• machiavellian@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    While I agree with the overall premise, it’s not a great article. The author just quotes facts while drawing no relevant conclusions or wrong conclusions.

    The fact that there is fraud in Estonia, like any other country, is, I imagine, due to people being stupid. In my country most fraud cases are grandmas handing off their pensions to randos to help their grandchild escape prison or to help with a super secret government mission to catch thieves. Similar to the classic Nigerian prince schemes. Not once does the author mention how digital ID’s are connected to fraud or how they enabled money laundering.

    I hope that the author is just not that great of a writer and not malicious because throwing in scary statistics and names like Palantir without making any conclusion as to how digital ID’s could exarcebate the problem, really feels like fearmongering.

    Nevertheless, I quite liked the website design and the extensive quotation of sources.

      • machiavellian@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        Will do. Also rereading my first comment I realised that I was perhaps overly negative which was not at all my intention. Apologies.

        While your here, I wanted to ask if I missed anything from the article or is my criticism valid?

        • Shibco@leminal.spaceOP
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          2 days ago

          The article is the opening foreword for a larger report on digital identity that we have been publishing for the last few months. We had to pause recently, for reasons beyond our control, but everything in the article is backed up by either chapters already published on the site, or by forthcoming chapters.

          • Mugita Sokio@discuss.online
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            2 days ago

            I could certainly see why some things were short for this first chapter. I skimmed through it a bit, and I wasn’t surprised at some of the things (even if I didn’t know them). Have you looked into the highest levels of governance behind it, such as the Roman Catholic Church and the Jesuit Order making statements about it?

              • Mugita Sokio@discuss.online
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                7 hours ago

                It’s alright if you don’t understand, but I’ll try to explain this a bit:

                The Roman Catholic Church and Jesuit Order of the Society of Jesus (both located in the Vatican, in Italy) have called the shots, particularly the Jesuits since 1798 when the Pope was overthrown (the Popes ruled over everyone from 538-1798). When it comes to digital ID, many people believe that the Khazars (of which I’m a partial German-American Khazar) want people to stop noticing them. My producer, Neigsendoig (who’s also a partial German-American Khazar), proposed the idea elsewhere (of course, not centralized slop, to be clear) that it was Rome, the Popes, and the Jesuits all along. They just used us so-called “Jews” as a scapegoat in the process. We, the Ashkenazim (Khazars) learned these techniques from the Jesuits, and we, along with Catholics, don’t want people noticing us. This is one reason we called for the digital ID in the first place. Look at Bryan Lunduke (a full-blooded Khazar) calling for the digital ID, because he doesn’t want people noticing his ethnicity’s tribalist behavior.