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Click Here: <A HREF="http://zolatimes.com/V4.40/DMTQnA.html">Questions and
Answers About the Digital Monetar�</A>
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Questions and Answers About


The Digital Monetary Trust



by J. Orlin Grabbe

What is the Digital Monetary Trust?
The Digital Monetary Trust is a computer system and mechanism that gives
users the ability to hold assets anonymously, along with the ability to
anonymously transfer these assets to other parties.

You can think of a DMT customer account as an anonymously-held checking
account (in which the customer is anonymous both to the bank and to other
people), but one which allows the customer to write checks to third parties
(and these third parties will also be anonymous to the bank and the outside
world; in fact, you can even arrange for the receiver of your check to be
anonymous to you also).

The "checking account" analogy here is only an analogy; there are no actual
paper records involved within the DMT system.

Are Digital Monetary Trust customer accounts like secret Swiss numbered
accounts?
No, they are far superior to Swiss numbered accounts. A Swiss numbered
account is not really anonymous: a few upper level bank managers always know
who you are (they know the name that is associated with the numbered
account). Thus your confidentiality rests on the discretion of bankers, and
hinges on often-leaky banking secrecy laws. Banks in banking "secrecy"
jurisdictions have been frequently known to leak customer financial
information to private investigators and national and international
governmental authorities, simply because it is politically expedient, or
because the bank is under pressure, or because bank employees have been
bribed or secretly work for some outside agency. Governments have even set up
their own fake "private" banks to snare unwary customers. Truly it has become
a fact of life that "your banker is a snitch." Your first objective in
seeking banking secrecy should be to protect yourself against your banker and
what he knows about you.

By contrast, in the DMT system, DMT never knows who its customers are. Their
identity is kept confidential by cryptographical protocols which allow
customers to be anonymous, yet at the same time ensure that only
customer-authorized transactions can take place in the customer�s account.

So the Digital Monetary Trust doesn�t follow "know your customer" procedures?
No, the Digital Monetary Trust is a system designed for anonymity. It is
specifically constructed on the principle of "don�t know your customer." This
anonymity protects both the customer and DMT itself. DMT employees can�t leak
information about customers, because they don�t know anything about them.

Who are the target customers for DMT? Rich people?
No, DMT is targeted neither to the rich nor the poor.

Poor people, who have only a small amount of assets, can maintain their
anonymity by dealing entirely in cash. In fact, we recommend they do so.

Rich people can afford to pay lawyers, managers, and bankers to look after
their wealth and its confidentiality. The current banking system serves them
well.

DMT is targeted to middle-level individuals who wish to hold anonymous, but
transferable assets in the one thousand dollar to several million dollar
range. When members of this group seek out "privacy havens", they are apt to
find themselves the prey of private or government scam dogs. And they are
frequently not able to afford the expensive lawyers and bankers who know
their way around the sometimes treacherous off-shore scene.

DMT intends to provide low-cost anonymity to this middle-level group by
substituting a complete system based on cryptology for the "privacy veil"
claimed to be offered by bankers and lawyers in jurisdictions with "banking
secrecy".

Is DMT a digital cash system?
No, DMT is an anonymous account system. Digital cash is something
different�digital cash is intended to be an Internet substitute for ordinary
cash, or perhaps even a day-to-day "pocket change" substitute for ordinary
cash (through smart cards or similar devices).

We have nothing against digital cash, but do not view it as a significant
market or business opportunity, and do not think it represents a great
advance in privacy.

For most daily transactions, ordinary cash works fine and is also anonymous.
Digital cash is not needed. So "if it ain�t broke, don�t fix it."

In fact, we view the attempt to substitute digital cash for ordinary cash
(bills and coins) in daily transactions with suspicion, and we suggest you do
the same. Could it be that someone, somewhere, wants to track your daily
activities? The web site of one so-called "privacy advocate" even boasted
that while "paper notes, briefcases full of which can be passed from hand to
hand without leaving any record, allow money laundering and tax evasion
today", "with ecash . . . all the amounts each person receives are known to
their bank." Thankfully, this person�s company went bankrupt.

For long distance transactions, such as over the Internet, there is an
obvious need for digital cash. There are several functioning versions (such
as PayPal) which are, however, not anonymous, in contrast to ordinary cash.
Thus far the only form of semi-"anonymous" digital cash that has emerged
commercially was the one associated with David Chaum (the ecash product of
the now-defunct company Digicash). But even in this case the so-called
"anonymity" was deceptive.

Chaum tried to have his cake and eat it too. He attempted to pick a single
bank to be an ecash issuer in each one of several countries. Thus his
"anonymous" cash had to please the banking regulators of all these countries
simultaneously. Not surprisingly, privacy was bastardized. The digital
"coins" could be spent anonymously, but they could not be received and
deposited anonymously. The payer was anonymous, but the receiver had to
reveal himself to the bank (which had signed the coins) by depositing those
coins in an identified account.

