> Blockchain won't save you from visit from a man with 5$ wrench, if you know what I mean.
This is accurate however the following isn't necessarily accurate:
> Blockchain might keep your transactions pseudonymous, but when government already knows you, there is little you can do to keep yourself out of its reach.
There are plenty of solid privacy chains based on well understood cryptography. On top of that it is becoming increasingly easy/viable for existing networks to integrate privacy preserving Tx into their networks. Ex: Litecoin (a long standing Bitcoin software fork) integrating privacy preserving Tx via the MimbleWimble protocol and Extension Blocks (together referred to as the MWEB hard fork).
Developments like the introduction of MWEB show that even if the government knows you or your Tx today, all you have to do is make an MWEB (or equivalent) transaction and all of a sudden that chain of visibility goes dark.
Additionally while it may be possible for the government or any organisation to forcibly extract access or knowledge from you with force, we as a society should not be content with making that easy. Prior to the introduction of the internet and digital society, organisations had to spend far more effort to collect far less (and far less reliable) information. We should be making every push to set that pre-digital information era as a baseline or absolute minimum for privacy standards.
This is accurate however the following isn't necessarily accurate:
> Blockchain might keep your transactions pseudonymous, but when government already knows you, there is little you can do to keep yourself out of its reach.
There are plenty of solid privacy chains based on well understood cryptography. On top of that it is becoming increasingly easy/viable for existing networks to integrate privacy preserving Tx into their networks. Ex: Litecoin (a long standing Bitcoin software fork) integrating privacy preserving Tx via the MimbleWimble protocol and Extension Blocks (together referred to as the MWEB hard fork).
Developments like the introduction of MWEB show that even if the government knows you or your Tx today, all you have to do is make an MWEB (or equivalent) transaction and all of a sudden that chain of visibility goes dark.
Additionally while it may be possible for the government or any organisation to forcibly extract access or knowledge from you with force, we as a society should not be content with making that easy. Prior to the introduction of the internet and digital society, organisations had to spend far more effort to collect far less (and far less reliable) information. We should be making every push to set that pre-digital information era as a baseline or absolute minimum for privacy standards.