That’s what I love about the Internet. Even if it’s small-scale and you’re just posting on a forum, that’s an uncensored expression. That’s what I love. —Felicia Day
Anyone who has tried earning any online income knows the challenge of finding an uncensored platform. Many online selling venues don’t allow any form of nudity at all. Most of those that are willing to provide for material considered Not Safe For Work (NSFW) still limit exactly that kind of content can be displayed. Finding a genuinely uncensored site from which to sell has been practically impossible.
Even if one finds a way to sell NSFW material, there is still a problem with actually getting paid. Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and PayPal all have rules against using their systems to pay for certain objects they deem dangerous, illegal, or inappropriate. PayPal is the most restrictive of that group and anyone with experience in any form of figure art knows the danger of using PayPal as a purchasing method. They will happily take the money from the buyer and keep it. Banks, too, such as JP Morgan Chase, refuse to provide banking services to any entity they consider adult or immoral, and their definitions for both are wide and arbitrary. Money is far from being uncensored.
All that began to change, however, with the introduction of Bitcoin. In case you’ve not been paying attention the past couple of years, Bitcoin is a digital currency that is not controlled by a central government. Bitcoin purchases are anonymous and can be used to make purchases internationally without having to worry about the local exchange rate. The concept is brilliant in that it takes both governments and banks out of the equation, allowing for a more pure market system. The biggest problem to date has been finding online stores that actually accept Bitcoin currency.
Yesterday, a solution to that problem became available with a new peer-to-peer retail system called OpenBazaar. OpenBazaar allows users to sell absolutely anything to anyone, anywhere, at any time. There are no content restrictions, making the system truly uncensored. Rather like an online bartering system, OpenBazaar connects people who have something to sell with people who are looking to buy. While the seller can set a given price, the buyer is free to negotiate with the seller so that a discount might be applied if multiples are ordered or if the buyer lives close enough to pick up the item themselves. For added security, a third-party moderator agrees that the deal is fair before Bitcoin is exchanged.
The opportunities of an uncensored marketplace are endless. As a photographer, I can sell figure work (theoretically) without having to worry about the product or the money being censored by a third party. I could also sell my services as a photographer, or a writer, or as an annoying neighbor if there happened to be an actual market for that service. The only limits are my imagination.
Of course, any system so wide open is also susceptible to dangers. Looking over the system that has only been operational a little over 24 hours, I see one person selling honey from Greece, which sounds enticing, but wouldn’t necessarily contain the contamination preventions required of domestic honey sellers. There’s also a person selling wizardry spells. I suppose it’s up to one’s own belief system as to whether or not one wishes to take that kind of risk.
OpenBazaar’s founders know that an uncensored system means that sooner or later people are going to use it for no good. Since everything is sold peer-to-peer, there is no way for anyone to tell whether what is sold is legal, moral, or even in existence. So yes, illegal drugs could be bought and sold through this market. One could sell a kidney as easily as they could sell puppies, or whale blubber, or the head of a presidential candidate. The folks at OpenMarket would have no way to stop those types of transactions.
There is a modest safeguard against illegal activity in that the open source code does not support Tor, which is an encryption language that hides IP addresses among other things. So, should one choose to engage in illegal activity, law enforcement still has the ability to track down both the buyer and the seller. However, law enforcement would not be able to confiscate funds because only the wallet holder can access and/or move Bitcoins.
Being the curious bug that I am, I downloaded the P2P software and set up an account, listing only one photograph for sale. We’ll see if that is enough to even get anyone’s attention. Setting up the site took me about 30 minutes, and that included creating a Bitcoin account so that I can actually accept payment should someone show interest in the photograph. If you want to try OpenBazaar for yourself and see what I’m selling, you’ll need to enter either my handle: 991803b5e7d0989bd6c7f829ccf39da329df6381, or search for my handle, which might be some version of @charlesiletbetter, but I’m not sure since I apparently can’t search for myself.