DMT is not interested in competing with ordinary cash. A DMT account is not
intended for small, everyday transactions. Rather, it can be viewed more as a
substitute for low-turnover checking or savings or money market accounts,
where the desired service is anonymity. Both payer and receiver are anonymous
within the DMT system. We have not sacrificed privacy to please bank
regulators.

How do I put money into the DMT system?
After downloading the DMT software, you will follow the instructions given
there, and wire money to a bank account, from where it can be claimed into
the DMT system by yourself or someone else you authorize, by giving them a
claim number.

You will then use this same software to make or receive payments within the
DMT system, or to remove money from it.

Will other payment mechanisms be available to interface with the DMT system,
in addition to wire transfers?
Yes, in time, once we feel we�ve had sufficient experience with the initial
set up (which will only involve wire transfers into or out of the DMT
system). We will then add as many payment interfaces as we find practical and
cost-effective in a business sense.

Will the DMT system accept (physical) cash?
No. DMT is intended to be a low-cost electronic (virtual) operation, and this
precludes us setting up physical facilities to accept and count physical
cash, or check for counterfeit bills, and so on.
In addition, even though cash may be important to the privacy of a sovereign
individual, it is also unfortunately true that large amounts of cash are
associated with the retail drug trade. We have no interest in servicing this
industry. (The ordinary banking system, in fact, already caters to the drug
industry. All the major banks making up the ordinary banking world have drug
suppliers and producers as important customers. This fact is used by
authorities in the various nation-states as an excuse to invade the privacy
of all their citizens, including the moral and upstanding.) DMT will not
accept cash deposits.

How will DMT make its money?
DMT will invest customer funds and its own capital in low-risk, highly
liquid, high quality securities. The goal is to achieve a 4 percent annual
gross return on assets, one-half of which will be absorbed in operating
costs, and one-half of which will be paid out to DMT stockholders.
This foregone interest, along with the small transactions costs, represents
the cost of anonymity. This cost is low. People today are not only accustomed
to giving up interest, but also to giving up 5 to 20 percent of their capital
in order to obtain anonymity.

What are the DMT transactions costs?
All transactions will be subject to a 1/10th of 1 percent fee, deducted from
the account of the receiving party. (That amounts to a $1 charge on a $1000
transaction.) The exception is that initial deposits into the DMT system will
have a minimum fee of $20. (This means deposits of $20,000 or less will be
charged a flat fee of $20 by DMT at the time the deposit is accepted into the
system; larger deposits will be charged 1/10th of 1 percent.) These fees may
be adjusted up or down as business conditions dictate.

Are there any other DMT charges?
No, just the ones mentioned in the previous paragraph. There may be other
costs of doing banking, which are not controlled by, nor the proceeds
received by, DMT. Your bank, for example, will charge you a fee for making a
wire transfer anywhere, including one to DMT. Similarly, the sending bank
will deduct a wire transfer fee for funds sent back to you (or to whomever)
if you remove them from the DMT system.

Why aren�t DMT transactions free?
If something is free, everyone wants two. Transactions represent a use of
system resources, and underpricing the marginal cost of using them invites
abusive or frivolous activity, including (but not limited to) a possible
large-scale turnover of small sums of money.
There is no such thing as "free checking" in the ordinary banking world.
Banks that so advertise require a minimum balance, where the interest earned
on the balance more than pays for the cost of "free" checking. But, unlike
banks, DMT does not do this sort of intrusive monitoring of account balances.
Your account balance at DMT will be checked only when you make a transfer
into or out of the account.

Why doesn�t DMT pay interest?
There is no such thing as a free lunch, despite the attempts of central banks
of the world to convince people otherwise. If DMT operates on a 4 percent
margin, and pays customers 2 percent interest, then it must invest in riskier
securities yielding 6 percent. This puts both DMT capital and customer
balances at greater risk. Then why should we not pay 4 percent interest to
customers and invest in securities paying 8 percent? Or pay 10 percent to
customers and double our money by investing in junk bonds paying 18 percent?

We are in the business of providing anonymous transaction services, not of
making loans and playing credit intermediary. If you want to be paid interest
on your money, stick with the ordinary banking world.

In addition (and this is a crucial technological point), if interest were
paid on accounts, the underlying cryptological protocols would become vastly
more complicated, transactions would be multiplied, and the overall security
of the anonymous system would be placed at risk. If you want your anonymity
compromised, stick with the ordinary banking world.

