a decent start to bridge that gap.

hndamien wrote at 2020-11-04 22:43:23:

You can pay rent with it if your landlord accepts it. I'm a landlord and accept it.

toyg wrote at 2020-11-04 23:00:19:

Are you declaring that in your taxes? And tax authorities are cool with it? What exchange rate do you apply, giving the volatility? In which country?

hndamien wrote at 2020-11-05 00:52:32:

Yes, declare it on taxes. AUD exchange rate. Australia.

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 23:14:29:

How many landlords who accept it do you think there are? I would guess somewhere below 1%.

moltar wrote at 2020-11-05 04:51:06:

What can you buy with gold bullion? Is gold worthless?

genewitch wrote at 2020-11-05 01:21:00:

you can buy stuff at Target, Ebay, and Amazon, just to name 3.

You can get groceries at Target, so yes. You can probably find gas cards, too.

nmlnn wrote at 2020-11-04 21:59:23:

Sigh.

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 22:04:00:

I'll take that as a no. So how is it "hard currency" if you can't buy the things you want with it?

nmlnn wrote at 2020-11-05 02:15:42:

The "hard" part of hard currency refers to its monetary properties - i.e. how easy it is to inflate the supply. On this metric Bitcoin is harder than anything else out there. So then we are arguing about whether it's a "currency" or not.

I personally accept is as payment, and therefore consider it a currency. Why would I want to buy things with it today when I can use ever inflating dollars for that?

ojnabieoot wrote at 2020-11-05 03:24:30:

Look that’s just not what “hard currency” is. “Hard currency” basically means “money which is considered a reliable store of value in major international markets.” Bitcoin simply isn’t that. No functional national government or large corporation is going to sign a large contract in Bitcoin - the very act of signing it could dramatically devalue the currency! You can’t just say Bitcoin is hard currency and devise some random measure of “hardness” out of ideological convenience.

Bitcoin is a fine technology and a fine thing to put part of your wealth into, especially if you support the tech and want to use it to buy things or invest. It’s also brand new, it’s price / USD or euro is obviously unstable, and there’s a global pandemic-depression! It’s just short-sighted (and intellectually dishonest) to say Bitcoin is low-risk and “hard currency” because it’s protected against inflation.

nmlnn wrote at 2020-11-05 04:02:30:

> Bitcoin simply isn’t that

Agree to disagree. I would say you're the one twisting the definition of "hard currency" (Wikipedia is not the source of all truth).

"Hard money" originally reffered to gold. When paper currency took over the term "hard currency" was used to distinguish between good and bad paper currencies.

I maintain that the "hard" part (which derives from gold) refers to the inability to be inflated easily. But I'm happy to concede that Bitcoin is not a currency yet in most peoples' eyes. I'm happy to switch to calling it a hard money.

neom wrote at 2020-11-04 18:52:02:

Very very very very very slowly using a series of off-shore bank accounts.

Devils-Avocado wrote at 2020-11-04 20:49:36:

Negotiate with the Russian Government to cash out in return for anonymity, citizenship and them taking an 80% commission.

zdkl wrote at 2020-11-04 21:20:52:

What could possibly go wrong trying to negotiate with <any country>'s intelligence/ops departement while being a very disappearable private person!

Der_Einzige wrote at 2020-11-05 12:49:23:

Are you claiming that _snowden_ is the owner of these coins????

alasdair_ wrote at 2020-11-04 23:06:09:

The simplest is probably to make a deal with criminals that have an existing money laundering network. The trick would be avoiding having said criminals simply kidnapping you and forcing you to reveal the keys.

Low volume ways would be to use the bitcoin to purchase drugs or other illegal goods by the kilo and sell the drugs the usual way.

It's unlikely that the person needs to full billion immediately. Five or ten million a year could be enough for many people and at that kind of level exchanging for monero could work.

There is also the option of sending small amounts to thousands of real people's bitcoin wallets (and lots more to wallets you control) and letting those people deal with the FBI first.

blunte wrote at 2020-11-05 02:32:09:

Buy a Trump Tower apartment for a grossly inflated price, and offer to pay in bitcoin. If you act quickly, the deal will get done before there's risk of prosecution.

kart23 wrote at 2020-11-05 06:25:13:

A crowd sourced cash out. I would never expect to get the full 1 billion dollars, so I'm basically going to offer the bitcoin at half price to whoever wants it, payment being in monero. I'd possibly set the price lower if demand is low, but adjust depending on how demand and monero value fluctuations go. I think people would buy the coins, especially if there's decent publicity and marketing. Frame it as free money for whoever wants it, and I would walk away happy with anything more than $100 million and my anonymity.

adtac wrote at 2020-11-05 08:02:37:

Congrats, your advertisement now looks like every scam ever on the internet.

zdkl wrote at 2020-11-05 08:44:58:

Ever wonder why there are so many of these scams? Even with very low conversion efficiency, it works over time with acceptable safety guarantees for the sell side. See scalped tickets, low cost bus travel & gift cards.

dorgo wrote at 2020-11-05 20:41:20:

- take out a loan (or borrow) money

- slowly buy bitcoins on exchanges over several years

- destroy the wallet with 1B publicly ( I assume here it is possible. I heard of possibility to transfer to reserved/impossible wallets )

