Ben Blaine

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Ben Blaine

Ben Blaine

@benblainex

"a force of nature"

เข้าร่วม Nisan 2011
730 กำลังติดตาม1.1K ผู้ติดตาม
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Ben Blaine
Ben Blaine@benblainex·
this @Dawie_Roodt guy says we won't pay for bread 🍞with Bitcoin "because of the fees" meanwhile the fees @PicknPay: R0.01
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Thom van Lieshout
Thom van Lieshout@thomvlieshout·
why would you use claude cowork over claude code desktop?
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Ben Blaine
Ben Blaine@benblainex·
@Beautyon_ I’m staying right here even though I lost all my bitcoin already 🇿🇦
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Beautyon
Beautyon@Beautyon_·
The only people who are worried about this are those that don’t understand how things work on the ground in “Africa”. South Africa has 20 to 21 million Smart Phone users; a 35.5% penetration out of a roughly 57-65 million population. Anyone who believes that there will not be millions of Bitcoin users beyond the reach of the State is delusional. Nigeria became the world’s number two country for Bitcoin adoption despite a total ban; do you really believe widespread adoption won’t be replicated in South Africa? In lawless countries, new laws are meaningless. These crypto laws are designed only for the law abiding, to prevent capital flight. Self custody makes frictionless capital movement trivially easy in arbitrary amounts; that’s what they want to stop, not Bitcoin Cult activity. What this means is that South Africans, like Nigerians, will find ways to obtain Bitcoin outside the country, and will then send it home for exchange into Rand and Naira on the street at prices they will accept. Then that bitcoin will flow back to the free world instantly to be recycled. Google “Hawala”. Now; imagine some law enforcement types discover “Issa” is buying bitcoin for cash on Mint Road in Jo’Burg. They catch him, and force him to open his phone with a pin. When they enter the pin, there is no Bitcoin app. At all. The pin he gave instructs the phone to send all his bitcoin to his cousin in Texas and delete the app. No evidence left behind. This is going to happen, and rarely, because EVERYBODY will be using Bitcoin, not just a handful. 15,000,000 Bitcoin users can’t be stopped, and in case you didn’t know, the police down there are already overwhelmed with real crimes. So keep Perl clutching and gasping about the “terrible” lols in South Africa. They won’t change the inevitable trajectory, and when they capitulate like Rhodesia has, that is now begging its criminally dispossessed farmers to return, South Africa too, will incinerate these stupid laws and beg on its knees for Bitcoin entrepreneurs to come back and help them.
Bill Hughes 🦊@BillHughesDC

I am frankly dumbstruck by the news out of South Africa 🇿🇦 that newly proposed regulations would upend self custody in that country. South Africa's National Treasury has published draft Capital Flow Management Regulations (treasury.gov.za/public%20comme…) to replace its 1961 exchange-control regime, and the proposal extends sixty-five-year-old capital controls designed for gold bullion and foreign banknotes directly onto self-custodied crypto. The result is one of the most invasive treatments of non-custodial wallets proposed anywhere in the world. The mechanics are clear and severe. Any purchase, sale, loan, or transfer of crypto above a Treasury-set threshold must run through a licensed "authorised crypto asset service provider." Cross-border movement of crypto requires permission. Holdings above the threshold must be declared within thirty days, and Treasury can compel their sale at market price. Crypto can be attached by administrative order, without prior judicial process, on reasonable suspicion of contravention. Penalties run to R1 million, five years in prison, or the full value of the crypto involved. The provision that is the real showstopper is Regulation 25(5). Where crypto has been forfeited to the state, the owner must "furnish full particulars in writing of all and any passwords, personal identification numbers or codes" necessary to give Treasury access. That seems to be a statutory compelled disclosure of seed phrases and private keys. There is no carve-out, no judicial check inside the regulation itself, no recognition that the keys are not separable from the user's right against self-incrimination or right to privacy under the South African Constitution. The reason that provision appears to exist is Treasury understands that, without it, the rest of the framework cannot reach a self-custody user. Exchange-control logic depends on gatekeepers — banks, dealers, intermediaries that the state can appoint and command. Self-custody removes the gatekeeper by design. So the regulation reaches the only places it still can: the on-ramp, the holder's declaration, and ultimately the holder's body and devices at the border. Regulations 4 and 5 give enforcement officers the power to search travelers entering or leaving the country, demand they "produce" any crypto in their possession or control, and seize it on suspicion alone. As you well know, this is not how most of the rest of the world is approaching self-custody. The EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets framework regulates issuers and crypto-asset service providers and explicitly leaves self-custody alone. The UK's financial services regime regulates exchanges and custodians and treats unhosted wallet software as out of scope. The US has spent the last two years walking back its most aggressive theories — the SAB 121 reversal, the broker-dealer rule rollback, the IRS DeFi broker rule rescission — precisely because policymakers across both parties recognized that you cannot regulate non-custodial software the way you regulate a bank. FATF's own guidance distinguishes wallet software publishers from custodial intermediaries. South Africa's draft does the opposite. It very much intends to reach through the software to the user. The technical reality the draft ignores is that a non-custodial wallet is a key-management tool, not a financial intermediary. @MetaMask does not hold user funds. It does not see private keys. It cannot freeze, seize, or surrender anything to a regulator. Compelling its users to declare, surrender, or hand over keys does not make Treasury more effective at managing capital flows. It makes ordinary South Africans criminally liable for using software the rest of the world treats as legitimate self-custody infrastructure. Treasury has opened a public comment period, and anyone with a dog in the fight should ask that the compelled-key provision be struck. The cross-border search-and-seizure regime should not extend to self-custodied wallets. And the framework should distinguish — as nearly every other major jurisdiction now does — between intermediated services and the user's own software.

