Quote from: harrymccartney on July 28, 2012, 12:30 pmYou're right Vlad, the Intersango deposit records could provide an opening for law enforcement and they could make some progress if they had the inclination and the resources (which we must always assume they do). I suppose as a small buyer I'm a little complacent, believing there to be many bigger fish than me who would be targeted first. Silly I know.But as you know I'm now looking to buy BTC by cash in the post, which I can see is an infinitely more secure method. I thank you for it and wish you ongoing success with your operation!Thanks Harry,Yes I am processing your order but I don't volunteer this information unless my clients do first just to stop you from being profiled based on the the orders sent (in practice this would be very difficult to achieve).As you say it would take a certain amount of time and resources to get this information but actually it wouldn't be too much of an imposition. I work in a bank and we will regularly e-mail a spreadsheet (using public key cryptography) with details of all deposits and transfers to an account so if LEO do get hold of this information then it will be no more trouble for them to trace who has wired 1000 to Intersango's account than 1.Having said this I don't want to scare people needlessly - as you say in itself it wouldn't be enough to incriminate someone but used as intelligence to merit further investigation it could prove problematic for buyers - simple solution as I said is to make sure you obtain your BTC using a safe method, once again this doesn't necessarily mean using my service!One of Intersango's redeeming features is it does list legal suppliers of services like web design or products like T Shirts who offer discounts to people who pay in Bitcoin so that's one way to get hold of them. So if you have a cottage industry or just a skill you want to sell why not spread the word and obtain payment that way? :-)V.