ATM For Anonymous Online Payments 254
prichardson writes "The New York Times has an article about a way to anonymously transfer cash online (NYT registration required)." The inventor, Carl Amos, believes the target market for his newly-patented 'Aunty IM' ATM machine "..might be teenagers.. [who] do not usually have their own credit cards, they usually have cash and are more than willing to spend it to download music or games", as well as "those who were worried about identity theft on the Internet, or who simply wanted the privacy it provided."
google linkage (Score:4, Informative)
Yay (Score:4, Insightful)
Power to the people! Vivé la transaction!
Perfect. (Score:5, Interesting)
Anonymity (Score:3, Insightful)
What's the penalty for wearing a mask in front of the camera?
How can I pay you? (Score:4, Interesting)
a credit card or Paypal at someone's web site...how could this be
done from an ATM? (No, I'm not gonna try to punch in the recipient's
URL!)
That's a rather critical detail not mentioned in the article.
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:5, Interesting)
. You could then use that number like any other card (visa/mastercard/etc). Jsut a thought. The article didn't really specify.
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:5, Informative)
Doesn't American Express have something like this? It's called Private Payments [americanexpress.com]. It gives you a unique number that's lets you obscure your identity.
Now there's probably a market for teenagers and such. But I'm thinking pre-paid cards will take care of that...
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:3, Informative)
No, Private Payments simply gives you a temporary American Express card number that expires at the end of the month in which it was issued.
The charge is still posted under your name and all the usual billing information is required. The amount is debited from your existing account.
The idea is that you give an on-line merchant a "throw-away" credit card number, without potentially compromising your primary credit card number. It cann
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:2, Informative)
Also, it is nice because you can give them the number (as a deposit for example) and then revoke it - though this may be fraud, so use at your own risk
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:3, Interesting)
MMM
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:3, Interesting)
A company called Mondex tried to implement something like this. My home town was actually a pilot test area and I was using it for about a year back around 1997 or so. The ma
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:2)
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:2)
You do it by publishing your P.O.Box on a website, freenet, invisiblog, or whatever. People can then pay you anonymously by posting cash.
This gives plenty of options, such as "use this to enable username x" or "to support blog y" or "for general use on project z". It allows you to pay for services such as email accounts, web proxies, etc. without having to trust some online e-tailer who almos
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:2)
It seems this device simply needs to collect the cash and credit the desired PayPal account with the cash collected. Therefore, with an email address and a transaction id as a comment, this device can convert PayPal into a cash transaction. Not too much punching in of information considering the convenience.
Re:How can I pay you? (Score:2, Interesting)
He's trying to sell it to banks. Ergo, the routing can take many shapes -an easy solution will be a virtual credit card number granted by that bank. Other solutions may well work on existing systems, but something using Visa and MasterCard networks is the most likely option (since they're not slow as hell like wire transfers.)
As to why this is necessary? Because not everyone has a credit card. Because not everyon
Money Launderer's dream (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
In other words...
1. Set up sham software business.
2. Buy licences from yourself.
3. PROFIT!
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:3, Insightful)
This system is simply a way of transfering cash online. I don't see how this would be usefull for money laundering.
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Step #1: Earn $100,000 selling cocaine.
Step #2: Make 100 anonymous $1,000 purchases to "friends"
Step #3: "Friends" make legitamate purchases from you on Ebay.
thus your money is laundered (provided you pay income tax on your ebay sales.)
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Step #1: Earn $100,000 selling cocaine.
Step #2: Make 100 anonymous $1,000 purchases to "friends"
Step #3: "Friends" make legitamate purchases from you on Ebay.
You forgot Step #1a: Spend all day standing at a machine feeding in five thousand $20 bills.
No, some of your drug customers might conceivably pay with this system -- just like they now pay with cash -- but you'd still have to funnel the accumulated funds through the accounts of legitimate-looking busin
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Of course, there's a few side benefits....
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
> Step #2: Make 100 anonymous $1,000 purchases to "friends"
> Step #3: "Friends" make legitamate purchases from you on Ebay.