- wait a bit for the exchange rate to go up

- sell your previously bought bitcoins

- pay back the loan

Edit: OK, maybe $1B is too small for this scheme to work. But if the wallet would contain say 50% of all bitcoins this would be a possibility.

ponker wrote at 2020-11-04 19:15:08:

Buy a container load of heroin, place it with the local kingpin.

sp332 wrote at 2020-11-04 20:07:14:

If you're going for the full amount at once, it doesn't even require an on-network transaction. Just send a thumb drive with the wallet on it.

aserafini wrote at 2020-11-04 20:47:44:

But then the recipient doesn’t know if the original owner has made a copy of the key.

nerdwaller wrote at 2020-11-04 21:37:50:

There can be options, the OpenDime[0] is one that’s intriguing. The owner seeds the entropy before it can be used and the only way to get the private key is to physically (and visibly) alter it.

[0]

https://opendime.com/

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 21:49:23:

I wonder how difficult it would be to extract the key from the device. Probably not very.

I also like how they say "no trust", but in reality, you have to trust them (and their entire supply chain).

Edit: from their FAQ: "Can I re-seal after breaking the seal? No. A permanent change is made inside the flash memory of the processor." Oof. Big oof.

nerdwaller wrote at 2020-11-05 17:53:14:

It would be interesting and probably a big deal to test this out, I don’t think I have the chops for it but hope to read about it if you (or anyone else) gives it a shot!

Thorrez wrote at 2020-11-05 06:45:10:

Yes, but to put the money on the OpenDime device requires an on-network transaction.

dyingkneepad wrote at 2020-11-04 21:32:15:

That won't matter anymore after they transfer it to a wallet they control, like they did today. Will it?

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 20:51:41:

That requires a lot of trust. What if the sender or recipient gets compromised? Gonna be a murdery dispute to save $12.

nijave wrote at 2020-11-04 21:51:39:

Money laundering which people are describing various ways of doing

sbierwagen wrote at 2020-11-04 19:05:17:

You couldn't. An easy guess is that every bitcoin mixer is compromised. You could maybe withdraw $100 at a time from bitcoin ATMs, until KYC/AML forces ATM operators to maintain a coin/address blacklist.

gruez wrote at 2020-11-04 19:53:01:

>An easy guess is that every bitcoin mixer is compromised

there are trustless mixer networks[1]. The bigger problem is that you're going to run out of liquidity. You preferably want to exchange 1B of "dirty" bitcoin for 1B of "clean" bitcoin, not tumble the 1B of bitcoin and get back the same dirty coins.

[1]

https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/CoinJoin

square90 wrote at 2020-11-04 20:57:14:

With $1B you could start your own mixers and hire people to run them. Or even start your own exchange.

zucker42 wrote at 2020-11-05 03:54:10:

Anyone you'd hire would be risking breaking the law in the U.S. or some other country, plus you'd have no legal protection if they decided to screw you over.

gmadsen wrote at 2020-11-04 20:36:42:

exchanging to Monaro solves this problem.

kache_ wrote at 2020-11-04 19:02:58:

monero

Darvon wrote at 2020-11-04 22:32:48:

bisq

mensetmanusman wrote at 2020-11-04 20:41:51:

Pales in comparison to money laundering with US real estate.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/03/how-kle...

eli wrote at 2020-11-04 20:58:39:

I'm not sure what point you're trying to make here.

xvector wrote at 2020-11-04 21:36:57:

The point is that the media gets up in arms about criminal activity and money laundering with cryptocurrency but rarely ever reports crimes of a much greater magnitude made by “legitimate” institutions like banks.

Someone money launders with crypto and it’s on the front page. A bank launders hundreds of times more and it’s just another day. Perhaps you could say it’s because of the novelty of crypto, but I suspect the motives run deeper - crypto is a threat to modern financial institutions and turning public interest against crypto is in the best interests of the establishment.

kmeisthax wrote at 2020-11-04 22:38:15:

Money laundering in traditional finance is a problem of scale: there's far too much of it and we don't police it well enough. The problem is tractable given enough enforcement tools and resources. Bitcoin's different - it has little AML control so it's super easy to write money laundering tools. Monero is even worse. Money laundering is built into the protocol, to the point where being able to determine the chain-of-custody over some funds is computationally infeasible. Cryptocurrency is designed to increase the scope of money laundering rather than just the scale, because it makes money laundering the default.

Think about how difficult it was to enforce copyright law in 1970 versus 2010. In the former, copyright enforcement was a matter of having enough lawyers to sue enough enterprises. In 2010, everyone has a commercial-scale copyright infringement device in their pocket. You practically can't enforce the law to the same level purely because the targets are too small and numerous and going after them is a PR nightmare. This is why the music industry fought against consumer-grade recording technology for so long (and lost). Regulating large businesses is a fundamentally more tractable form of law enforcement than individuals.

chii wrote at 2020-11-05 00:53:04:

> Monero is even worse. Money laundering is built into the protocol, to the point where being able to determine the chain-of-custody over some funds is computationally infeasible. Cryptocurrency is designed to increase the scope of money laundering rather than just the scale, because it makes money laundering the default.

I would replace 'money laundering' with privacy and anonymity.

