this post was submitted on 08 Feb 2025
10 points (77.8% liked)

Cashless society, forced banking, and the War on Cash

48 readers
1 users here now

In many regions people are being forced patronize banks. This community is for that discussion regardless of which side of the war on cash you are on.

The war on cash is war on privacy.

related communities (decentralized only)

closely related:
[email protected] (ghost node) ← only reachable from instances that federated to that community before nano.garden disappeared

loosely related:
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

founded 11 months ago
MODERATORS
 

The CFPB has always been underpowered & under resourced. I reported malpractice by the finance industry many times and they could never fix a single problem while banks and CUs got away with murder in broad daylight. But it’s still good to have a watchdog around even if it’s toothless. If anything just to collect and publicize abuses, and advise consumers.

Now the Emperor of DOGE (Elon) is putting that toothless (yet mildly helpful) dog down.

The cherry on top: data brokers can keep selling your social security number, says new CFPB chief. This timing seems strategic. Recall that Trump overturned Obama’s policy that required ISPs to obtain consumer’s consent before selling their private data. I see a pattern.

Do you still want to participate in a banking system that exploits consumers? Consider these actions:

  1. Draw down your bank balances by mostly cashing out. Keep the balance low.
  2. Ask employers to pay you by cash or paper check.
  3. Cash the payroll check at the issuing bank rather than deposit it. Bypass your bank. (Note that some Casinos give perks for cashing payroll checks in their establishment)
  4. Stop using billpay, which enables an intermediary to collect more data on you (of course, because you have no protection from data abuses). Send paper checks in the mail with your own postage stamps. Unlike billpay intermediaries, USPS will not peek inside the envelope and pawn your data.
  5. Switch to a bank or CU that is not a KYC overachiever (this may be impossible -- most banks demand more data on you than legally required)
  6. Paycheck too big for this? You’re overemployed. Switch to part-time and quit buying silly tech garbage. Instead, pull your tech out of the dumpers, hack it and liberate it.
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I’ve reported unlawful CUs to the NCUA. They have never taken enforcement action. You cannot rely on them.

Once you start reporting banks and CUs to their respective regulators, you will quickly realize the protections are a façade. They only pretend to protect consumers for optics -- to maintain consumer confidence. My confidence in bank regulation from the consumer standpoint is gone.

I have only gotten results when suing in court. But that is only possible in a minority of situations. When it comes to data abuses, the court is mostly helpless unless you can prove actual damages. It’s insufficient to prove data exfiltration.