What do you mean by "system" in the DMT system?
The DMT system begins with a virtual private network (VPN) that links
together Linux servers in various areas or jurisdictions of the world. In
addition, there is a customer module (a software program much like a web
browser) that DMT customers will use to interact with these servers to make
transactions within the system. These elements, along with the underlying
cryptological protocols for communication and generation of transaction and
storage numbers, make up the basic DMT system.

What is a "virtual private network"?
Our servers in different parts of the world communicate via the Internet. To
make this communication private, communication packets are encrypted
end-to-end, and authenticated to ensure they have not been altered in
transit. This turns the server communication into a private, secure network,
even though it uses the public, insecure Internet. In particular, we use Free
S/WAN, which you can read about here (http://www.xs4all.nl/~freeswan/). We
have made a few "hacks" (modifications) for our purposes.

Why did you choose Linux?
For several reasons. The first is that Linux is open source. That is, all the
Linux source code is available for inspection and development, and is in the
public domain. We don�t want our life and our customer�s security to be
controlled by some large company which might choose to ignore security
problems, or to implant backdoors under government pressure, or charge
exorbitant fees for us to use and modify their software. Therefore the basic
design of the DMT system called for the exclusive use of open-source software.

Second, we wanted a system that was scalable for a large number of users,
like Unix, but one that could run on cheap and fast PC processors, as well as
one that could be secured. On these criteria, for example, Windows NT was out
of the question. Linux was it.

What about the customer module? Is it a plug-in to the Microsoft Explorer or
Netscape Navigator web browsers?
No, these browsers are designed to leak too much information about the user,
and plug-ins to them do not make possible proper security controls.

The customer module is a stand-alone browser-like piece of software written
in Java. One of the goals of Java, of course, was to allow the creation of
software that could run on various operating systems (such as Microsoft,
Macintosh, and Linux) just as long as they supported a Java virtual machine.

How will a customer get the needed software?
It will be available for download at a number of places on the Internet. To
check on progress, look for DMT information pages (these are not DMT servers)
that will be posted soon in Hong Kong, at http://orlingrabbe.org/, and in
Amsterdam at http://www.xs4all.nl/~kalliste/
.
How does the customer module communicate with the server?
The module securely communicates with the server using TLS (Transport Layer
Security), which establishes an encrypted communication link. The basic
software code comes out of the OpenSSL project (http://www.openssl.org).

The customer module leads the customer through the steps he or she needs to
send money to DMT, to collect a payment, to make a payment, or to transfer
money out of DMT. This information, and the various challenge-response
protocols which allowed secure, anonymous banking are communicated in an
agreed message format based on XML.

There is additional encryption of some variables involved in the
communication process. Keep in mind, also, that the underlying information
being transmitted is itself a system of numbers derived from cryptology. No
customer-identifying information is transmitted.

Is DMT legal?
Is privacy legal? Is encryption legal? If your answer to these questions is
Yes, then DMT is legal. If your answer is No, then please just go away
somewhere and die quietly. The Digital Monetary Trust is a Laissez Faire City
corporation, and privacy and encryption are not only legal, but expected.

DMT is a corporation that operates a secure computer system (the DMT system).
In addition, DMT purchases computer and banking services from other entities.
All these entities operate legally in their areas of the world.

Why, then, might statists not like DMT?
Tyrants maintain their power and control, among other ways, by spying on
their subjects�the most important aspect of which is spying on their
subjects� financial activities. Therefore, tyrants are prone to argue that
"some of your customers might be criminals." This is similar to the argument
that "encryption must be banned because criminals might use it," or "rental
car agencies must be banned because criminals might rent cars." Tyrants want
to spy on everyone, in order to be able to label anyone who threatens their
power a "criminal."

If someone is a bona fide, known criminal, then let him be arrested. If he is
not a criminal, then leave him alone. DMT is not concerned with the spurious
political propaganda of the Big Brother state, and it does not inquire into
the background of its customers.

When will the DMT software be available?
There will be a beta test of the software probably by the end of this year.
No actual monetary transfers will be involved. The beta test will be limited
to Laissez Faire City Founders. This will allow Founders to familiarize
themselves with the software first, as a reward for helping build Laissez
Faire City.

[Note: LF City Founders will be anonymous like all other users of the system.
But only Founders will be told where they can download the initial software.]

This beta test will test the flexibility of the Java virtual machine, and
will alert us to any common problems or questions in downloading, installing,
and using the software.

The system is expected to go live by the end of the first quarter 2001.
Again, initially the system will be limited to LF City Founders, but will be
open to all in due time.

How can I lose my anonymity in the DMT system?
Only you, as the customer, will know which DMT accounts are yours, and only
you will possess the relevant account numbers, private keys, and DMT
signatures on the account balances. If you share these with others, or allow
others to access your computer, then these same people will or may become
privy to your private DMT information. DMT puts your private financial
information completely in your hands, but after that it�s your responsibility
to keep it that way.