These properties are desirable. These properties give the individual undertaking the transaction a semblance of control. These properties prevent authorities from taking that control away except by using the law, which i think is a fairly good way to enforce control.

So if the individual feel that the law is unfair, they have the option to _not_ obey. If enough people choose to _not_ obey, it forces the court's hand and legislator's hand - this serves society.

Under centralized control, the individual does not have the option to not obey, because their transactions require approval from authorities. This approval becomes a chilling effect for change, and it makes it easy to target them before the general society is able to transition or understand. Civil disobedience is thus impossible under centralized control.

kls wrote at 2020-11-05 02:12:31:

Right I had to explain this to someone last time this subject came up. Illegal != immoral, take for example the Jews in Nazi Germany because it's required by the internet to invoke Nazis :) . Anyways, had cryptocurrencies existed when the some Jews were trying to escape Germany, and had those Jews moved their assets into crypto it would have certainly been illegal but that does not mean it would have been immoral. There are quite a few people in which anonymous funds not trackable by the government lends to their moral cause, though that cause may very well be illegal in their country.

eli wrote at 2020-11-04 21:52:48:

"The media" didn't vote this article to the front page of HN.

xvector wrote at 2020-11-04 22:43:04:

HN is not immune to propaganda.

ndesaulniers wrote at 2020-11-05 01:03:24:

or what-about-ism, it would seem.

crtasm wrote at 2020-11-04 21:58:51:

I don't know what media you read but I see stories in The Guardian about banks laundering money when it comes to light.

bpodgursky wrote at 2020-11-04 21:57:31:

OK, but the real economy is about 10,000,000x larger than the crypto economy.

The point is that a huge fraction of the crypto economy is outright extortion or fraud, not that it's the source of all evil in the world.

javert wrote at 2020-11-04 22:10:11:

> a huge fraction of the crypto economy is outright extortion or fraud

I'm not sure that's true. Do you have a citation?

What _is_ clear is that a huge portion of the crypto economy is based around cryptocurrencies (particularly bitcoin) being financial assets.

xapata wrote at 2020-11-04 22:16:09:

> citation

While it's good to check sources, keep in mind that original research is also valid.

After all, you made a similarly uncited assertion.

javert wrote at 2020-11-04 22:23:44:

I don't think there is any point to saying something like that.

xapata wrote at 2020-11-04 22:26:22:

Because you don't think I'll change anyone's behavior or opinion? I'm holding out hope.

javert wrote at 2020-11-04 23:09:16:

What behavior of mine do you think I should change? I didn't see any suggestion of something I actually did wrong. It felt like you were trying to criticize, but that your criticism had no actual content.

xapata wrote at 2020-11-04 23:37:09:

> no actual content

Indeed, the criticism is not of the facts but of the logic. My critique is primarily of your rhetoric. You requested a citation without offering a rebuttal. Yet, you you made a claim that appears to be equally well-founded, or as you're implying, un-founded.

Saying "citation needed" is a somewhat bland, passive-aggressive statement that itself lacks content. I'd have (and still would) appreciate reading the rationale for your skepticism.

javert wrote at 2020-11-05 10:39:20:

I'm not interested in arguing with you for its own sake. I'm just saying the following because I don't like to see the kind of behavior in this community that I think is going on here (and I don't think it's intentional, fwiw).

Your criticism of me amounts to the fact that I asked for a citation of a statement I was skeptical about. I think that's pretty plainly not a legitimate criticism.

I think that you are the one who is being passive aggressive here.

If you thought my comment was passive aggressive, you could have just said so. (It generally is not passive aggressive to ask for a citation, but I can see how someone could think that.)

If you wanted me to explain the rationale for _my_ statement, you could have just _directly_ asked, instead of criticizing me in the way you did, which seems indirect and unfair.

xapata wrote at 2020-11-05 20:02:17:

I'm not interested in arguing for it's own sake either. I spoke up to fight a frustrating trend in internet argumentation.

> ... pretty plainly not a legitimate criticism

What's plain to you isn't plain to me, and vice versa. I think you missed the main thrust of my argument, which is getting at the hypocrisy of asking for a citation and then making an uncited claim. Perhaps more importantly, it's asking for logical argument to accompany requests for a source.

There's a related issue in the current scientific paradigm, fetishizing statistical p-values. People are so distracted by the veneer of a p-value (or a citation) that they forget to look for a plausible causal mechanism.

By the way, you still haven't explained your skepticism of the original statement you replied to.

javert wrote at 2020-11-05 23:39:25:

> getting at the hypocrisy of asking for a citation and then making an uncited claim

A person asking for a citation is not disallowed from making a claim. Someone else is free to ask for a citation from me, in return.

You are not only incorrect, which is fine, but you're unjustly calling me a hypocrite, which, personally, I consider to be a rather non-nice thing to say.

Furthermore, my request for a "citation" was supposed to be equivalent to asking for "any sort of rationale." You are interpreting that overly legalistically. I'm was just trying to have a conversation, OK? And I did it in a polite way. I would have been happy to hear a rationale that was not a citation _per se_. It would even have been OK for the person I was responding to to say, "I don't know, I just suspect it," or "I heard it anecdotally," or whatever.

