And sending donations to causes the government doesn't endorse.
A good example was the truck manifestation in Canada a few years ago, they went after all the donors for what was a legitimate protest. Anyone using bank transfers or any crypto that wasn't Monero was persecuted.
Those who used Monero had their privacy assured and zero issues.
I'm not sure that I'd cite being able to donate to terrorists as a legitimate use case. I mean, at the protocol level, donating to a terrorist is the same as donating to anyone else, so a system that lets you donate to anyone will necessarily let you donate to terrorists, but it wouldn't be the example I'd bring up in polite conversation.
He received plenty of USD in cash delivered in hands by the US government through the three-letter-agencies. These kind of things always happened, it is unfair and incorrect to blame crypto currencies whereas the overwhelming majority of "special operations" continue to be paid today in plain paper money.
I bought legal things with Monero a while back when I was into "crypto". I've never bought illegal things with Monero (or any other currency/cryptocurrency).
I was interested in Monero because it actually was what people thought Bitcoin was.
And sending donations to causes the government doesn't endorse.
A good example was the truck manifestation in Canada a few years ago, they went after all the donors for what was a legitimate protest. Anyone using bank transfers or any crypto that wasn't Monero was persecuted.
Those who used Monero had their privacy assured and zero issues.
I'm not sure that I'd cite being able to donate to terrorists as a legitimate use case. I mean, at the protocol level, donating to a terrorist is the same as donating to anyone else, so a system that lets you donate to anyone will necessarily let you donate to terrorists, but it wouldn't be the example I'd bring up in polite conversation.
You can be sure that those truckers were not terrorists.
Courts deemed as unlawful this government persecution to whoever donated to the protest using transparent cryptocurrency: https://usethebitcoin.com/news/canadian-court-rules-against-...
The point is that only those who used monero were safe from unlawful government persecution.
Remember that nelson Mandela was considered a terrorist too
So was Osama bin Laden.
Bin Laden was at some point pushed as a freedom fighter hero by the US government: https://www.businessinsider.com/1993-independent-article-abo...
He received plenty of USD in cash delivered in hands by the US government through the three-letter-agencies. These kind of things always happened, it is unfair and incorrect to blame crypto currencies whereas the overwhelming majority of "special operations" continue to be paid today in plain paper money.
Blocking critical infrastructure is not a legitimate protest in any country.
I bought legal things with Monero a while back when I was into "crypto". I've never bought illegal things with Monero (or any other currency/cryptocurrency).
I was interested in Monero because it actually was what people thought Bitcoin was.