<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>satsdisco wrote</title><author_name>satsdisco (npub1gu…3nudq)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1gunkavtrl32txueexz44el2l49rg0gv48pc6suadf7hwj852tuuqj3nudq</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>So I don&#39;t know why more people don&#39;t scream about this but KYC does not prevent crime.&#xA;&#xA;I&#39;m gonna lay out the numbers here because people need to see this. The cost of pretending it works is measured in actual human lives now.&#xA;&#xA;There was a peer reviewed study by researcher Ronald Pol where he found that AML regulations have less than a 0.1% impact on criminal finances. You read that correctly. Less than 0.1%. That means it catches basically nothing. What a joke.&#xA;&#xA;But how much does this cost? The financial industry spends over $200 billion a year on KYC/AML compliance. Europol itself says they confiscate less than 2% in the EU, and in the USA it&#39;s even worse, its less than 0.2%. &#xA;&#xA;That means the cost of compliance is over 100x what they recover. &#xA;&#xA;You know what does happen through all of this compliance? &#xA;&#xA;The biggest money laundering operations in human history.&#xA;&#xA;So what do the numbers show for the fully KYC compliant banks?&#xA;&#xA;&#xA;Danske Bank: $230 billion laundered&#xA;HSBC: billions for the Sinaloa cartel&#xA;Wachovia: $378 billion in cartel wire transfers&#xA;&#xA;&#xA;HSBC was laundering money for one of the most violent drug cartels on earth. They got hit with a $1.9 billion fine. Nobody went to jail, then according to the ICIJ investigation they kept moving money even after the fine.&#xA;&#xA;That&#39;s not a system that prevents crime. That enables it. &#xA;&#xA;At the same time, the system generates 4.6 million suspicious activity reports in the US alone. 95% of them are false positives. Millions of people&#39;s accounts flagged, frozen, and their lives disrupted. For what? To catch 0.1%. But it&#39;s not just about the inconvenience of having your account frozen. It&#39;s your life on the line. KYC links your identity to your money. Every exchange that collects your passport, your address, your biometrics and all that data sits in a database waiting to be breached. &#xA;&#xA;Coinbase in 2025 employees were BRIBED to steal data. &#34;We&#39;re sorry.&#34; 70,000 users. Government IDs, SSN, bank details, transaction history, addresses. Yet people still willingly turn this information over because they believe they have to. &#xA;&#xA;And we learned that Persona, a KYC provider used by Kraken and many others, has code that pipes your passport data directly to FinCEN tagged with intelligence program codenames. &#xA;&#xA;Furthermore, while all this happens, 1.7 billion people still don&#39;t have access to a bank account. The World Bank says 75% of unbanked people are locked out because of costs and requirements. 100 million in Africa without IDs at all. KYC makes financial access impossible for them. &#xA;&#xA;So help me understand. A system that catches less than 0.1% of criminal activity. Costs 100x more than it recovers. Enables the largest laundering operations in history. Creates target lists that get people kidnapped and mutilated. Yet we&#39;re told it&#39;s protecting us.&#xA;&#xA;&#xA;&#xA;Jameson Lopp tracks physical bitcoin attacks. Wrench attacks up 169% in 2025, and France is a hotbed of activity these days. These people aren&#39;t being targeted because of Bitcoin. They&#39;re being targeted because their identity was linked to their holdings. &#xA;&#xA;That is KYC.&#xA;&#xA;I know I scream this every day and the people who follow me are probably tired of hearing me talk about it. But I don&#39;t know how to say it louder. We need your voice as well. &#xA;&#xA;KYC is not a safety measure. KYC is surveillance infrastructure marketed as consumer protection. &#xA;&#xA;If you actually care about safety, you should care about people being able to transact without painting a target on themselves.&#xA;&#xA; Peer to peer. No KYC. That&#39;s not radical it&#39;s the only thing that makes sense.</html></oembed>