> There's a related issue in the current scientific paradigm, fetishizing statistical p-values. People are so distracted by the veneer of a p-value (or a citation) that they forget to look for a plausible causal mechanism.

I agree, although that's not related to my behavior here.

I'm annoyed by the same thing you are, which is when people use "citation?" as though it's a counter-argument. But _I wasn't doing that._ I wish I had just said, "What's your _rationale_ for saying that." But you know what? I can't predict when someone is going to misinterpret a perfectly reasonable and polite thing I've said.

I think the thing I was responding to is exactly the (rare) kind of thing where an actual citation _probably is_ the kind of answer someone with a rationale would _want_ to give, as opposed to a causal explanation or some other sort of evidence. So you're preaching to the choir, here. I get what you're saying, i.e., that many people ask for citations in a context where a citation doesn't really make sense (for example, a controversial medical claim where there are probably numerous studies that seem to disagree with one another). This just isn't that sort of context. I could see myself making the same point you are making _in a different context_. It annoys me to be lumped in with _those people_ that you and I are both justifiably annoyed by.

> By the way, you still haven't explained your skepticism of the original statement you replied to.

I just don't think it's true. I know that cryptocurrency is being treated as a financial asset. I haven't seen evidence that extortion or fraud are a major fraction of what's going on with cryptocurrency. I have enough familiarity and experience with the field to think that my sense of this is probably correct.

Bitcoin is 66% of the market cap of cryptocurrency. It's clear that bitcoin is being used widely as a financial asset (it's available in multiple funds you can get in brokerage accounts, there are many high-volume OTC desks, there are derivatives, there is now lending). There is a _lot_ of journalism showing that large sums of money are flowing into bitcoin _as a financial asset_; for example, the company MicroStrategy purchasing $425M of bitcoin, or Robinhood facilitating bitcoin trading, or GBTC accepting inflows of hundreds of millions of dollars to purchase bitcoin.

In contrast, I'm aware of ransomware, but I suspect it's probably a very small fraction of the bitcoin/cryptocurrency economy (but, as I _said originally_, I would be interested to see evidence contrary to that). My sense is that it's pretty hard to _effectively_ launder money with cryptocurrency, unless you stay out of the US and Europe and parts of Asia, i.e., unless you stay in the places where it's already probably easier to launder money. But again, that's just my sense, so if someone has an explanation contrary to that, I'd be interested to see it, which is _why I asked._

I view many of the smaller crypto coins as scams, so there is actually an interpretation of OP's statement that I agree with - I guess it depends on how you define "fraud" and "a huge fraction." Again, bitcoin is 66% and is clearly not a scam (though it would be fair to ask why that's clear if someone doesn't already know - but my answer right now would be, go research it yourself, I can't take the time to explain all that). Bitcoiners may be _misguided_ or _wrong_, but it's not a scam.

xapata wrote at 2020-11-06 01:41:31:

You've confused a critique of your rhetoric for a critique of yourself. There's no need to defend a turn of phrase so vigorously. If you'd just led off with, "No, I didn't mean it like that," as you've done here, then I'd have shut up. I mean, come on, surely you recognize how "Do you have a citation?" falls into the camp that both of us apparently dislike.

Anyway, back to the topic of Bitcoin. I think your assessment is right in that the bulk of Bitcoin transactions are speculative investments. However, given that the value of Bitcoin as an asset lies in its assumed eventual use as a currency, the original comment might also be correct in that non-speculative transactions are predominantly related to illicit activities. I'm unaware of any common legitimate purpose beyond financial speculation.

When one thinks of world trade, there's (these numbers are from a faded memory of an international trade class about 2 decades ago, so they're horribly wrong) something like $50 billion in goods exported daily. That's the world economy. Then there's $500 billion in currency derivatives traded daily to ostensibly enable exports across currencies, but it's really just speculation. It's not real trade. So when someone talks about the Bitcoin economy, it's hard to know whether we should be talking about just the actual economic activity conducted using Bitcoin as a currency, or whether we should include the speculative trades as well.

javert wrote at 2020-11-07 01:48:26:

> You've confused a critique of your rhetoric for a critique of yourself.

If you call my comment hypocritical, I think you're calling me hypocritical. Apparently you don't think so. That's fine. It could be a cultural difference. Let's not litigate it.

> There's no need to defend a turn of phrase so vigorously. If you'd just led off with, "No, I didn't mean it like that," as you've done here, then I'd have shut up.

I don't think this is a charitable thing to say. If there was no need for me to defend it, there was no need for you to "attack" (criticize) my comment in the first place. If you don't agree, that's fine. Again, let's not litigate it.

> I mean, come on, surely you recognize how "Do you have a citation?" falls into the camp that both of us apparently dislike.

I don't agree. As I already explained, I think it's OK to ask for a citation, in a certain context. I don't think I was doing the thing you're complaining about and which annoys me. If you disagree, that's fine. Let's not litigate it.