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Ben Blaine
Ben Blaine@benblainex·
@coinerkurt I love South Africa 🇿🇦 I didn’t really like USA when I visited, although it might be that I went to the wrong areas
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Kurt Pretorius
Kurt Pretorius@coinerkurt·
@benblainex All the more reason to get on the refugee program to the US. Trump already told Ramaphosa to fuck off - I'm ready to do the same. 🇺🇲💯🤝🏻
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Ben Blaine
Ben Blaine@benblainex·
I gave my sister her first Bitcoin, just in time to be banned and sent to jail by the SARB!
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Alex MacCaw
Alex MacCaw@maccaw·
My friend @PhilipJoubert has put together an incredible useful set of AI skills that you can use to improve your thinking. Bring in your favorite thinkings to critique your memos, blog posts and research. npx skills add philipjoubert/dojo-public \ --global \ --copy \ --skill dojo-david-deutsch \ --skill dojo-thomas-sowell superdojo.xyz
Alex MacCaw tweet media
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Nick Darlington
Nick Darlington@NickDarlington·
We call Bitcoin the hardest form of money, but many of us are just holding it like gold, never using it in the real world. I don't know about you, but I firmly believe that if we want Bitcoin to succeed as money, more of us need to start spending it. Not occasionally. Not when we feel like it, but consistently over time. That's why I'm laying down a challenge. [Thread]
Nick Darlington tweet media
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Money⚡️Badger
Money⚡️Badger@MoneyBadgerPay·
👉 Pay with Bitcoin here! @Comfyzak is locally made brand that focuses on contemporary beanbags made to work across different spaces. 🛋️ Indoor and outdoor beanbags 🛒 Easy online checkout with @PeachPayments 👉 Visit Comfyzak: comfyzak.co.za 🔎 Find more stores: moneybadger.co.za/stores
Money⚡️Badger tweet mediaMoney⚡️Badger tweet media
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Money⚡️Badger
Money⚡️Badger@MoneyBadgerPay·
We’ve released an official MoneyBadger statement on South Africa’s draft Capital Flow Management Regulations here: moneybadger.co.za/blog/moneybadg… While the intent is to formalise crypto within a risk-based framework, there are areas where greater clarity and consistency are needed for meaningful public participation. We encourage businesses, industry participants, and the public to review the draft and engage in the consultation process @Treasury_RSA #bitcoin #CryptoRegulation #DigitalAssets
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Nakamoto10101010
Nakamoto10101010@V4Larry·
@benblainex I'm taking it your using Blink wallet to do this, is this a new capability? I can't find the option in my wallet and it won't let me update, just checking before i delete and re-install.
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El Flaco
El Flaco@_pretyflaco·
@benblainex She looks nice, why would anyone put her in jail???
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Money⚡️Badger
Money⚡️Badger@MoneyBadgerPay·
👉 Pay with Bitcoin here! Lighting choices can be confusing. @TLWSouthAfrica makes it easier. Wide range. Strong value. Honest service. Now you can also pay with Bitcoin when buying your lights. In store or online. No cards. No cash. Just scan and pay. Easy checkout @PeachPayments Find more stores: 🔎: moneybadger.co.za/stores
Money⚡️Badger tweet mediaMoney⚡️Badger tweet media
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Ben Blaine
Ben Blaine@benblainex·
@BitcoinNewsCom Meanwhile I just paid for my water with Bitcoin in South Africa at a gas station, it’s a wild time.
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Bitcoin News
Bitcoin News@BitcoinNewsCom·
🇿🇦 SOUTH AFRICA PROPOSES INSANE CRYPTO CONTROLS, POSSIBLE FORCED SALES South Africa National Treasury and South African Reserve Bank have introduced draft Capital Flow Management Regulations that could dramatically restrict crypto use. The proposal would require disclosure of crypto holdings above an unspecified threshold and could allow the government to force holders to sell assets for rand. Under the draft, investors may not buy, sell, lend, or transfer crypto above the threshold without permission, except through approved providers. Transactions would require a stated purpose, and using funds outside that purpose could trigger mandatory resale. Cross-border transfers and payments using crypto would be banned without approval. Authorities would also gain powers to search individuals, demand declarations, and seize assets suspected of violating the rules. Critics say the changes raise serious constitutional concerns around privacy, property rights, and freedom of association, calling them among the most aggressive updates to South Africa’s decades-old exchange control system.
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Ben Blaine
Ben Blaine@benblainex·
If you want to fight the moves by the powers-that-be, go out and spend Bitcoin and tell the staff and business owner you are doing it. Payments is the only way to spread Bitcoin beyond the “crazies” and into the main stream. It’s what people understand and it’s really what Bitcoin is about: proof of work.
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