What's the news here?! BTC was never meant for privacy, and it isn't a big FBI achievement that it was tracked through a public record anyone can check. I would be impressed if it was through Monero.
There are multiple privacycoins that exist, not limited to Monero, Zcash (with privacy features enabled), and Litecoin (with MWEB enabled). Bitcoin with Lightning Network too indirectly offers privacy, although not as strongly as the rest.
The purpose of a news article is to convey all the facts, which it does.
I know, duh, I was being sarcastic and referring to what the article is trying to frame.
> to convey all the facts, which it does.
Conveying all facts alone isn't enough, because when you start mixing some facts to influence the reader's interpretation, you are not being honest. I think this is called "priming" in journalism.
>Priming - Introducing certain information early to influence how readers interpret subsequent information, even when the early details aren't directly relevant to the main story.
The article could avoid mentioning Monero altogether, maybe at the end state that he wouldn't have been busted if he had kept using Monero, but they needed to muddy the water to give an illusion to the reader that big brother surveillance is over the top and you should never trust crypto privacy, which is not true.
It's best to never use sarcasm online unless it's explicitly declared as such at the time of posting. Your comment will be taken literally.
> they needed to muddy the water to give an illusion to the reader that big brother surveillance is over the top and you should never trust crypto privacy
This impression was given for Bitcoin, whereas the reverse impression was given for Monero. These are as expected.
Can someone explain how a BTC tumbler can fail to obfuscate the history of a certain BTC wallet? Seems like such an easy way to basically blame everyone involved in the tumbler which is not how prosecution works.
A defense counsel tactic similar to this is to put doubt in to _which_ of a handful of individuals did the crime when each is blaming the other, and that doubt is enough to be found not guilty.
Instead of using space heaters, during chilly winters, I mine Monero using `xmrig` (MacPro5,1/VEGA64/Ubuntu). The money would have just turned into heat, anyways (might as well try to win a block/XMR), and the computer is 15+ years old (eWaste).
I know several people IRL that will pay cash for anything scarce. You probably do, too (start asking)...
A friend of mine worked cybercrime and said that was often a weak link- criminals tend to want to enjoy the money which means converting and withdrawing or buying physical things.
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