I would have liked for you to find a way to continue communicating without continuing to criticize, but it didn't happen. Oh well. Let's call this conversation finished. Take care. On the bitcoin stuff you are bringing up, that looks fine to me. I don't have anything more to say about that.

xapata wrote at 2020-11-07 04:23:48:

Yeah, it's interesting how similar our viewpoints are, including the stubborn itch to debate rhetoric. Have a good evening.

kylebenzle wrote at 2020-11-04 21:54:28:

Also, HN inexplicably hates Bitcoin. Also why this comment will be removed.

labster wrote at 2020-11-04 22:01:00:

If you'd like me to explain why I hate Bitcoin, look no further than the Bitcoin Energy Consumption Index[0], which currently has Bitcoin using the same energy consumption as the nation of Chile. It provides less utility than a credit card, all while using 779092 times the energy needed per transaction.

I don't think it's inexplicable that we hate an ongoing environmental disaster.

[0]:

https://digiconomist.net/bitcoin-energy-consumption

javert wrote at 2020-11-04 22:12:34:

Saying bitcoin provides less utility than a credit card is missing the point the bitcoin people are making.

You can still hold that bitcoin is bad, but that particular argument is not viable and comes from ignoring what the other side is saying.

ahallock wrote at 2020-11-04 22:06:26:

You're not wrong. HN seems heavily biased against anything crypto. With Paypal, Square, MicroStrategy, and even JPMorgan adpoting/investing in Bitcoin, I think it's becoming legitimate.

etc-hosts wrote at 2020-11-05 16:22:34:

Pales in comparison to money stolen from employees by employers.

https://www.gq.com/story/wage-theft

forgotmypw17 wrote at 2020-11-04 21:15:49:

Thanks for sharing this article.

aaron695 wrote at 2020-11-05 07:41:13:

Your comment is so bad I checked your other comments to see if you were GPT-3.

And I notice you once called me GPT-3.

What a Blade Runner future we live in.

mensetmanusman wrote at 2020-11-06 02:23:21:

This is amazing.

globular-toast wrote at 2020-11-05 09:18:08:

Has anyone _not_ been called GPT-3 yet? If you post anything remotely controversial then it's inevitable sooner or later. It's the current go-to for discrediting opinions you don't share.

arcticbull wrote at 2020-11-04 20:52:21:

Real estate is designed for people to live in. Money laundering through real estate is ancillary -- a bug -- and attempts are made to stop it. Regularly. Up to and including Vancouver instituting a 15% tax on foreign buyers and New Zealand banning non-residents from buying real estate.

Cryptocurrency is designed specifically, by virtue of its decentralized and trustless nature, to facilitate money laundering. It was a design goal. This is what it's _for_. That and of course, collecting the proceeds of ransomware. Another way of describing 'money laundering' is transferring value, without the permission of a centralized government authority, with the intent to conceal the source of funds (hey it's your money right?).

That it has yet to achieve the same scale is not relevant.

All sorts of illegal activities aren't done at scale, that doesn't mean they shouldn't be policed. Otherwise you'll be pointing to the small scale right up until the moment it's not small anymore, and then it's too late.

baybal2 wrote at 2020-11-04 21:02:40:

_> Cryptocurrency is designed specifically, by virtue of its decentralized and trustless nature, to facilitate money laundering. It was a design goal._

If it was its designed goal, it would've also included provisions to provide proofs anonymously, and reduce physical traceability.

I very much see some cryptocurrencies tried, and some are moderately successful with it, but none have progressed much on the former other than by using crypto signing by some centralised, or semi-decentralised entity which processes the ledger, or does proof of work. So, none of the popular cryptocurrencies have achieved a true "non-chain" way of working, which does not rely on a continuous record of the global state of the ledger.

The cryptographic trust in such mechanism would be much less than in a non-anonymous ledger, where the state of all wallets is recorded for everybody to see, and check for signs of something weird.

kmeisthax wrote at 2020-11-04 22:39:56:

[laughs in Monero]

vmception wrote at 2020-11-04 21:00:10:

Despite you being incorrect, its not even worth debating because the common denominator is that it looks like the state should just quit using public resources on trying to whitelist transactions since that seems to be the real waste, and find a new tool to curb whatever activity they were actually trying to stop.

arcticbull wrote at 2020-11-04 21:02:58:

Wrong in what way? I made three fairly factual statements.

1. Houses are meant for you to live in. Not super contentious I wager.

2. Trustless and decentralized means you can transfer value without the permission of a centralized authority. I believe that's frequently touted.

3. Money laundering is transferring money without the permission of a centralized authority with the intent to conceal the original source of funds.

vmception wrote at 2020-11-04 21:08:18:

> [Money Laundering] is what [cryptocurrency's] for. That and of course, collecting the proceeds of ransomware.

That's the wrong part, even if it was just hyperbole for literary effect then you are conflating legal terms you don't really understand then. Money laundering is a legal term that requires an illicit origin, not merely circumventing the permission of a centralized authority. You were correct that it is designed to ignore the concept of centralized authorities, the rest was either a completely incorrect extrapolation of that, or hyperbole that did not give the effect you thought it did as it just undermines your point and the strength of your argument.

arcticbull wrote at 2020-11-04 21:11:51:

Depends, I maintain that Paul Le Roux is the most likely Satoshi, and of course -- if true -- that would be why Paul Le Roux created it. [1]

> Money laundering is a legal term that requires an illicit origin.

I'm not 100% sure if it requires both an illicit source and intent to conceal or not. It might, but it sounds like we both have half the definition.

