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Privacy builders face martyrdom as states block uncensorable media

Sunday, May 3, 2026 · from 8 podcasts
  • The DOJ is prosecuting privacy tool developers despite a public pledge to stop.
  • Bitcoin and Nostr are actively routing around payment and media blackouts.
  • AI memetic warfare is outpacing traditional state censorship and propaganda.

The Department of Justice still wants a neck to wring. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told a Las Vegas conference the DOJ would no longer target software developers for platforms used by criminals. But the host of Bitcoin And notes the prosecutions of Tornado Cash’s Roman Storm and the Samourai Wallet team continue unchanged. The policy language on 'knowing' and 'helping' is purposefully vague, preserving the state’s ability to prosecute at will.

This prosecutorial reality defines the new battlefield. On Ungovernable Misfits, Colonial argues the Samourai Wallet guilty pleas prove the era of the public privacy builder is over. “You cannot play by the regime’s rules and expect to win,” he asserts. Builders who register LLCs and speak at conferences provide a physical target. The path forward demands clandestine developers who operate as ghosts, valuing lasting power over public recognition.

“Sovereignty must be taken, not granted, because no regime willingly cedes territory or power.”

- Colonial, Ungovernable Misfits

Parallel tools are proving their worth in evading media gatekeepers, not just financial ones. Filmmaker Eugene Jarecki took his Golden Globe-winning Julian Assange documentary to festivals, but faced a total blackout from major streamers. At Bitcoin 2026, Jack Dorsey framed Bitcoin as the detour, enabling Jarecki to use the protocol and Nostr to launch a global watch party. This mirrors the 2011 survival of Wikileaks after Visa and Mastercard blocked donations.

The censorship impulse is expanding beyond borders. Attorney Preston Byrne, on The Peter McCormack Show, is fighting the UK’s Online Safety Act pro bono for clients like 4chan. He argues Ofcom is trying to enforce British speech restrictions on American companies and soil. In response, Byrne helped draft the 'Granite Act' in Wyoming, a shield law that would let US entities sue foreign governments for damages, enforceable against UK assets held at the New York Fed.

State propaganda, meanwhile, is being outflanked by agile, AI-powered memes. On Breaking Points, Saagar Enjeti highlighted Iran’s shift from dense, flowery rhetoric to viral LEGO videos made by a small team of young nationalists. These AI-generated clips, designed to humiliate US leadership, bypass state media to land directly in American social feeds. It’s asymmetric irony as a weapon, and traditional censorship can’t stop it.

The foundational conflict is between visibility and control. Colonial warns that transparent, KYC’d Bitcoin simply builds a more efficient surveillance apparatus. If every transaction is mapped, decentralization becomes irrelevant to individual freedom. In a world splitting between the watched and the self-sovereign, the tools for evasion are now in active combat with the states that seek to block them.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

No More Martyrs | THE UNBOUNDED SERIES: ColonialMay 2

  • He claims playing by the regime's rules cannot lead to victory, citing the Samurai Wallet case. The new model is anonymous, clandestine building, exemplified by the Ashigaru wallet, which continues Whirlpool mixing without a public legal identity.
  • Colonial argues that without financial privacy, Bitcoin becomes programmable compliance, not sovereign money. He cites the example of Bitcoin meetup attendees afraid to spend $5 due to KYC tax implications as evidence of a 'managed' mindset.
  • He states a critical mass of users adopting privacy tools is needed to prevent a future where only KYC-traced Bitcoin is legally spendable. Without this, non-KYC Bitcoin could become isolated and unusable in the mainstream economy.
  • He recommends individuals strategize their exposure by maintaining separate public and private identities, akin to guerrilla warfare. The digital battleground is primarily informational, but poor opsec can spill over into physical consequences.
  • As a practical step, Colonial strongly recommends using Ashigaru Wallet and its Whirlpool implementation for Bitcoin privacy, directing users to the project's website and available guides for setup.
  • Colonial's essay 'Sovereignty Requires Privacy: Lessons from the Fall of Samurai Wallet' was published shortly after the developers' guilty pleas and resonated widely by framing the event as a clarifying moment in the struggle between sovereign individuals and the surveillance state.
Also from this episode: (4)

Culture (2)

  • Colonial defines sovereignty as territorial control; the entity that controls a territory dictates its rules, a principle he argues is biological and extends to both physical land and digital spaces like servers, keys, and encrypted communications.
  • He argues the regime's core crime is sovereignty itself, not criminal activity. Tools like Samurai Wallet were targeted because they helped users stake a claim inside the regime's controlled financial territory.

