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posted by janrinok on Sunday April 08 2018, @02:49AM   Printer-friendly
from the downside-of-Utopia dept.

"If you have control of the servers belonging to Visa or MasterCard, you have control of Sweden," Engström says.

It is hard to argue that you cannot trust the government when the government isn't really all that bad. This is the problem facing the small but growing number of Swedes anxious about their country's rush to embrace a cash-free society.

Most consumers already say they manage without cash altogether, while shops and cafes increasingly refuse to accept notes and coins because of the costs and risk involved. Until recently, however, it has been hard for critics to find a hearing.

"The Swedish government is a rather nice one, we have been lucky enough to have mostly nice ones for the past 100 years," says Christian Engström, a former MEP for the Pirate Party and an early opponent of the cashless economy.

"In other countries there is much more awareness that you cannot trust the government all the time. In Sweden it is hard to get people mobilised."

There are signs this might be changing. In February, the head of Sweden's central bank warned that Sweden could soon face a situation where all payments were controlled by private sector banks.

The Riksbank governor, Stefan Ingves, called for new legislation to secure public control over the payments system, arguing that being able to make and receive payments is a "collective good" like defence, the courts, or public statistics.

[...] "Most citizens would feel uncomfortable to surrender these social functions to private companies," he said.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/apr/03/being-cash-free-puts-us-at-risk-of-attack-swedes-turn-against-cashlessness


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  • (Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Sunday April 08 2018, @06:59AM

    by MichaelDavidCrawford (2339) Subscriber Badge <mdcrawford@gmail.com> on Sunday April 08 2018, @06:59AM (#663892) Homepage Journal

    I read James Bamford's "The Puzzle Palace" over 20 years ago.

    That's an awesome book but it gets tedious sometimes. Bamford is more a historian than a journalist, so he details every single reorg the NSA ever went through.

    There are many editions. He issues new ones as he learns what the NSA is up to the last few years.

    Strange But True:

    "NSA" no longer means "No Such Agency": the National Cryptologic Museum [nsa.gov] is at Forte Meade and is open to the public.

    Among the exhibits are a U2 and a real NAZI enigma machine.

    --
    Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
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