> thus your money is laundered (provided you pay income tax on your ebay sales.)
If you pay income tax on your coc^H^H^HeBay sales, so much the better for the IRS. If we can't legalize it, the least we can do is tax it to fund the costs of not legalizing it :)
Seriously, I can't imagine Joe Mobster using this as a means of laun
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:4, Insightful)
Now typically you would have records of credit card transactions, that could be traced back to the card's owner. With this system, you would have records of transactions that cannot be traced to anyone.
You could then simply pump a buttload of cash into the system and report legitimate profits.
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
What a great idea!
In fact, let's take it a step further. Eliminate the possibility of being seen shoveling cash into the ATM at night (and the embarassing questions by law enforcement that invariably follow), and just write a bunch of fake receipts for your:
Nope, can't be material things (Score:2)
Has to be data, content, not anything material. Even then, a simple trace would show how much was actually transferred in the period you claimed.
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
just my 0.02c i'll pay you anonymously
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
I dunno... trying to stick a million dollars' worth of bills (even hundreds) into one of these machines would take an awfully long time. And that assumes that they even take large bills - have you ever seen a vending machine which takes hundreds, or even fifties? More than likely, these ATMs will only be useful for relatively small transactions.
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Every day. Come to Vegas, baby.
I admit, I'm talking out my ass, but money-laundering doesn't typically handle a million bucks per whack. A few thousand, or even 20 - 50 grand maybe.
Millions are the very rare exception, not the rule.
Re:Money Launderer's dream (Score:2)
Hmm... I'm trying to see a downside here. ;)
Too Much Freedom? (Score:2, Insightful)
Arguments?
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:5, Insightful)
How about the fact that it's no different from cash?
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:2)
Physical Mail?
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:3, Funny)
Just stick it in a bloody envelope! My god people are so uncreative these days. (Sure, you risk losing it, but the risk isn't that great. You could also break up the cash into several letters to diffuse the risk of loss)
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:2)
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:2)
Serial numbers, OCR, easy to track. Along with cameras mounted in the ATM you lose more privacy by using this system than the US Postal service.
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:3, Insightful)
So you believe in no privacy at all? You believe that nobody should ever be allowed to pay cash at stores? If I go to a store and pay cash, where is the money trail?
Please name a few bad uses... The money isn't really anonymous, law enforcement can still trace your payment to a source and destination. I would assume that this guy will be smart and require the companies recieving the money to
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:2)
In the serial numbers on the money, logged when the atm spit it out (with a picture of you from the camera).
Re:Too Much Freedom? (Score:5, Interesting)
I have read that organized crime transfers money from country to country by wiring small amounts (under the amount that must be reported) constantly. Even though there is a paper trail of sorts, it is very hard to sort through. But again, most of the people who wire money are not organized criminals. Should we stop this practice because some of the people are?
Means of moving illegal money secretively already exist. I think the idea with this system is it could allow people to make online purchases, even if they are from an area of the world that does not have the financial systems and identification systems that we take for granted in the West. I am inclined to think the net effect of this would be good. Many people do not have any sort of identification or formal bank account (as required for a service like paypal, which is apparently unavailable in much of the world), but if they could get to a kiosk with some cash, they might be able to order something - provided someone was willing to ship it to them. This could be a big improvement in the lives of many people. It could also help economic growth, facilitating transactions at greater distances and of greater complexity than was possible before.
Should we not build any infrastructure because criminals could use it? Criminals can drive on the roads, too, but that does not mean we stop building them. We police them. This system would have to be policed.
The market (Score:5, Interesting)
Whoever steps in to fill that gap make a friggin mint. The frontrunner seems to be CitiBank's C2It, though I know nothing of such services.
Re:The market (Score:2, Funny)
C2lt... (Score:3, Funny)
Great!! (Score:5, Funny)
What can it do? (Score:3, Insightful)
Some more details on capability would be cool. Google here I come.
