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[GNUnet-SVN] [taler-marketing] branch master updated: sa


From: gnunet
Subject: [GNUnet-SVN] [taler-marketing] branch master updated: sa
Date: Fri, 24 May 2019 22:13:37 +0200

This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script.

grothoff pushed a commit to branch master
in repository marketing.

The following commit(s) were added to refs/heads/master by this push:
     new 1440d7b  sa
1440d7b is described below

commit 1440d7bfc743fde3056e77f77043fed728b5e1ec
Author: Christian Grothoff <address@hidden>
AuthorDate: Fri May 24 22:13:34 2019 +0200

    sa
---
 sa/sa.tex | 66 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------
 1 file changed, 51 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)

diff --git a/sa/sa.tex b/sa/sa.tex
index 5f62480..e87b199 100644
--- a/sa/sa.tex
+++ b/sa/sa.tex
@@ -21,12 +21,6 @@
 
 \medskip
 
-% \begin{tabular}{l l}
-% Project Acronym      & LAC - Latent Anonymous Commons  (LAKE) \\
-% Principal Investigator       & Jeffrey Burdges \\
-% Host Institution     & University of Luxembourg \\
-% Main Partner         & pEp SA \\
-% \end{tabular}
 \end{center}
 
 \def\red{}  % FIXME
@@ -39,9 +33,10 @@ broadly fits the requirements of SARB's CBDC project.  Taler 
is an electronic
 payment system with focus on security, efficiency and data minimization.
 Cryptography is employed for security.  While Taler includes privacy features,
 it can at the same time guarantee that cash flows to merchants/retailers are
-transparent for AML and other financial auditing requirements.  Transactions
-with Taler are fast and can execute in one network round-trip time. Taler is
-economically viable for micro-payments (payments of 1 cent).
+transparent for anti money laundering (AML) and know-your-customer (KYC)
+auditing requirements.  Transactions with Taler are fast and can execute in
+one network round-trip time. Taler is economically viable for micro-payments
+(payments of 1 cent).
 
 The USPs of Taler are:
 
@@ -272,17 +267,36 @@ policy positions in future.}
 \item
 {\bf It must enable immediate person-to-person transfer of value without 
clearing and
   settlement in today’s terms.}
+  Taler enables offline person-to-person transfers without the involvement of 
third parties
+  only if those individuals form an economic union, that is trust each other to
+  behave honestly. Basically, such transfers are not transactions in that the 
sender
+  can spend the money elsewhere at any time.
 
+  Online person-to-person transfers are possible, but involve at least the 
exchange
+  as a service provider to protect against double spending.  In this case, the 
receiver
+  also must have an account that satisfies KYC requirements at the exchange to 
prevent
+  money laundering.
 \item
 {\bf It must be possible to set limits for CBDC transaction values and to 
implement
-graduated regulation depending on transaction value.}
+  graduated regulation depending on transaction value.}
+  Taler can impose withdrawal limits for consumers, and merchants may be 
required to
+  limit the value of individual transactions or to provide additional 
identification
+  of customers based on the specific product being sold or the value of the 
transaction.
+  Taler provides an audit trail for the state to ensure merchants comply with
+  applicable regulation on transactions.
 \item
 {\bf CBDC payment products should enable transaction notifications to 
consumers.}
   Customers and merchants always have access to their full account
   histories and their balances on their local computer.
 \item
 {\bf CBDC must be accepted and usable at all levels of transactions, in the 
same way
-cash is accepted and usable at all levels of transactions.}
+  cash is accepted and usable at all levels of transactions.}
+  Taler is in principle suitable for microtransactions as well as very large
+  transactions, however the system assumes that the consumer is under control
+  of their computing resources. Given the state of security on mobile phones,
+  it may thus not be generally advisable to carry very large balances on a
+  mobile phone.  However, it is in principle possible to produce hardware
+  security modules to pay larger amounts with adequate security.
 \item
 {\bf CBDC must provide real-time, final and irrefutable transfer of value.}
 Taler payments typically clear in one network RTT, concluding with
@@ -298,7 +312,8 @@ data once online.}
   communicate with the exchange.  Otherwise the merchant cannot be sure that 
the payer
   did not double-spend and risks being defrauded.
 \item
-{\bf The government must be able to make payments in CBDC.}
+  {\bf The government must be able to make payments in CBDC.}
+  This is possible with Taler.
 \item
 {\bf Interoperability principles must enable CBDC to be used at all levels 
throughout the
 payment system.}
@@ -330,7 +345,16 @@ payment system.}
 
 \item
 {\bf Auditability of transactions should be parameterised in order to 
determine the balance
-between anonymity of the transacting parties and traceability of funds 
transfers.}
+  between anonymity of the transacting parties and traceability of funds 
transfers.}
+  Taler generally is setup to protect the privacy of consumers (who spend 
money)
+  and to provide full accountability for merchants (who receive money).  
Consumers
+  of course still have to authenticate when withdrawing funds.  For particular
+  transactions (such as sale of weapons, drugs, chemicals or high-value goods) 
merchants may
+  be required by law to identify the buyer (and possibly perform additional 
checks).
+  Taler does not assist merchants with this per-se, but by providing an 
electronic trail
+  from the Taler transaction to the business contract of the merchant, Taler 
makes it
+  easy for law enforcement to verify that merchants have complied with 
applicable regulation
+  on identifying customers for critical transactions.
 \item
 {\bf It must be possible to issue a consumer with a ‘proof of payment’ from 
transaction
   audit trails.}
@@ -435,8 +459,16 @@ holdings, without requiring input from the consumer.
 
 \subsection{Participation in similar initiatives or projects}
 
-Mention ECB, SNB, Riksbank consultations, and cooperation with German bank
-on real-world deployment.
+We have been involved in consultations with the Swiss National Bank, the
+European Central Bank, and the Swedish Riksbank as all three were interested
+in Taler in their respective CBDC initiatives. However, none of them is yet at
+the point where the respective central banks have made any commitments for any
+particular direction or technical solution.
+
+We are also working with the German GLS Bank on a commercial deployment of
+GNU Taler and expect the technical integration with their banking platform
+to be concluded later this year.
+
 
 \subsection{Experience and skill set offered by the subject matter experts}
 %
@@ -460,6 +492,10 @@ We are also surprised that privacy for citizens using the 
system is
 not listed as a principle objective and urge the SARB to consider
 adding privacy considerations to their requirements.
 
+Similarly, we hope that SARB understands the value of a Free Software solution
+in that it preserves SA's independence from particular vendors.  Furthermore,
+open standards and public source code enhance public verifiability and thus
+the public's trust in the solution.
 
 \section{Proposed approach and methodology}
 

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