16.17.1. Strong crypto makes possible the creation of institutions which can persist for very long periods of time, perhaps for centuries. - such institutions already exist: churches (Catholics of several orders), universities, etc. 16.17.2. all of these "persistent" services (digital banks, escrow services, reputation servers, etc.) require much better protections against service outages, seizures by governments, natural disasters, and even financial collapse than do most existing computer services-an opportunity for offshore escrow- like services - to maintain a distributed database, with unconditional privacy, etc. + again, it is imperative that escrow companies require all material placed in it to be encrypted - to protect them against lawsuits and claims by authorities (that they stole information, that they censored material, that they are an espionage conduit, etc.) 16.17.3. Escrow Services + "Digital Escrow" accounts for mutually suspicious parties, especially in illegal transactions - drug deals, information brokering, inside information, etc. + But why will the escrow entity be trusted? + reputations - their business is being a reliable escrow holder, not it destroying their reputation for a bribe or a threat + anonymity means the escrow company won't know who it's "burning," should it try to do so - they never know when they themselves are being tested by some service - and potential bribers will not know who to contact, although mail could be addressed to the escrow company easily enough - like bonding agencies - key is that these entities stand to gain very little by stealing from their customers, and much to lose (hinges on ratio of any single transaction to size of total market) - useful for black markets and illegal transactions (a reliable third party that both sides can trust, albeit not completely) 16.17.4. Reputation-Based Systems + Credit Rating Services that are Immune from Meddling and Lawsuits + with digital pseudonyms, true credit rating data bases can be developed - with none of the "5 year expirations" (I mean, who are you to tell me I must not hold it against a person that records show he's declares Chapter 7 every 5 years or so?...such information is information, and cannot be declared illegal, despite the policy issues that are involved) + this could probably be done today, using offshore data banks, but then there might develop injunctions against use by Stateside companies - how could this be enforced? stings? entrapment? + it may be that credit-granting entities will be forced to use rigid formulas for their decisions, with a complete audit trail available to the applicant - if any "discretion" or judgment is allowed, then these extralegal or offshore inputs can be used - related to "redlining" and other informal signalling mechanisms - remember that Prop. 103 attempted to bypass normal laws of economics + AMIX-like services will offer multiple approaches here + ranging from conventional credit data bases, albeit with lower costs of entry (e.g., a private citizen could launch a "bankruptcy filings" data base, using public records, with no expiration-they're just reporting the truth, e.g., that Joe Blow filed for personal bankruptcy in 1987 - this gets into some of the strange ideas involving mandatory rewriting of the truth, as when "credit records are expunged" (expunged from what? from my personal data bases? from records that were public and that I am now selling access to?) + there may be arguments that the "public records" are copyrighted or otherwise owned by someone and hence cannot be sold - telephone book case (however, the Supremes held that the "creative act" was the specific arrangement) - one ploy may be a Habitat-like system, where some of the records are "historical" - to offshore data bases + Book Reviews, Music Reviews - sometimes with pseudonyms to protect the authors from retaliation or even lawsuits + "What should I buy?" services, a la Consumer Reports - again, protection from lawsuits 16.17.5. Crypto Banks and the "Shell Game" as a Central Metaphor + Central metaphor: the Shell Game - description of conventional shell game (and some allusions to con artists on a street corner-the hand is quicker than the eye) + like entering a room filled with safe deposit boxes, with no surveillance and no way to monitor activity in the boxes....and user can buy new boxes anonymously, transferring contents amongst the boxes - only shutting down the entire system and forcing all the boxes open would do anything-and this would "pool" all of the contents (unless a law was passed saying people could "declare" the contents before some day....) + the shell game system can be "tested"-by testing services, by suspicious individuals, whatever-at very low cost by dividing some sum amongst many accounts and verifying that the money is still there (by retrieving or cashing them in) - and remember that the accounts are anonymous and are indistinguishable, so that the money cannot be seized without repercussions + this is of course the way banks and similar reputation- based institutions have always (or mostly) worked - people trusted the banks not to steal their money by verifying over some period of time that their money was not vanishing - and by relying upon some common sense ideas of what the bank's basic business was (the notion that a bank exists to continue in business and will make more money over some long run period by being trustworthy than it would make in a one-shot ripoff) + Numbered accounts - recall that Switzerland has bowed to international pressure and is now limiting (or eliminating) numbered accounts (though other countries are still allowing some form of such accounts, especially Lichtenstein and Luxembourg) + with crypto numbers, even more security - "you lose your number, tough" - but the money must exist in some form at some time? + options for the physical form of the money + accounts are shares in a fund that is publicly invested - shares act as "votes" for the distribution of proceeds - dividends are paid to the account (and sent wherever) - an abstract, unformed idea: multiple tiers of money, like unequal voting rights of stock... + could even be physical deposits - perhaps even manipulated by automatic handling systems (though this is very insecure) - the Bennett-Ross proposal for Global Data Services is essentially the early form of this 16.17.6. cryonicists will seek "crypto-trusts" to protect their assets + again, the "crypto" part is not really necessary, given trustworthy lawyers and similar systems - but the crypto part-digital money-further automates the system, allowing smaller and more secure transactions (overhead is lower, allowing more dispersions and diffusion) - and eliminates the human link - thus protecting better against subpoenas, threats, etc. + and to help fund "persistent institutions" that will fund research and protect them in suspension - they may also place their funds in "politically correct" longterm funds-which may or may not exert a postive ifluence in the direction they wish, what with the law of unintended consequences and all opl + many avenues for laundering money for persistent institutions + dummy corporations (or even real corporations) - with longterm consulting arrangements - "shell game" voting + as people begin to believe that they may just possibly be revived at some future time, they will begin to worry about protecting their current assets + recollections of "Why Call Them Back from Heaven?" - worries about financial stability, about confiscation of wealth, etc. - no longer will ersatz forms of immortality-endowments fo museums, universities, etc.-be as acceptable...people will want the real thing + Investments that may outlive current institutions - purchases of art works (a la Bill Gates, who is in fact a possibel model for this kind of behavior) - rights to famous works, with provision for the copyright expirations, etc. (which is why physical possession is preferable) - shell games, of course (networks of reputation-based accounts) - Jim Bennett reports that Saul Kent is setting up such things in Lichtenstein for Alcor (which is what I suggested to Keith Henson several years ago)
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