Going to need alot of work (Score:5, Insightful)
about quick and easy anonymous money transfer...
Re:Going to need alot of work (Score:4, Insightful)
it's nice but this, I fear, will go the way of big hair and mullets... unless you live in the south.
Re:Going to need alot of work (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, and since you have the anonymous purchase card you don't have to register the gun or go through the other processes. "Here's my anonymous cash card!" "Right, here's your pistol and ammo." You do know that you have to register to buy a gun, right? You also know you can buy a gun with cash, right?
Anybody who accepts these cards will accept cash, and you have no benefit over them. For some reason I doubt that most private gun sellers will offer support for these cards.
Actually, (Score:4, Funny)
I'd like a gun and ammo
Here you go. That'll be $342.22
Here's my anonymous cash card!
Right, here's your pistol and ammo.
Oh - I won't be needing a bag...
Huh? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Going to need alot of work (Score:3, Funny)
But of the money-transfer device, obviously, not guns.
What is happening to the English language? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What is happening to the English language? (Score:3, Informative)
This is old hat in Japan (Score:5, Informative)
You just key in the bank name and account number to transfer to, insert the cash, and it's on its way. The ATM will even make change for you.
Re:This is old hat in Japan (Score:4, Insightful)
Funny (Score:5, Insightful)
Why to I find this sentence funny ?
So, finally banking can be anonymous (yeah right, in your wildest dreams [whitehouse.gov], but we still need to register with NYT?
No wait, you can't do do banking with a hotmail account
Is there an identity verification system? (Score:4, Insightful)
Already been done. (Score:3, Informative)
They also made into the system a way of determining real-time if any "bill" was being used more than once.
Wow. Anonymous atm. It's a real shocker if it hasnt already be theorized up to the top.
boring.
Good Luck (Score:2)
The way they crack down on the gambling industry, you can bet they'd scream "terrorism" and "drugs" and all the other things they have wars on.
Not to mention the Tax Evasion uses, and we all know that taxes are #1 when it comes to the governments concern.
Re:Good Luck (Score:2)
sounds good (Score:3, Insightful)
Amazed no one has mentioned ... (Score:2)
Re:Amazed no one has mentioned ... (Score:2)
Useless invention (Score:4, Offtopic)
This is not hearsay or speculation, I work in the financial services industry, and I can tell you that the financial laws are going the other way - less anonymity and higher identification requirements for money wires.
In other words, this guy will have to keep transactions down a ridiculously low upper limit to avoid ID requirements.
I have seen people wiring money for very fraudulent puposes, so I don't really share people's feelings that wiring money should be anonymous.
As for this guy's plans to use the technolgy abroad, he should take into consideration that the USA is requiring other countries to follow USA-like laws and he might have the same issue abroad.
Again, this is from first-hand experience, not hearsay.
Re:Useless invention (Score:2)
Re:Useless invention (Score:2, Informative)
He just goes to the local box and sticks 20 bucks cash money into a slot, which electronically credits you. He is somewhat anonymous, paying cash (of course, you are shipping to him), you are not.
People are hyping the word "anonymous" erroneosly here.
Re:Useless invention (Score:2)
Re:Useless invention (Score:2)
Very useful if properly implemented (Score:2, Interesting)
As a teenager, I can definitely see a use for this (Score:2, Interesting)
Somethings not right... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, you don't have the logs of cash coming out of your account (credit, savings, etc), but there is cash being sent somewhere, and that somewhere has to be well-defined for the cash to get there.
Also, the product, assuming something is bought, has to go somewhere, again a well-defined location, even if it is a mail-drop.
AFAIK, all wired money transactions are logged in some fashion, and for this to be approved by the government, it would have to be as well. I still don't see how super-beneficial this gimmick might be.
