That's a fallacious leap of logic. You need concrete proof to show that Bitcoin was actually created by intelligence agencies.
And suggesting you use kyc to find someone's private wallet is the equivalent of assuming someone still is in possession of gold because of a bank transaction. There's always plausible deniability. ie. "I lost my gold in a boating accident". Unless you physically go to someone's home to confiscate their Bitcoin keys (like you would gold), you won't ever know with 100% certainty whether they own that Bitcoin.
The FBI, with significant assistance from Sony and Citibank, continued to investigate in cooperation with Japan’s National Police Agency, the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department, Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office, and JPEC (Japan Prosecutors unit on Emerging Crimes). As a result of this coordinated effort, investigators obtained the “private key” – the rough equivalent of a password – needed to access the Bitcoin address. All the Bitcoins traceable to the theft have been recovered and fully preserved. Ishii has been criminally charged in Japan.
Expand your horizons fren. The info I gave you is just the tip of the iceberg. Once you realise there is more to dig, and you actually start digging, you can find so much more.
No one (wise) who invests into Bitcoin stores their key phrases digitally. They have them hand-written on paper and stored in a safe where they keep their gold and silver. In fact, it actually would be best if you can memorize your key phrases so you leave nothing physical for them.
If they were to do this on a national scale, it will stir a civil war. We learned from Roosevelts gold confiscation order.
A wise person, upon seeing news like this, will not assume that someone had a hand-written paper waiting for the FBI to grab hold of. A wise person will ask the question "How the heck does FBI keep finding Bitcoin keys?"
That's a fallacious leap of logic. You need concrete proof to show that Bitcoin was actually created by intelligence agencies.
And suggesting you use kyc to find someone's private wallet is the equivalent of assuming someone still is in possession of gold because of a bank transaction. There's always plausible deniability. ie. "I lost my gold in a boating accident". Unless you physically go to someone's home to confiscate their Bitcoin keys (like you would gold), you won't ever know with 100% certainty whether they own that Bitcoin.
You think that poses any challenge to the Cabal soldiers? There are many cases. Here is one:
FBI Tracks Money to Bitcoin
Expand your horizons fren. The info I gave you is just the tip of the iceberg. Once you realise there is more to dig, and you actually start digging, you can find so much more.
No one (wise) who invests into Bitcoin stores their key phrases digitally. They have them hand-written on paper and stored in a safe where they keep their gold and silver. In fact, it actually would be best if you can memorize your key phrases so you leave nothing physical for them.
If they were to do this on a national scale, it will stir a civil war. We learned from Roosevelts gold confiscation order.
A wise person, upon seeing news like this, will not assume that someone had a hand-written paper waiting for the FBI to grab hold of. A wise person will ask the question "How the heck does FBI keep finding Bitcoin keys?"
Dude they're literally just leaving their keys for the FBI to grab them dude.