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CBDCs Are Programmable Surveillance Money

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pivx22 days agoPeakD4 min read

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Think about this: when you hand a $20 bill to a merchant, the transaction is instant, final, and to a great degree anonymous. The central bank that issued the note has no idea where it was spent, what was purchased, or who currently holds it.

It’s no longer news that countries are in a race to deploy Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs). While this may seem like innovation on the surface, I opine that the very nature of money is being rewritten. Money is no longer just a “store of value” or a “medium of exchange”; it is becoming a programmable software protocol.

Spare me the promise of efficiency and financial inclusion; a deeper look reveals a sobering reality. CBDCs are the ultimate tool for state-level surveillance and behavioural engineering.

Money with Strings Attached

The most dangerous feature of a CBDC is programmability. Unlike “dumb” cash or even current digital bank deposits, a CBDC can be hard-coded with specific rules and conditions.

In a CBDC ecosystem, the government doesn’t just see your money. They can control the logic of your money. Imagine a scenario where the government programs your savings to lose 5% of its value every month if not spent. This may come under the cover of stimulating the economy, effectively forcing consumption and destroying the ability to save. Your money could also be “locked” so that it can only be spent within a 10-mile radius of your home, or restricted from being sent abroad.

In the current banking system, there is a “buffer” of privacy provided by commercial banks. While banks report suspicious activity, the central bank (the government) does not have a real-time ledger of every citizen’s morning coffee or rent payment.

CBDCs remove this buffer. Because a CBDC is a direct liability of the central bank, every single transaction is recorded on a centralized government ledger. This creates a “Financial Panopticon” where every cent has a digital fingerprint. The state can retrospectively track the flow of every unit of currency back to the moment of its creation.

When money is programmable, it can be linked to a Social Credit Score. Falling behind on a utility bill or posting a “wrong” opinion online could result in an automatic “freeze” of your digital assets or a limitation on your ability to use public transport.

The End of Financial Exit Ramps

Physical cash is the ultimate “exit ramp.” If a bank fails or a government becomes tyrannical, cash allows you to operate outside the digital grid. CBDCs are designed to close this loop.

Governments are already signalling the “War on Cash.” By making physical banknotes obsolete and funnelling all economic activity into a state-controlled digital ledger, the government gains an Electronic Kill Switch. Without the ability to hold a physical asset or use a private decentralized alternative (like PIVX or Bitcoin), a citizen who is de-banked by the state is effectively deleted from society. They cannot buy food, pay for shelter, or travel.

The Illusion of Convenience

The marketing of CBDCs often focuses on “faster payments” and “lower fees.” However, these are problems that have already been solved by private fintech and cryptocurrencies.

The true motivation for CBDCs is monetary policy precision. In a traditional system, the central bank is like a doctor prescribing a general antibiotic to a whole population (by raising or lowering interest rates). With a CBDC, the central bank becomes a surgeon with a scalpel. They can apply “negative interest rates” to specific demographics, or drop “helicopter money” that can only be spent at specific government-approved retailers.

The Role of Decentralization

As the “Programmable Surveillance” era looms, the importance of privacy-preserving technologies has never been higher. Projects like PIVX offer the exact opposite of the CBDC model. Transactions are shielded by default using zk-SNARKs, ensuring that your financial data belongs to you, not a central ledger. You are your own bank, and there is no kill switch.

We are standing at a fork in the road. One path leads to a centralized CBDC future, where money is a tool for behavioral control and total transparency for the state. The other path leads to decentralized privacy, where money remains a neutral tool for individual freedom.

CBDCs are not just a technological upgrade; they are a fundamental shift in the power dynamic between the citizen and the state. When money becomes programmable, so does the person using it.

Written by Clement Saudu

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