The other day I saw a guy who had a little tin foil “folder” for his credit card. I guess he was trying to block criminals from getting his card number?
Yeah, in a serious country, it’s easy to identify the criminal and send them to jail. So this tends to happen in short and localized bursts where people don’t steal a lot.
I mean, arguably that’s what visa and mastercard and whatnot are. We need one with infrastructure controlled by the gubmint because it’s a utility, not a service. In the following 500 pages I will prove…
Oh, 100%, it’s core infrastructure!
It’s just mad to have that privatised. And held by monopolies. From an unstable third-world country.
In EMU we just got/are getting Wero, which is getting adopted to serve this purpose (and in the same way as payment cards too, eventually).
(Basically all the big banks already support it, even tho they many offer similar in-house services, and the countries/makers are set for adoption in the coming years. Overall the initial one-time infrastructure cost per bank is laughably minimal, basically less than annual fees to MasterCard/Visa.)
We however don’t have a clear timeline on digital Euro, a digital currency that can be used as regular “traceless” “cash” (that means offline as well) payments.
The other day I saw a guy who had a little tin foil “folder” for his credit card. I guess he was trying to block criminals from getting his card number?
RFID for contactless payments.
You can just hold your NFC phone with a payment app to someones butt & give yourself a few monies.
Yeah, in a serious country, it’s easy to identify the criminal and send them to jail. So this tends to happen in short and localized bursts where people don’t steal a lot.
But it does exist.
We need a digital € anyway.
I mean, arguably that’s what visa and mastercard and whatnot are. We need one with infrastructure controlled by the gubmint because it’s a utility, not a service. In the following 500 pages I will prove…
Oh, 100%, it’s core infrastructure!
It’s just mad to have that privatised. And held by monopolies. From an unstable third-world country.
In EMU we just got/are getting Wero, which is getting adopted to serve this purpose (and in the same way as payment cards too, eventually).
(Basically all the big banks already support it, even tho they many offer similar in-house services, and the countries/makers are set for adoption in the coming years. Overall the initial one-time infrastructure cost per bank is laughably minimal, basically less than annual fees to MasterCard/Visa.)
We however don’t have a clear timeline on digital Euro, a digital currency that can be used as regular “traceless” “cash” (that means offline as well) payments.