For instance, structuring -- breaking apart large transactions into smaller ones to avoid a currency transaction report -- is illegal regardless of whether the source of funds is criminal or not.

[1]

https://www.wired.com/story/was-bitcoin-created-by-this-inte...

vmception wrote at 2020-11-04 21:30:01:

> Depends, I maintain that Paul Le Roux is the most likely Satoshi, and of course -- if true -- that would be why Paul Le Roux created it. [1]

Okay. And that's partially why I'm open to the idea of the government ceasing to use public resources on whitelisting all transactions, instead of debating you over whether something is or isn't money laundering.

Structuring is a different crime than money laundering, which is actually another exhibit on why I want the government to cease using bothering using public money and resources on whitelisting all transactions. I read enough court cases on Google Scholar about paranoid people doing legal things convicted for _only_ structuring on Google Scholar to make this opinion, and this was before HSBC got a slap on the wrist for literally accepting cash deposits from the literal cartel and getting caught, undermining the whole point of whitelisting transactions to begin with.

pbhjpbhj wrote at 2020-11-04 21:30:05:

>"For instance, structuring -- breaking apart large transactions into smaller ones to avoid a currency transaction report -- is illegal regardless of whether the source of funds is criminal or not."//

I assume you mean according to USC (ie USA law), could you cite which section please?

vmception wrote at 2020-11-04 21:34:51:

https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/31/5324

https://www.justice.gov/archives/jm/criminal-resource-manual...

and pretty much trying to avoid any monetary reporting threshold is a criminal charge whether you intended to or not.

so this one is funny because almost every fairly poor person I know, the kind of people that would rarely have over $10,000 at once ever, are the exact people that would harbor some belief about doing X, Y and Z to "avoid transferring over $10,000"

believe it or not, jail, right away.

pbhjpbhj wrote at 2020-11-05 19:21:40:

Interesting, thanks.

Thinking about workarounds, of course carrying money over the border is limited to $10k too, but this was amusing (in a 'I can't believe they were that petty' sort of way):

>"There was also a case in Canada in 2013 where fluctuating exchange rates caused a man to have his funds seized. In this situation, the man carefully calculated and was carrying just under $10,000 CAD. However, by the time he reached the airport two days later, the exchange rate tipped his combination of USD and CAD dollars to over $10,000 CAD. Sniffer dogs detected the undeclared cash and the CBSA seized the total amount from him." (from

https://clearitusa.com/u-s-customs-cash-limit/

)

and carrying a cheque that's signed counts as carrying >$10k. So, I wonder about carrying a Bitcoin wallet?

jcranmer wrote at 2020-11-04 21:35:22:

31 USC § 5324 seems to be the main one:

https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/31/5324

leppr wrote at 2020-11-05 04:44:53:

1. Houses are not "the real estate market". People need dwellings to live in, and the real estate market is there to regulate people's ability to build and occupy them.

In a similar fashion to you, I could very well argue that real estate was designed to perpetuate class by way of a multi-generational ponzi scheme, because that's the de-facto situation.

In reality, like with cryptocurrency, trying to attribute intention where you only see an effect is just manipulative.

ballenf wrote at 2020-11-04 21:14:25:

I don't think 3 provides a very robust definition. Otherwise cash, if introduced today, would meet the definition way better than Bitcoin.

Or maybe that's intentional.

URSpider94 wrote at 2020-11-04 21:23:20:

Cash does work pretty well for money laundering, except that it’s bulky. The $1 billion mentioned in this article would weigh 10,000 kilos and would require a semitrailer to move. And the big problem is that now you have to do something with it. You can’t buy anything worth more than $10k with it, without the government getting paperwork on it, so you’re kind of stuck with it.

freeone3000 wrote at 2020-11-04 21:31:28:

(3) is a sufficient component in the US to be money laundering, so it's a sufficient working definition. cash is tracked fairly extensively, as anyone who's transferred large sums can attest to.

arcticbull wrote at 2020-11-04 21:19:53:

I suspect, like someone attempting to introduce cigarettes as a new product into today's market, that's quite intentional.

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 21:31:41:

> Cryptocurrency is designed specifically, by virtue of its decentralized and trustless nature, to facilitate money laundering. It was a design goal. ... with the intent to conceal the source of funds

That is simply false. Virtually every cryptocurrency is 100% traceable.

arcticbull wrote at 2020-11-04 21:46:14:

Not, obviously, Monero and Zcash. Pseudonymity is often sufficient, money laundering doesn't require anonymity.

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 22:00:30:

Pseudonymity is almost never sufficient, as Ross Ulbricht proves.

Yes, there are a few cryptocurrencies for whom untraceability is a design goal. Obviously this does not include Bitcoin (which is the subject of this thread), and in general it doesn't include the vast majority of cryptocurrencies.

arcticbull wrote at 2020-11-04 22:04:00:

Tumblers seemed to work just fine.

One single counter-example of someone who failed to take necessary precautions when committing a crime doesn't mean the tens of thousands of people you never heard of haven't been very successful.

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 22:07:35:

Is that the same as a mixer? If so: sure, they work just fine, except that you've introduced a SPOF who can tell everyone who you are/where it came from/where it went, etc. It's also tough to call something that arose long after BTC itself a "design goal" of BTC.