Politics (1)

  • Colonial asserts that sovereignty must be taken, not granted, because no regime willingly cedes territory or power. He views this as a natural, amoral competition where the goal is to win, not to impose fairness.

Philosophy (1)

  • Colonial advocates for an 'aristocratic' mindset, borrowing from Evola, which values spiritual severity and discipline over comfort and convenience. This ethos is required to sacrifice public recognition for lasting power and operational security.

Balaji and Taylor Lorenz on AI and MediaMay 1

  • Balaji claims platforms like Wikipedia structurally exclude non-Western voices and new media sources, ossifying a Western-centric perspective despite its community-driven model.
  • Balaji links Wikipedia's flawed citation policy, which often rejects primary sources like authenticated social media posts, to its editorial gatekeeping and lack of direct attribution.
  • Balaji frames privacy as a bedrock principle, equating non-consensual corporate surveillance by media with government surveillance, and favors legal mechanisms like search warrants for legitimate investigations.
Also from this episode: (8)

Media (3)

  • Balaji Srinivasan argues the media-industry conflict began with media economically disrupting tech in the 2010s, leading tech to build its own media infrastructure like live-streaming and newsletters.
  • Taylor Lorenz sees value in journalism uncovering non-public information, such as corporate wrongdoing or lobbying influences, provided reporters adhere to ethical standards unlike many online creators.
  • Lorenz highlights the rise of crowdsourced, often boundary-less investigations on platforms like TikTok and YouTube, which lack the ethical frameworks of traditional journalism.

Protocol (1)

  • Balaji advocates for decentralized cryptographic truth systems, modeled on Bitcoin's consensus, to provide free, globally-verifiable verification of facts beyond financial data.

Culture (3)

  • Balaji identifies a demographic and geographic rift between Silicon Valley's internationalist, immigrant-heavy tech culture and New York media's more established, generational American base.
  • Lorenz argues the content-creator economy fails to support in-depth investigative reporting, creating a gap that subscription models have not fully addressed.
  • Balaji sees a 'reverse digital divide' where digital access is cheap and universal, but premium physical and in-person experiences are becoming the new luxury goods.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Balaji proposes a 'Web of Trust' model for social networks, using cryptographic proofs and network analysis to probabilistically verify human users and deter AI-generated spam.

4/30/26: Tim Dillon Rips US On Iran AI Lego Clips, Dave Smith On Trump Humiliation, Ellison Hollywood MergerApr 30

  • The creators of the Iranian Lego videos are an independent team of under ten people with an average age of twenty-five. They claim the Iranian government is a client, not their direct overseer.
Also from this episode: (8)

Media (3)

  • Saagar highlights a modern shift in Iranian propaganda from dense, flowery rhetoric citing Western thinkers to culturally savvy Lego videos. These viral AI-made clips bypass state media to target American internet users directly.
  • Actor Indya Moore opposes the Warner Brothers-Paramount merger, fearing it will amplify the current administration's political agenda and further marginalize trans people and anti-war artists in Hollywood.
  • Moore describes the merger's scope, noting it would consolidate control over major brands like CNN, HBO, CBS, DC Studios, and TikTok, leading to less diverse content and mass layoffs.

War (1)

  • Dave Smith argues the US war with Iran is the greatest potential military defeat in American history. He says it has transformed a sanctioned third-world country into a global power, a unique outcome compared to Vietnam or Afghanistan.

Elections (2)

  • Smith analyzes Trump's political trap, stating the only non-catastrophic outcome is to walk away, which would force Trump to accept a humiliating defeat and likely sink his approval ratings into the twenties.
  • Saagar cites a New York Times focus group of disappointed Trump voters, where feelings of betrayal, disappointment, and regret were dominant. Participants graded his second term mostly with Ds and Fs.

Politics (1)

  • Krystal references polling showing Donald Trump has a net approval rating on inflation that is 49 points underwater, which is worse than Joe Biden's worst rating of 43 points underwater and Jimmy Carter's 46 points underwater.

