ECash isn't money, it's credit that's only useful with the server that created it. It's not tied or pegged to anything, it's completely trust based. The server can simply just break the connection with Lightning or whatever else they claim you're getting a share of.
It's basically an API token, but differs because it uses signatures instead of being mapped to a user account in a traditional database. The theory behind this being that with a sufficient anonset it could make interactions between a client and server a little more private by not having accounts. Unless the mint is a large bank or exchange though, this anonset is unrealistic, and large custodians present even worse problems for privacy because of flow capture on the settlement layer.
As is common, spooks and scammers have the twisted narratives of ECash's functionality to exploit users who don't have the capacity to question it. There's an active campaign with 10s of millions of dollars being invested into these mint architectures so that Bitcoin software might be future-compatible with dollarized government ECash. (read the ECash Act and understand it's an RFP signal)
The most insidious aspect is that even though ECash is useful at one mint, it's being astroturfed as a decentralized payments system by these spooks and scammers. The reason for that is because native Lightning makes Bitcoin a more serious threat to the established order.
Bitcoin is easily captured via institutions as a store of value, and so the "then they fight you" stage is against Bitcoin as a means of exchange. If Bitcoin leaked into the economy at large as a means of exchange it could no longer be captured as velocity would be too high.
This is why these scammers with their hands out to the tunes of 10s of millions of dollars are astroturfing ECash as a payment system, so the government/banks can simply stay in power by turning up their own e-mints.
The end-game is your Lightning wallet using a bank or government e-dollar mint.
this territory is moderated
100 sats \ 1 reply \ @Lumor 6 May
RFP = ?
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A request for proposal (RFP) is a project announcement posted publicly by an organization indicating that bids for contractors to complete the project are sought. The RFP defines the project, for the company that issues it as well as the companies that respond to it.
The organization in this context is the banks that own congress
The contractors are their operatives in the private sector
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39 sats \ 1 reply \ @calle 6 May
This is ridiculous, we deserve better enemies :(
Your golden days are long over Justin, you peaked when you said that Blockstream was controlled by lizard people 🤣
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we deserve better enemies
I concur, 0 substance from you, just like your shitcoin
Blockstream
As a pinko you're obligated respect their preferred pronouns
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