What currencies will be available?
Eventually all the currencies that make up the Rand, as well as the Rand
itself. (Namely, the US dollar, Japanese yen, the British pound, the European
euro, and gold, as well as the Rand, which is defined as a composite of all
these.) However, initially, only the US dollar will be available. We want to
be sure things are running smoothly using a single currency before
introducing additional ones. But no matter what currency you normally use,
almost any bank in the world can wire US dollars and charge your account.

What if the US blocks dollar bank accounts or transfers?
What if it does? If the US wants to destroy the credibility of its currency
as an international medium of exchange, they can be our guest. We�ll simply
switch to another currency.

As a separate, but not entirely unrelated, issue, we don�t care who our
customers are. If all our customers come from the Middle East or from
Southeast Asia, that�s fine with us.

What if someone attacks your servers?
What if someone blows up your house, or rapes your daughter? There is little
point in responding to "what ifs", based on the hypothetical activities of
criminals.

But, speaking of criminals, keep in mind that banking security has been a
private matter throughout most of history. While we don�t believe in
initiating violence, we do believe in self-defense and protecting our
customers� assets. We have contracts with private agents to deal with thieves
and scoundrels.

Secondly, keep in mind that nation-states have more to lose than we do from
information warfare attacks. Disrupting DMT may inconvenience a few thousand
customers for a few days. But shutting down CHIPS or SWIFT or the equivalent
could bring a nation to its knees. We hope everyone gets the point.

Will the DMT source code be available?
Yes, after we�ve had enough experience so that the code is reasonably stable.
This will be a while, but making the source available was part of the
original design specification.

Won�t this help competitors?
Yes, but we welcome competition. At the moment, there isn�t any. We welcome
competition, perhaps cynically, because it will provide more targets for
tyrants. But, more importantly, it will make the job of providing anonymity
easier, because each provider of anonymity can call on the others� services.

What is the purpose, again, of the Rand, exactly?
The Rand is simply a product offering by DMT. It is not related to DMT�s
basic purpose, which is to to provide an anonymous financial transaction
mechanism.

But some of our customers may contemplate putting assets away for a long
period of time, and may not want to take the risk that their chosen currency
may depreciate against most other currencies. So the Rand (which is named for
novelist Ayn Rand: it has no relationship to the South African rand) is
simply a diversified currency made up of equal weights of gold and the four
currencies most used in trade and finance.

Consider it a "poor man�s portfolio".

The daily value of the Rand, based on the London P.M. gold fix, and the New
York Federal Reserve�s 10 A.M. monitoring of exchange rates, can be found
daily on the Homepage of J. Orlin Grabbe (http://www.aci.net/kalliste/,
http://orlingrabbe.com/, http://www.xs4all.nl/~kalliste/,
http://orlingrabbe.org/).

What has been the experience with the Rand�s value?
As expected when it was created, all the Rand�s components (except the US
dollar) have depreciated with respect to the US dollar. So the Rand has
fallen in value versus the US dollar; been roughly stable in terms of gold
and the Japanese yen; and risen against the British pound and European euro.

However, given the size of the US current account deficit, the dollar�s rise
cannot be sustained for long. But this is a prediction, and the purpose of a
unit like the Rand is to diversify currency risk independently of (often
wrong) predictions.

Might the Rand become an independent currency?
Yes, like the component currency the ECU (European Currency Unit), which
eventually became the euro, it is conceivable that the Rand could become an
independent currency sometime in the future. An important precedent that
could lead to this would be if the Rand become a means of payment for
fundamental economic activities, such as the payment of wages. Again, the
Rand is neither here nor there with respect to the basic business of DMT. Our
priority is to provide anonymity and to make DMT a successful business. We�ll
let the market sort out the rest.

Where can I read more about DMT?
At the following locations:

The Digital Monetary Trust, Part 1 (http://zolatimes.com/V3.44/dmt1.html).
The Digital Monetary Trust, Part 2 (http://zolatimes.com/V3.45/dmt2.html).
The DMT Rand (http://zolatimes.com/V4.2/rand.html).
These three articles expand on many topics only briefly addressed by this
FAQ. (There may be a few minor discrepancies between the three previously
published articles listed above, and what is stated here [e.g., the initial
$20 minimum change]. In such cases, the information in this FAQ supersedes
what was said previously.)

[This is version 1.0 of the DMT FAQ. If there are additional questions you
would like to see the next version address, send your comments, questions,
and (if appropriate) suggested answers to [EMAIL PROTECTED]]

------------------------------------------------------------------------
J. Orlin Grabbe is the author of International Financial Markets and resides
in Costa Rica. His home page is located at http://www.xs4all.nl/~kalliste/
and his email address is [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 4, No 40, October 2, 2000
-----
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Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
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