| Management number | 228508273 | Release Date | 2026/05/31 | List Price | $12.00 | Model Number | 228508273 | ||
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The state cannot steal what it cannot see. The state cannot control what it cannot observe.The Praxeology of Privacy joins two intellectual traditions that arrived at the same conclusions from different starting points. Austrian economics established, by strict deduction from the fact that human beings act, that privacy is structural to deliberation and exchange, that sound money is essential to coordination, and that observation is the precondition of state predation. Cypherpunks built the running code that proves these systems can be defended. This book is the synthesis: a treatise on why privacy matters and a working field guide to the engineering that makes it survivable.Inside the book:Three axioms that frame the argument. Mises on action, Hoppe on argumentation, Voskuil on resistance — and why each one collapses when observation is cheap.Privacy as selective disclosure. Why "nothing to hide" answers the wrong question, and what the right one looks like once secrecy, anonymity, and privacy are held apart.Property rights without "data ownership." Why information cannot be property, and what Kinsella's scarcity criterion actually protects when readers say they want privacy.Financial surveillance, CBDCs, and the analytics industry. How states buy observational capability they cannot legally assemble themselves, and what programmable money does to voluntary exchange.The crypto wars and the cryptographic stack. From symmetric encryption and digital signatures through zero-knowledge proofs and computation on encrypted data.Bitcoin's privacy model and the layers built to defeat chain analysis. CoinJoin, PayJoin, Lightning, Spark, Ark, ecash, and Chaumian mints — what each protects, what each costs, and where the tradeoffs sit.Anonymous communication and decentralized social infrastructure. Tor, mixnets, MLS-encrypted messaging, and the protocols that put identity back in the user's hands.Operational security and the parallel economy. Threat modeling, compartmentalization, and the institutions that raise the cost of surveillance until the predation it enables becomes unprofitable.Author Max Hillebrand has spent over a decade building and advocating for privacy infrastructure at the intersection of Austrian economics and cypherpunk cryptography. Foreword by Paul Rosenberg, twenty-year veteran of the privacy trenches. With praise from Eric Voskuil, Stephan Kinsella, Knut Svanholm, and Luke de Wolf.If you've sensed that something has tightened and want to understand why — and what to do about it — this book is the bridge. Read it while there's still room to build. Read more
| ASIN | B0H1L1H1GM |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 979-8196622069 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Independently published |
| Dimensions | 6 x 1.17 x 9 inches |
| Item Weight | 1.9 pounds |
| Print length | 517 pages |
| Publication date | May 12, 2026 |
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