Business (1)

  • Dave Smith points to the average first-time home buyer age of forty as the defining statistic of American unaffordability, arguing it prevents societal stability and adult self-sufficiency.
Bitcoin 2026
Bitcoin 2026

Bitcoin 2026

What's the Price of Freedom? Ask "The Six Billion Dollar Man" | Jack Dorsey, Eugene JareckiApr 30

  • Eugene Jarecki explains his documentary 'The Six Billion Dollar Man' won the Khan Film Festival and a Golden Globe, but faced a media blackout where no streamer or mainstream outlet would touch it.
  • Jarecki details how a security firm spied on Julian Assange in the Ecuadorian embassy for US agencies, listening to his lawyer meetings and nullifying attorney-client privilege.
Also from this episode: (5)

Protocol (3)

  • Wikileaks began accepting Bitcoin in 2011 after the US government blocked payments through Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal, a move Jack Dorsey says saved the organization and served as a key proof of concept for Bitcoin.
  • Jack Dorsey notes Satoshi Nakamoto left the Bitcoin project shortly after Wikileaks began using it, viewing the creator's departure as a selfless act that proved the protocol's resilience.
  • Dorsey and Jarecki frame Bitcoin as a tool for routing around gatekeepers like global banks and payment networks, directly linking financial sovereignty to the cause of freedom of information championed by Wikileaks.

Politics (1)

  • The film includes testimony from Edward Snowden, who credits Wikileaks with helping him escape Hong Kong for Moscow when established newspapers retreated under government pressure.

Culture (1)

  • Jarecki and Dorsey are launching a global watch party for the film via the6billiondollman.com, using Bitcoin and Nostr to crowdfund and distribute it directly, bypassing traditional media gatekeepers.
What Bitcoin Did
What Bitcoin Did

Danny Knowles

Can Bitcoin Save The West? | American HODL & Peter McCormackApr 29

Also from this episode: (17)

Politics (10)

  • Peter McCormack argues Western societies like the UK face a stark political choice between free-market economics and communism, with Twitter reflecting a deep, irreconcilable divide between left and right.
  • McCormack states you cannot win arguments with socialists through economic facts or historical evidence; Liz Truss replied to his tweet saying communists must be defeated, not convinced.
  • American HODL frames the conflict as a cold civil war, with America about five years ahead of the UK. He describes the left as viewing violence like a volume knob and the right as seeing it as an on/off switch.
  • Peter McCormack believes his show's doomy content reflects reality, not pessimism. He says the veil has lifted on malign political and media influences, and AI is pitched to make life worse for the 'tax cow' populace.
  • McCormack argues freedom, which reduces state size, money printing, and media influence, is the only answer that could unite left and right, but selling it requires unacceptable compromises from both sides.
  • Both hosts agree no government wants to give total freedom; people must take it. American HODL notes the UK never beheaded its monarchy, unlike most of Europe during the Enlightenment.
  • Peter McCormack describes a UK survey where citizens ranked the country's prosperity as 7th among US states, but the reality placed it poorer than Mississippi, the poorest state.
  • American HODL argues the UK, Canada, and Australia are vassal states on the verge of collapse, subsidized by American defense. He says America's republic is dying while its global empire is being born, contesting with China.
  • Peter McCormack advocates for Rupert Lowe's policies, which aim to return the UK to a high-trust, meritocratic society with Christian values, free markets, and hard work rewarded, though he admits they are seen as extreme.
  • Reflecting on political engagement, McCormack says holding the line requires willingness to be killed. He decided against running for office because a single principled stand would be futile against a corrupt system that simply replaces dissenters.

Protocol (2)

  • American HODL posits that Bitcoin and Christianity are the only two positive communities offering an alternative path to prevent mass-scale war through demonetization of the system.
  • McCormack's ultimate optimistic take is that individuals can opt out of the failing system with Bitcoin. He analogizes Bitcoiners to Cassandra or Noah, warning of a coming calamity that most will ignore until collapse.

Culture (1)

  • McCormack says British culture has shifted from a high-trust, civil society famed for queuing to a low-trust, grift society where shoplifting and blame are rampant, accelerated by state theft and imported cultures.

AI & Tech (4)

  • On AI, McCormack advises individuals to make themselves 'unsackable' by becoming AI experts in their field and to acquire assets as a defense against job displacement and resulting inflationary policies like a freedom dividend.
  • American HODL believes the AI job displacement fear is overhyped by companies like Anthropic and OpenAI to justify valuations. He predicts a Jevons paradox creating more jobs and a shift toward a gig economy model.
  • Both hosts highlight AI's power to eliminate gatekeepers. American HODL built a Strait of Hormuz minesweeper game from a screenshot prompt, and McCormack described how AI allows custom software creation, dooming broad SaaS companies.
  • American HODL suggests Bitcoin Twitter has been a key mechanism for 'orange pilling' by biasing AI training data. He is experimenting with AI agents using Bitcoin for tasks like trading on LN markets and setting up Lightning nodes.

