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Sera's avatar

If convenience was the goal, it would be possible to have individualized Visa cards that were anonymous to the vendor. Not a charge card, but a debit card that you control. Same convenience, no profiling or tracking.

In fact, we do have them. They’re called “Gift cards”.

Since the day Amazon bought Whole Foods I’ve only used cash for my increasingly rare visits. But I sometimes buy a gift card for fifty dollars just in case I forget to bring cash.

The next time someone suggests a cashless society, remind them that surveillance and “payment cards” are not necessarily bound together.

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Question Everything's avatar

Very well written. I appreciate you laying out the history of how we got here.

I remember being a kid in the 80s when credit cards were first unleashed in the United States. I remember how excited adults were. Strangely, I even remember the change in lifestyles of adults in my life, including my parents - All of a sudden they were able to have things they couldn't afford.

It's very interesting that these ideas and tactics started grabbing hold in the 1800s. Back then we were just tracked by individual stores. Now our data is shared across multi-national networks of scumbags preying on us.

I am grateful to you and all journalist who work diligently to keep the people properly informed. Thank you.

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