I’m not yet ready to put a significant amount of time into OpenBazaar. Law enforcement hasn’t taken kindly to uncensored online marketplaces because of the difficulty in stopping and tracking illegal activity. If I see a black SUV pull up in front of the house, I’ll know something’s up. Still, the world needs places where we can sell legitimate, legal products without the interference of governments, banks, or numerous middlemen. If this works, it could have a global economic impact that could change the way goods and services are bought and sold everywhere.
Are the opportunities worth the risk? We’ll find out, won’t we?
Time To Ditch The Cruelty
Cruelty, like every other vice, requires no motive outside of itself; it only requires opportunity. —George Eliot
We need more smiles. We need more niceness. We need less cruelty.
I started yesterday in one of those foul moods where I’m pretty sure my verbal cruelty had Kat more than happy to be spending the day at the salon. I hate those days, but yesterday rather snuck up on me as a confluence of circumstance combined with continual interference from an unwanted external source made the situation intolerable. While I would like to excuse the behavior as just being human, I can’t. I know better. I caved to those basest and vile instincts that might have had their place some 40,000 years ago but are wholly inappropriate now.
Sadder still, I’m far from being the only one who has had issues with cruelty of late. We have come to expect cruelty in a presidential election year, I suppose, but that still doesn’t make the comments against women, minorities, immigrants, or other candidates’ family members any more appropriate. One of the first things I saw in my newsfeed this morning was a click-bait article (I’ll not bother you with the link) recounting the 17 worst assassination attempts on President Obama. And the whole still-developing mess from the Panama Papers threatens to unleash a whole new wave of international outrage toward anyone whose offshore dealings come off as shady. Given the current inference of bad guys mixing with heads of state, one might expect the next couple of weeks to be a bit tense at best.
I worry that cruelty has become our second nature. Someone says something we don’t like, we want to punch them. Someone represents something we oppose, we want to redistribute their body parts. Someone cuts us off in traffic, we’re immediately homicidal. We don’t want to take time to talk and understand each other’s point of view, we don’t want to take into consideration a different perspective. We don’t want to negotiate a peaceful outcome. We want full and complete destruction and will go to whatever means necessary to satisfy our blood lust.
This is the world we have created. We cannot blame our bent toward cruelty on previous generations. We did not learn this through bad parenting. We did not get here by failing to get the right trophy when we were in grade school. This is the result of a conscious and deliberate decision to not stop ourselves at that first moment of anger or disappointment. We could have just as easily shut ourselves down and done the right thing, but we decided, both collectively and individually, to let the anger push us forward.
As a result, we no longer even notice when five are killed in Pittsburg, or Kansas City, or Glendale. When an Uber driver goes nuts and kills six in Kalamazoo, we’re momentarily upset because children were involved, but then we go right back to exactly the same things we were doing the moment before. We’ve resigned ourselves to the notion that this is just the way things are and there’s nothing we can do to stop it.
I call bullshit.
I can do something about my attitude and my response to everything that happens to and around me. How I respond, in turn, effects how others around me respond and their response impacts others beyond my reach. Every last one of us can improve the world simply by changing our own response and not letting anger and cruelty take over. We are in control and just as my grousing and cursing made yesterday difficult for everyone, I can just as easily make this morning better by saying thank you, speaking softly, and maybe even hand delivering a kiss or two where appropriate.
You can do the same. I know you can. You can smile, even though the weather this morning leaves something to be desired. You can choose a quiet, positive-toned response when someone approaches you with unjustified anger. You can stick up for someone who’s being treated unfairly. You can earnestly try to understand someone else’s point of view, even though you disagree with their position on the matter. You can step back, count to ten, or maybe even walk away from a situation rather than losing your temper.
We can all do a lot to change this pattern of cruelty that we’ve allowed to permeate our society. After all, we were the ones who let the situation get out of control in the first place. Politicians don’t make America or anywhere else great, people do. Let this be your #MondayMotivation to start making the world more friendly. We can do it.
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