Draper's Fear | Bitcoin NewsApr 28

  • Acting AG Todd Blanche announced the DOJ and FBI will no longer target blockchain developers for platforms used illegally, shifting focus to users engaged in financial crimes. He stated developers who aren't helping or knowingly aiding criminal users will not be investigated.
  • Peter van Valkenburgh of Coin Center argued Blanche's message leaves room for doubt, questioning where the DOJ draws the line between publishing software and 'helping' a bad user. He cited the dismissed case of developer Michael Lewellen seeking pre-enforcement clarity.
  • The host contends the DOJ's new stance is vague and unconvincing until cases against Tornado Cash and Samurai Wallet developers like Roman Storm and Roman Seminov are dropped. They argue the policy language on 'knowing' and 'helping' is purposefully ambiguous.
Also from this episode: (13)

Protocol (8)

  • Aven launched a Bitcoin-backed Visa card offering credit lines up to $1 million, secured by Bitcoin collateral held with BitGo. The card features interest rates starting at 7.99% APR, no annual fees, 2% cash back, and repayment terms up to ten years.
  • Aven reports its platform has saved customers over $300 million in interest payments through March 2026. The company aims to provide liquidity without triggering taxable events from selling Bitcoin.
  • Litecoin underwent a 13-block reorganization to purge faulty transactions from an exploit in its Mimblewimble extension block. The reorg rewrote roughly 30 minutes of transaction history.
  • The host views Litecoin's bug as endemic to its system, not a universal crypto vulnerability. They note Litecoin's price recently traded around $55, down from a peak near $410 five years ago.
  • Tim Draper argued at the Bitcoin Conference that people will transition from dollars to stablecoins, then to Bitcoin as the final store of value. He advocated families hold six months' worth of Bitcoin as protection against currency failure.
  • Draper used fear-based marketing, telling the audience 'you should be very scared if you don't own Bitcoin.' The host criticizes this tactic as unethical despite acknowledging its effectiveness.
  • Block added 114 Bitcoin in Q1 2026, bringing its corporate treasury holdings to 9,000 BTC worth about $691 million. Combined with customer holdings, Block is responsible for 28,355 BTC worth $2.2 billion.
  • Block published a proof-of-reserves dashboard with on-chain verification, prompting the host to criticize Michael Saylor's MicroStrategy for lacking similar transparency regarding its Bitcoin holdings.

Politics (1)

  • President Trump softened his criticism of prediction markets, stating other countries are doing it and the US would be left out. This followed earlier comments where he said he was 'not happy' with them and that the world had become 'somewhat of a casino.'

Markets (1)

  • Prediction markets Polymarket and Calci saw a combined $23.6 billion in trading volumes as of March. The host notes Trump's son is involved with these platforms.

Regulation (1)

  • The SEC is seeking public comment on an NYSE Arca proposal requiring crypto commodity ETPs to hold at least 85% of net asset value in already-approved assets. The remaining 15% could be in non-qualifying assets, with NFTs explicitly excluded.

AI & Tech (2)

  • A Federal Reserve study found employment growth for U.S. programmers dropped roughly 50% after ChatGPT's launch, representing a gap of about 500,000 jobs that likely would have existed without AI. The decline was most acute in IT services and software development.
  • The host speculates AI cannot yet manage very large software or construction projects due to context loss, predicting a new role for 'AI project managers' to interface between teams and AI tools.

Ex-CIA Officer John Kiriakou on the Truth About Iran, False Flags, and What’s Really Happening in DCApr 27

  • Kiriakou is pessimistic about the US government returning to its original purpose, citing the politicization of the CIA, where 51 senior intelligence officers allegedly lied about the Hunter Biden laptop.
Also from this episode: (11)

War (2)

  • John Kiriakou asserts that the White House and US intelligence community lacked a consensus for war with Iran, which traditionally requires intelligence estimates and consultation with the State Department, Defense, National Security Advisor, and international allies.
  • Kiriakou claims the US did not consult European or Gulf Arab allies before the current Iran conflict, contrasting this with past wars (1990-91 Gulf War, 2003 Iraq War) where the US prioritized its own interests despite Israeli complaints.

