These are minimal SMS exchanges, and the feds are probably reading them in real time. I asked if he was able to use email + PGP, and he said no. I haven’t said who I was, I’m just anon asking for the Internet.
These are minimal SMS exchanges, and the feds are probably reading them in real time. I asked if he was able to use email + PGP, and he said no. I haven’t said who I was, I’m just anon asking for the Internet.
Records said he has been released. I gave him a link to this site, suggested he make an account, and asked if there was anything he wanted me to tell people.
Thanks. I’m safe and unavailable for trades, and working with the pretrial services office of the US District Court for the Central District of California to get trades on Agoradesk/LocalMonero. I’m barred from “social media apps” but not under a gag order. Thanks for letting people know.
People have been relying on the notion that “Selling peer-to-peer isn’t illegal.” The problem with that is, that as soon as you are trading regularly, or making a profit, they are going to say that you are in the business of it instead, and therefore have to be a licensed money-service business, keep records, and perform full KYC on your customers.
In principle it doesn’t matter what coin it was; their MSB rules are the same in any case, and they’ve done it with Bitcoin before.
How else could I rent an SMS service to talk to someone who’s being prosecuted, without being targeted just for daring to talk to him? Without having to rely on a company not to secretly give my information out behind my back, even if they weren’t actually legally required to?
If people want any sort of alternative to credit card payments and bank transfers, it has to have the privacy features of Monero. Open-ledger coins are even worse. People have recently been kidnapped and murdered for having too much Bitcoin, which anyone was able to see.