Maintaining proper opsec for any significant length of time is extremely difficult, nigh impossible. Almost everyone will fail at some point. With pseudonymity, a single failure ever means everything is lost. With anonymity, only that single failure is lost.

a1369209993 wrote at 2020-11-05 12:21:18:

Not taking any position on the rest, but you can mix/tumble cryptocurrency without SPOF: given a specific denomination of bitcoin (eg 1BTC,0.5BTC,0.2BTC,0.1BTC,etc; call it a DIME), set up one or more TOR hidden services with the following interface:

.init: generate a new wallet and return its public key, the public key of another wallet (probably one per service for obvious reasons) with at least a DIME to mix and a opaque token identifying (only to you) the pair.

.fini: given a token from .init and a transaction that adds up multiple source UTXOs and sends 1 DIME to each of a (sorted) list of wallets that includes the .init-generated wallet, sign that transaction with your source wallet.

.link: given a DIME size in BTC and a (.onion) URL implementing this interface at that size, add it to a internal list.

.list: given a DIME size, return (possibly a random subset of) the list from .link for that size.

For best results you'd need to formalize this interface a bit more and popularize it for better entropy and better plausibility of "well, I guess someone else thought this was a good idea to imitate". Speccing a client to interact with such services (feeding data from .list back into .link and collecting keys from .init to build transactions for .fini) is left as a excersize for the reader.

The key point is that you have disposable pseudonyms that will mix their coins with anyone who offers a valid mixing transaction. Assuming there is demand for mixing from anyone other than you (if there's not, you can't really do anything anyway), this captures that demand _in order to satisfy your own mixing needs_, while also allowing others to bootstrap the exact same trick by adding their own backends via .link.

There's QOS and anti-DOS issues to be solved, but it's definitely something that in principle _can_ work.

selectodude wrote at 2020-11-04 22:16:20:

He got nicked for selling drugs, not using Bitcoin. The dealers on the site probably didn’t face the same consequences.

jfrunyon wrote at 2020-11-04 22:20:36:

He got nicked because he was pseudonymous, not anonymous. It's a lot easier to track one guy named DPR than hundreds of guys named random things.

kls wrote at 2020-11-05 02:37:58:

IIRC it was an old domain registration in his real name that did him in. He realized it and change it, but the history was still there. Been a while since I read about it, but that seems to stick in my mind as how he ended up being unmasked.

javert wrote at 2020-11-04 22:14:50:

> Cryptocurrency is designed specifically, by virtue of its decentralized and trustless nature, to facilitate money laundering. It was a design goal. This is what it's for. That and of course, collecting the proceeds of ransomware.

You probably have some good points to make, but saying something like this is just willfully _not_ engaging in communication with the other side of the argument. That is an egregious strawman which obscures whatever valid points you actually have.

gl00pp wrote at 2020-11-05 03:38:11:

"Cryptocurrency is designed specifically, by virtue of its decentralized and trustless nature, to facilitate money laundering. "

No it's designed to eliminate debasement and inflation

koreanguy wrote at 2020-11-04 21:31:54:

they cant cash out, they had to update into new chain. they got nowhere to cash out. every exchange knows this block.

even if they have trillions, they cant cash it out because its so large. to many eyes. and bitcoin is not anonymous

kylebenzle wrote at 2020-11-04 22:02:30:

For coins on the BCH chain he has Cash Fusion. A pretty great way to mix the coins.

koreanguy wrote at 2020-11-05 07:06:05:

financial conduct authority, will go after fusion and make them pay. this is the chains problem. every exchange to scared to accept that block.

ed25519FUUU wrote at 2020-11-04 21:43:25:

How would one even "cash out" $1B? The more likely scenario is they eat away at it slowly over the next 40 years.

koreanguy wrote at 2020-11-05 07:02:15:

they face 40 years of verification on every transection, its a waiting game. pretty sure they want to cash out fully at first sight when time allows it.

patriksvensson wrote at 2020-11-04 20:36:40:

The wallet address is: 1HQ3Go3ggs8pFnXuHVHRytPCq5fGG8Hbhx

More information on the wallet found here:

https://www.blockchain.com/btc/address/1HQ3Go3ggs8pFnXuHVHRy...

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 17:01:11:

Simply guessing the private key of a bitcoin wallet is functionally impossible

Well, a private key is only as good as your (P)RNG.

Consultant32452 wrote at 2020-11-04 18:38:56:

For $1 Billion I can generate a LOT of random numbers.

gruez wrote at 2020-11-04 19:17:13:

but nowhere near 2^160[1] random numbers.

[1]

https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Transaction#Pay-to-PubkeyHash

harrisonjackson wrote at 2020-11-04 19:22:35:

You can't win if you don't play. Could get it right on the first go!

xtracto wrote at 2020-11-04 21:05:57:

Yeah, I also have

https://privatekeys.pw/bitcoin/random

. as my homepage. Every day I reload it a couple of times... it's like playing a [very shitty] lottery every day.

stOneskull wrote at 2020-11-05 10:36:08:

i think if there's a hit, the site owner would take it and just show you another zero

bottled_poe wrote at 2020-11-04 20:41:53:

Put it this way: you could spend $1B on energy costs testing random numbers and still have practically 0% chance of hitting the right number.

xur17 wrote at 2020-11-05 02:10:08:

So you're saying there is a chance.

kls wrote at 2020-11-05 02:51:31:

I don't usually fall for humor on HN, but well played.

twinkletwinkle_ wrote at 2020-11-04 20:25:12:

Better off just playing Powerball. Order of 1 in 10__9

stOneskull wrote at 2020-11-04 19:57:09:

how sweet that would be

ur-whale wrote at 2020-11-05 23:36:56:

Update:

https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.cand.368440...

gorgoiler wrote at 2020-11-05 08:25:02:

What happens to the price of bitcoin when you try to sell $1B worth?

