Or via any good DEX or P2P exchange. Or the best way - just spend it.
Being unable to achieve 100% anonymity does not mean you should therefore accept zero privacy.
I know Bisq is the truly one of good DEX, but since it's an exchange, I think when you want to sold your coins to fiat, the origin source of the money came from Bisq, no? if it's P2P exchange, the origin source would be the one who send you the money. If the banks and CEX know you're using DEX, will it raise a question for them?
You make a good point, I think every person in this world ever expose their identity in internet, but it just depends on each person if he's care with his privacy or not, either he will stop to share anything in social media and delete his whole information or he will don't give a shit and continue to share anything to everyone. But majority of people are in middle, they're okay to give information to online sites e.g. banks, exchange, casino, shitcoins project or something related with financial, but they're not want to give their information to public or random stranger.
I think this is because abuse of personal information isn't a frequent case.
Bitcoin transactions are irreversible. Centralized exchanges can't change the protocol.
How did the courts help people who lost money in Cyprus bailouts? This gives people a false sense of security, that's all.
Correct, I forgot to explain. I think it's somewhat like PayPal where you can only send and receive Bitcoin from PayPal only, you can't send your coin to external wallet. But the good thing is, PayPal now enable to send Bitcoin to external wallet.
Well I'm not really followed about Bank of Cyprus's case, but since it's in crisis situation, they have no funds to cover their clients money. I agree after all any centralized party will not able to prove all of their promise.
I genuinely believe that actual future will be radically different from the one that you imagined. What if government pushes every ecommerce website to ask for KYC documents to their customers? Right now, you can register on Amazon and buy whatever you want without submitting your KYC documents but what if it changes? What if computer ownership becomes as strictly controlled car ownership?
What if every recent computer and smartphone hardware is backdoored?
I mean, we can't predict the future and 21th century is so unpredictable in any aspect, we can't really shape a future in a certain way and discuss it like it's going to happen. Don't get wrong with me, I hope you get it.
It's true anything can happen in the future, but it's sound like you're somewhat have similar speculation with me because you're thinking the government will be very strict about KYC rule
even though it's not related with CEX and Bitcoin.
KuCoin is a centralized exchange which can request KYC from you at any time and seize your coins if you don't provide it. Just because you are using a non-KYC account with them at present does not mean you are either safe or private.
It baffles me that after a number of months in which millions of users have lost billions of dollars worth of crypto to various CEXs scamming, going bankrupt, shutting down, etc., people still try to claim that CEXs are safe or somehow better than trading peer to peer. Sending your coins to a CEX is one of the riskiest things you can do with your bitcoin.
Majority of people are like this, they're aware of Kucoin will ask KYC in anytime, but not all people are asked to complete KYC verification. This same applies with CEX, every year CEX always got hacked or scam, but not all CEX suffer that.
They need to get a lesson first before they will learn, but the funny thing there are a lot people never learn even though they have a lot experienced and lesson from their fault.
Maybe CEX is unsafe or not the best choice, but FTX crash doesn't mean Binance or coinbase will crash. FTX does not represent all centralized exchanges, the collapse of FTX should only be blamed on it, not the whole of CEX.
A legend say, time will tell everything