CoinWatchX ⚡
Realtime crypto terminal with:
• Live market tracking
• Fast charts
• AI insights
• Watchlists & alerts
• Mobile PWA support
Built for modern crypto traders.
https://t.co/zuQablWvGQ
The UK government spyware demand means that the government decides exactly what should be censored on every mobile device. They say they will start with nude pictures (if you don’t identify yourself as an adult). But it could at any time be expanded to anything the government disapproves of. Today, 30 people are arrested every day in the United Kingdom for writing something online that the government classifies as "grossly offensive". It is obvious that they will use this tool to restrict free speech.
Currently, there appears to be no requirement to report findings outside the device. However, with both legal and technological decision-making power taken away from individuals and transferred to the government, that is only a pen stroke away.
This means that the government could also use this system for total mass surveillance.
And they can do so in secret.
The government recently, in secret, tried to pressure Apple (which is now agreeing to client-side scanning) to build backdoors into its end-to-end encrypted cloud service. They can do this under the Investigatory Powers Act 2016, also known as the "Snoopers' Charter" – a law that makes it illegal for tech companies to disclose secret demands from the government.
@CoinMarketCap This explains the narrow market breadth we're seeing right now -only ~20% of top 150 coins in the green. When institutional flow drops 80% and retail rotates to AI, crypto breadth compresses. The question is whether this is accumulation or distribution at these levels.
@saylor Rare to see someone with your platform explicitly separate signal from noise this publicly. Most just let the ambiguity work for them. Respect for the clarity