Re:Somethings not right... (Score:2)
Think of this as a machine that spits out a "prepaid" credit card on the spot. Somebody who doesn't qualify for a credit card can stick money in, and then get a card number that's valid for online transactions... finally a way for little Jimmy to spend his allowance money at Amazon.com without having to bother his parents.
disposable credit card numbers (Score:5, Interesting)
Something like that must be done at a global level (Score:2)
Something that enables to pay directly with cash, no risks involved (like the fear of many of using their credit card number online) and really for everyone (well, with the cash and with that kind of ATMs near :) could do a real boom for online payments (at least, for the things that don't h
Easily Bypassing NYT 'Registration Required' (Score:5, Informative)
2. Go to URL bar, replace "www" with "archive" in the URL, leaving the rest alone, and hit ENTER
3. The system will bounce you around a few erroneous URLs, before returning you to the homepage
4. All NYT links will now work without registration, thanks to a special cookie set by the bouncing process
David Chaum is the guy we should be watching (Score:2)
No way in Hell (Score:2, Insightful)
There's so much more to this but the only way this idea would make it is for it to not be anon but that defeats the purpose right?
Suuuuuuure... (Score:2, Interesting)
But it's primary use will be for drug dealers to launder money. For married men(and women) to pay for hookers and strippers. For people to turn petty cash into petty lap dance...
Big market for those things tho
where's the anonymity? (Score:4, Insightful)
A search on the article itself does NOT have the word "anonymous" anywhere in it.
So... given that the article is very short on implementation details, how does one come to the conclusion there is anything anonymous about it? Because no credit card is involved? Not saying it isn't... but it just seems there's a big jump to conclusions.. unless I'm blind.
An easy way to implement this would be... (Score:2)
Two words... (Score:2)
(or money launderers)
[or hot items]
I like it (Score:2)
Well... I like the idea of anonymous cash transfers.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
less here than meets the eye (Score:5, Insightful)
The potential profits are too low for the risks involved. Also, there are already ATMs that have been retrofitted to accept cash for the purpose of paying bills for defined (telco, utility) customers. Ever see one?
There are cheaper and more cost-effective ways to do this than via ATM, I filed a provisional patent app for one years ago.
NYT Registration gets us AGAIN! (Score:3, Funny)
You mean I actually have to register with the NYT to anonymously transfer cash online?!
WHEN. WILL. IT. STOP?!
Re:ATM machine?! (Score:2, Flamebait)
Heh, I'm so funny. (Score:2)
Will these new ATM machines use the HTTP protocol?
Re:This looks like a good way to fund terrorists (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This looks like a good way to fund terrorists (Score:5, Informative)
It's not even that simple, nor is the threshold that high. There are several levels of reporting requirements and the lowest explicit thresholds are at about $3000 for most states.
Additionally, funds transfers companies are burdened with detecting "suspicious" transactions, and you have to report those no matter what the amounts are.
I am not going to spell out how to do this, just suffice it to say that the methods are very sophisticated.
This guy ain't implementing his invention in the USA (and the non-triangle of terror countries) until he gets some heavy-duty legal compliance checking stuff into his system. The age of anonymous funds transfers is over.
Re:Hrmmmm, terrorist concerns? (Score:2)
And besides, the interstate highway system could be used by terrorists to quickly move people and supplies around. Should we shut down highways because of this use?
Re:Hrmmmm, terrorist concerns? (Score:5, Interesting)
Every slashdot discussion will eventually mention terrorism.
Re:Hrmmmm, terrorist concerns? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is an extremely poor argument. Your argument would apply the same if we did not have privacy laws, and all of a sudden people proposed having privacy. Using the same logic, because privacy laws helps the boogey-man terrorist immensely, we shouldn't implement them.
Re:Visa Electron and friends (Score:2)
Re:Potential users... (Score:2)
Re:The breakdown of user demographics: (Score:2, Insightful)
10% people who have had their credit trashed via identity theft and can no longer get even a debit card.... you know the same people who, as soon as they open weven savings bank account, get hit with legal garnishments by the government and collection agencies. Believe it or not, some people are *forced* to operate on a cash only basis and I'm not just talking about paycheck to paycheck, lower 10% of the economey types.
Oh and this demo. as well:
10% illegal aliens. You know..