The first few buyers might be paying the asking price, but presumably the order book has offers to buy at considerably less than today’s $/BTC?

Are there any markets out there that quote the price of stocks in terms of the total (average? median?) value of currently placed orders?

pfundstein wrote at 2020-11-05 10:19:10:

Obviously you don't dump it all on the order books at once.

m1sta_ wrote at 2020-11-04 20:31:38:

Election timing?/

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 20:35:12:

Some speculate that it was a good day to get diluted in the news. I’d say they were right.

quickthrower2 wrote at 2020-11-05 04:25:19:

You can't fool HN though!

globular-toast wrote at 2020-11-05 09:20:32:

HN will forget this tomorrow when the Github CEO does something again.

TuringNYC wrote at 2020-11-04 20:56:50:

What is the significance of the _seven years_ specifically? Is there a statute of limitations?

tyingq wrote at 2020-11-04 22:10:09:

Could be a SilkRoad vendor just getting out of prison.

URSpider94 wrote at 2020-11-04 21:24:38:

Just that it’s a long time for a billion dollars to sit around.

dzmien wrote at 2020-11-04 21:54:28:

Maybe the private keys were behind an encryption scheme that took roughly seven years to be cracked with brute force. I can't say I envy the owner(s) of these coins. Maybe a billion dollars worth of closely watched bitcoins it is a good problem though. Who knows? I certainly don't.

mekster wrote at 2020-11-05 09:11:25:

How envious could one be if one can't easily liquidate the said funds?

ToFab123 wrote at 2020-11-05 12:47:33:

Did silkroad get replaced by other services or did that entire marked fade away when they turned off the light?

realce wrote at 2020-11-05 13:10:37:

Replaced by many, many, many other services. The marketplace is still healthy today.

asdewexx wrote at 2020-11-05 13:30:49:

Any pointers to the name of some of these markets? Curious to see what they look like compared to "normal" shopping sites

ascii234 wrote at 2020-11-05 15:06:15:

https://dark.fail/

Lots of links on there, it's pretty interesting to see how it all works.

smoyer wrote at 2020-11-05 12:47:04:

Didn't Ross Ulbricht claim he was no longer "The Dread Pirate Roberts".

agotterer wrote at 2020-11-04 18:31:35:

Why couldn’t this be the government transferring to another wallet?

wmf wrote at 2020-11-04 18:59:39:

The US government sold their Silk Road BTC long ago. I don't know why they'd hold onto any for this long.

screaminghawk wrote at 2020-11-04 18:47:44:

It can, why would they though?

shoshino wrote at 2020-11-04 18:49:50:

To be certain that they are the only entity that controls the coins.

appleflaxen wrote at 2020-11-04 18:32:28:

it can

ponker wrote at 2020-11-05 06:11:19:

I can’t get over the idea that the HODL gang thinks that cryptocurrency=freedom when everyone can see the global transaction log.

xxxxxxxx wrote at 2020-11-05 07:01:30:

It's permissionless, as in no reporting transactions over $10k to the government, no ID checks to create an account, no names and addresses in the "global transaction log" etc.

That sounds a lot like freedom to me.

ponker wrote at 2020-11-05 07:15:11:

To me, privacy is an essential component of freedom, and the government and banking system knowing everything about my transactions is not as bad as everyone knowing something about my transactions.

1996 wrote at 2020-11-04 20:44:29:

Some people are richer than you. New at 11.

bluedevil2k wrote at 2020-11-04 20:00:12:

Ulbricht is paying off Trump for clemency. Sounds crazy, but anything is believable right now.

tofuahdude wrote at 2020-11-04 22:07:05:

Of all the conspiracy theories this is the most hilarious

Scoundreller wrote at 2020-11-04 17:03:50:

They were clearly biding their time and waiting for a busy news day in order to do this without it getting too much attention.

Nooooo, they were Biden their time! Good choice of day though. Who would have expected this level of chaos.

mrlala wrote at 2020-11-04 18:18:44:

>Who would have expected this level of chaos.

Anyone who has been breathing for the past four years..

baybal2 wrote at 2020-11-04 20:50:01:

_> “Either way, the funds are now on the move, and whoever now controls the bitcoins may want to cash them out,” Robinson said. As for whether it was an insider or a hacker, his guess it’s as likely either way. “I’d say I’m 50/50 right now, perhaps leaning towards a Silk Roader. They were clearly biding their time and waiting for a busy news day in order to do this without it getting too much attention.”_

Busy news day... which means... today?

TedDoesntTalk wrote at 2020-11-04 20:52:27:

Yes. The US elections make it a busy news day.