this post was submitted on 12 Mar 2026
813 points (91.4% liked)
Privacy
9231 readers
699 users here now
A community for Lemmy users interested in privacy
Rules:
- Be civil
- No spam posting
- Keep posts on-topic
- No trolling
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
They do accept bitcoin, and if that's not private enough, they also let you mail them cash in an envelope.
Mailing cash is probably less private. Your mail is postmarked, and can be tracked. The serial numbers on the bills can be tracked too. Not to mention the envelope itself, fingerprints, possible DNA in the saliva when you licked it to seal it, your handwriting or printing to address it, how unique the stamp is...
Only if all that information is collected and stored. Digital finance systems tend to track every transaction and keep a record of them (because of legal requirements among other reasons). With cash in an envelope a government can't check all the info you suggested a year after the payment has happened, perhaps not even after a few days.
True. I'm thinking of what they can collect after they've already decided to target you.
Sorry frongt, but I think you're wrongt, haha. I don't think mailing cash is less private than other methods.
If anyone was concerned enough to the point they were sending cash, they might also take precaution to send coins instead of notes, wearing gloves when handling them, folding their own envelope - do people still lick envelopes anymore? - using lettering stamps instead of handwriting...
Forgive me for the joke on your username, made me laugh.
That's only a concern if Proton keeps all the envelopes people send them, and the authorities are willing to sift through them all and check the fingerprints on them one by one.
Ok, so in what other way should they allow anonymous payments?
Ah, thats good to know, I looked at their signup page and it didn't have those options listed.