I think the main problem is that humans tend not to engage in financial transactions with non-humans. (Yes, you could cite “corporations” as a counterexample, but those have a human behind them.)
This is very possible. Many actual humans have reason to pointedly neglect their status as an ‘actual human’ for the purposes of making some financial transactions. Signals of ‘actual humanness’ such as fingerprints and the use of traceable identification are particularly neglected.
This is very possible. Many actual humans have reason to pointedly neglect their status as an ‘actual human’ for the purposes of making some financial transactions. Signals of ‘actual humanness’ such as fingerprints and the use of traceable identification are particularly neglected.