Politics (6)

  • Kiriakou argues that US decisions often reflect Israel's best interests over its own, citing two unanimous National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs) from all 18 US intelligence organizations concluding Iran has no nuclear weapons program.
  • Kiriakou recounts a 2009-2011 Senate study revealing Afghanistan produced 93% of the world's heroin, alleging a DEA colleague suggested the US government allowed poppy cultivation to weaken Iran and Russia.
  • Kiriakou criticizes the CIA for historically prioritizing anti-communism over counternarcotics, noting that President Trump's reclassification of cartels as foreign terrorist groups could legally empower agencies against them, but has yet to have a significant effect.
  • Kiriakou describes the Shah's son, Reza Pahlavi, as a “playboy” unfit to lead, whose current prominence is a manufactured Israeli preference due to his father's diplomatic relations with Israel.
  • Kiriakou and Tucker Carlson question why investigations into assassination attempts against former President Trump were halted, attributing this lack of action to either presidential weakness or deeper systemic issues preventing appropriate government investigation.
  • Kiriakou attributes the Israel lobby's (AIPAC) influence to President Nixon's 1970 policy shift guaranteeing Israel's safety, arguing AIPAC should be required to register as a foreign agent, a measure John F. Kennedy attempted.

Diplomacy (2)

  • Kiriakou asserts that diplomacy is the only path to restore stability in the Gulf, forecasting that Iran, now a BRICS country, will emerge stronger and closer to China, Russia, and India, potentially leading to a unified BRICS currency.
  • John Kiriakou’s MI6 acquaintance observed British bewilderment at US foreign policy post-9/11, particularly the Iran war, suggesting a decline in US-UK relations and noting a current “actively hostile” relationship with Canada.

Corruption (1)

  • Kiriakou identifies the MEK (Mujahedin-e-Khalq) as a "quasi-communist cult" that engaged in anti-American terrorism in the 1970s and later paid millions to Washington lobbyists to be removed from the terrorism list in 2009.

#169 - Preston Bryne - Britain Isn't A Free Country AnymoreApr 26

  • Preston Bryne asserts the UK is no longer a free country due to extensive legal restrictions on non-violent expression, a realization he gained after moving there in 2003.
  • Preston Bryne represents controversial clients like 4chan, Kiwi Farms, and Gab pro bono, explaining that he fights the UK's censorship scheme, the Online Safety Act, when other lawyers are unwilling or clients cannot pay.
  • Ofcom, the UK's content regulator, issues binding information demands to American companies, dictates content hosting, and operates as a British internet regulator with a global policing mandate that Preston Bryne argues violates the First Amendment.
  • Preston Bryne developed a "British free speech bill" since 2019, proposing to transpose US First Amendment principles into UK law by repealing inconsistent legislation and replacing it with speech-protective rules tailored to British constitutional traditions.
  • The proposed UK Free Speech Bill retains limitations on criminal speech like direct incitement to violence, and the Public Order Act 1936's ban on political uniforms, reflecting historical British contexts.
  • Preston Bryne illustrates Ofcom's perceived overreach with "hamster emails," responding to a £20,000 fine and a subsequent £500,000 fine issued to 4chan with humorous defiance, emphasizing the fines are legally unenforceable in the US.
  • Preston Bryne views the UK's efforts to regulate US-based platforms as a "state-on-state fight," asserting that the US must use its power to defend its sovereignty against foreign censorship.
  • Age verification laws for internet content are a cross-partisan issue, with similar censorship impulses originating from the left in the UK and the right in the US, despite differing political orientations.
  • Preston Bryne argues that age verification and similar internet censorship are unnecessary, advocating instead for parental controls, dumb phones, and supervised access as effective solutions for child safety that do not restrict content publication.
  • The "Granite Act" (GuAranteeing RIghts aNti-International Tyranny and Extortion), a censorship shield law authored by Preston Bryne and Colin Crossman, passed the Wyoming House 46-12.
  • Ofcom reopened its investigation into the controversial "sanctioned suicide" website, threatening a £1 million fine despite the site's geoblock of the UK, after activist groups used VPNs to circumvent the block and pressure the regulator.
Also from this episode: (2)

Digital Sovereignty (1)

  • Preston Bryne's commitment to free speech stems from witnessing a 16-year-old receive a criminal summons from City of London police in 2008 for holding a sign criticizing Scientology.

Regulation (1)

  • The Granite Act enables US entities to sue foreign governments for statutory damages equal to threatened fines, with potential judgments enforceable against foreign assets held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, such as the UK's approximately £46 billion.