This is a nice idea that will possibly serve better as a suggestion that bitcoin is regulated against fraud, rather than be a tool to prevent it.
There are far too many ways that fraud can take place, that I can't see this project being much more than the equivalent to Spamhaus for the Bitcoin community.
However, if it wasn't for the likes of Spamhaus, would email be used as much as it is today? Would email be subject to far more regulation?
I like the Red List project, but please try to explain to some of the hard of thinking on this forum that its not a way to prevent crime!
It prevents crime by creating a psychological deterrent.
Here is a story to clarify:My friend John insures his wallet in a custom insurance group in Bitinsure.
His wallet is hacked and 20 BTC are stolen and sent to the thief's wallet.
We submit the thief's first degree wallet address to The Red List.
Using the same wallet, the thief attempts to pay for an OKCupid subscription.
OkCupid runs the public address against The Red List using the API and gets a first degree match - a definite redlist.
Since the wallet is first degree, OkCupid decides to send personal information gleaned from the thief's OkCupid profile to The Red List for investigation.
Here is a second story:My friend John insures his wallet in a custom insurance group in Bitinsure.
His wallet is hacked and 20 BTC are stolen and sent to the thief's wallet.
We submit the thief's first degree wallet address to The Red List.
The thief sends the BTC to two more wallets.
We submit the second degree wallet addresses to The Red List.
The thief uses one wallet to purchase cooking ware on Amazon via BitSpend.
BitSpend checks the wallet address against The Red List, gets a second degree match, and issues the thief a questionnaire asking where he got the money from at the time of purchase. BitSpend may also send minimal identifying information such as a piece of the address back to The Red List for private storage and factoring into the indefinite algorithm which will increase The Red List ranking if the same minimal identification information is flagged/sent again by the same or another business.
The thief gets his cooking ware from Amazon via BitSpend but after the questionnaire is apprehensive so decides to use a mixing service on the contents of the second wallet.
The thief mixes his BTC and gets BTC transferred into a new wallet.
A different person who used the mixing service spends the BTC on a Gyft gift certificate. Gyft runs the public address against The Red List and issues that second person a questionnaire - that person reveals he recently used a mixing service and names the service. The results of the questionnaire are sent to The Red List.
The Red List now has money laundering evidence against the mixing service and suspicions against/algorithm inputs for an identifying piece of information from the first wallet.
What if John was lying and he did all the spending himself and just claimed, and even did the hacking himself - how does this prevent that?