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Re: Internet Banking
> (First of all, I just wanted to say hello, especially to those of you I
> met for the first time at the Cypherpunks BOF last night at Usenix.)
>
> I caught up on the digital banking thread and have a few thoughts
> about future banks, financial privacy, and nonregulation issues,
> especially how they relate to the way things are done now.
>
> What is important to me in an ideal bank, in roughly descending order:
>
> 1. Security. The bank will not disappear, steal my money, allow others
> to steal my money, or unwarrantedly cut off my access to it.
>
> 2. Convenience. I can easily and reliably spend the money I have on deposit,
> deposit funds from elsewhere, and communicate with the bank regarding
> my accounts.
>
> 3. Privacy. The bank will not (or, possibly, cannot) reveal details
> of my financial situation or transactions to others including the
> government.
>
> 4. Credit. The bank will loan me money for appropriate purposes if
> needed (and my credit rating is acceptable).
>
> The financial institutions I currently deal with do a pretty good job
> of all of these except (3), which is not their fault but is the
> government's. (Except for crud like banks that use trivial keys like
> your SSN for access to banking by phone.)
>
> No. 1, security, is a problem with anonymized, offshore, network
> banking. Today we rely on a combination of reputation and regulation
> to provide bank security -- the banks we deal with stress size,
> longevity, permanence, etc., in their marketing campaigns, and there
> are mandatory reserve requirements and mandatory deposit insurance.
> Reputation should translate pretty well in our idealized banking world
> -- what is better than the electronic word of mouth of the Internet?
> But in a nonregulated environment, there will have to be private
> deposit insurance which could easily have some bootstrap problems in
> building the initial market.
>
> Convenience, #2, should be a vast improvement. Freed from the
> necessity and cost of maintaining a network of impressive physical
> edifices of Federal-style architecture, and coupled with more-or-less
> ubiquitous networking and computing, banks can concentrate on giving
> ultra-fast, efficient transaction services via authenticated e-mail
> and customer services via a Web-like server.
>
> I envision transactions ending up in two big buckets: card services
> and "cheque" services. Cards are for when you are wandering around,
> and e-mail "cheques" are for paying regular bills. The card system,
> insecure at it is, is fast becoming universal; I stopped carrying a
> checkbook around years ago and use credit cards for all possible
> transactions: you get a comprehensive statement at the end of the month with
> the names of all your vendors, and you also get a nice premium for
> using their transaction services (mine is airline frequent-flyer miles).
> In any future banking system one must assume that card-based
> transaction service will be the main, if not only, means of
> casual transaction, and it will be up to us to to build in the
> ncessary privacy and authenticating schemes to make this a trustable
> system. I find it difficult to imagine large-scale displacement of
> institutions like VISA, MasterCard, and Amex, simply because they do
> what they do (provide instant POS credit authorization, guarantee
> merchants quick payment, etc.) very well.
>
> While e-mail "cheques" are attractive because the mail infrastructure
> is almost entirely there already, I wonder if they will ever become more
> than a small percentage of total transactions, possibly limited to
> pre-authorized direct drafts for such things as utility bills, and
> maybe mail orders and transactions between individuals.
>
> #3, privacy, is a very difficult issue because of the regulatory role
> of the government. Because of the degree to which strong financial
> privacy threatens government power (especially taxing power; see
> previous messages on this) I can easily imagine that (1) banks doing
> business in or "touching" the US and most politically similar
> sovereignties will not be able to prevent themselves from disclosing
> identity and transaction information about their customers, and (2)
> people will probably be prohibited from dealing with these banks if
> they are in fact beyond the reach of legal process.
>
> This leads to the key question: should one trust (i.e., disclose
> one's identity to) or not trust one's bank? It would certainly be nice
> to be able to trust your bank, as it makes things much easier for all
> parties. They would be able to freely grant you credit (#4 above),
> since you could verifiably prove your assets, real property,
> employment, etc. But if you trust your bank, then they may be forced
> to disclose your identity to the government under legal process. Thus
> it is probably best to postulate a banking system that does not
> require trust.
>
> This complicates #4, credit. I can envision a system of vouched-for
> indirection (not unlike signing PGP-keys) that would allow you (the
> borrower) to disclose assets/earning capacity to a trusted third party
> that would certify to a lender that you (known to the lender only as a
> numbered account) are credit-worthy. If it can be made possible
> to break the traceability link between the credit-vouching agency and
> the lender, privacy may be possible. One problem may be that
> credit-vouching agencies cannot easily be "offshore", since they may
> need to examine your real estate (or whatever) though this could be
> done, perhaps, by appraisers or other local agents.
>
> Comments?
>
> --
> Michael C. Berch
> [email protected] / [email protected] / [email protected]
>
>
I am new to this list, so excuse me if this topic has already been
discussed, but I think you need to take a 200 level course in economics
called Money and Banking. I think the idea is so obsessed with tax-evasion
and privacy protection that you have ignored all the economic consequences
of the ideas you are proposing.
1) Who will insure your money ? Can you trust anyone but the US gov't to
back your funds ? Even in the S&L scandal the gov't refunded money to
people that weren't insured by the FDIC. Do you think they would come to
the cypher-punk rescue if your money up and flew to Brazil ?
2) A doctoral thesis could be written about this one, but what about the
Federal Reserve ? You would wreak havoc on interest rates, inflation,
international balance of payments, and international trade. How would this
electronic bank adjust for inflation or an expanding/shrinking electronic
money supply ? Take a look at some historical texts that describe the
problems that the Early American Revolutionaries had in breaking from the
British Currency. It took several failed efforts, and the currency of the
United States has been constatnly evolving ever since.
3) Interest Rates and Inflation ...
4) Interest Rates and Inflation ....
5) You guessed it, Interest Rates and Inflation.
What about Capital Markets ?
What about foreign labor unit exchanges?
Is mexican labor worth as much as US labor?
I think there are more economic issues than encryption issues to be
considered in this case.
Matt
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