🚨 CBIs: 1️⃣Norway set the dangerous precedens with not allowing CBI holders (from Caribbean) to enter the country while not violating Schengen rules. Absolutely crazy. 2️⃣ CBIs already have and will have more scrutiny in the future not just from EU but US too (visa bond program). I was talking about this at the PLAN B meetup some months back. 3️⃣ CBD or naturalizations from geopoliticaly strong jurisdictions will always have higher value. CBIs are great for springboard benefits for some harder to get jurisdictions.
🚨 Antigua and Barbuda 🇦🇬 and Dominica 🇩🇲 CBIs are subject to a partial travel ban into the US. The world is changing fast. However, think twice before taking action concerning another citizenship.
Result of underestimating physical security. Spending 30-50k would prevent the problem. I can see huge discrepancy between digital and physical security these days.
Feels like this (shitcoin/VC/funds) lately with quantum FUD. image
Sovereign Digest ⏳A quick 5-minute summary to accompany your morning espresso, covering recent interesting developments in the following areas: 🌎Global mobility & Plan B, 💳Bitcoin & payments, 🕵️OPSEC, privacy, 🕴️Entrepreneurship, 🆓Personal sovereignty 🔖Follow the blog, it's full of interesting information and articles.
Bitcoin P2P - How it was intended by Satoshi. Fantastic event with @lunaticoin @Josef Tětek and @Jan Kotas under the umbrella of @BitcoinParaguay . Great meetup 👇
🇺🇸 Trump card visa is live. Let’s see how this will play out in long term. 👀
Argentina 🇦🇷 citizenship = Hotel California I don’t make the rules. Just truth.
🚨How to exploit delivery acknowledgments (even without victim participation) for behavioral surveillance / profiling in WhatsApp and Signal. Tip: Turn off messages from unknown sources.
This article is an introduction to practical, real-world privacy and security, digital, physical, and social, without theatrics or over-engineering. Nothing here is exotic, advanced, or meant only for experts. The tools and approaches discussed are not overkill; they are a deliberate mix designed to preserve productivity while significantly improving how much of your life leaks into the open. Some of the services mentioned don’t just improve privacy, they also strengthen your overall security posture. A key idea running through the article is that privacy and security are not the same thing. A system can be secure while offering very little privacy. Google is the textbook example: when configured correctly, it can protect your accounts quite well, yet your personal data remains the product. High security does not automatically mean high privacy. Understanding this distinction is foundational before making any meaningful changes. Privacy is also not a binary choice. It exists on a spectrum. The more private you aim to be, the more trade-offs you’ll encounter, less convenience, more friction, and a higher need to understand what you’re doing. Total privacy quickly becomes impractical for everyday life. This article deliberately avoids that extreme. Instead, it focuses on reasonable steps that deliver clear benefits without turning daily life into a constant struggle. The steps outlined are beginner-friendly. You don’t need deep technical knowledge, special hardware, or a radical lifestyle shift. With a small number of intentional changes and a handful of carefully chosen tools, you can dramatically reduce unnecessary data exposure, strengthen both your privacy and security. The goal is not perfection, but control, and keeping your life your own.image ⚡Zap 9999 sats to unlock this note on