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I have a few questions:

1 - Does the country suffer sudden Internet or power outages? If so, how are transactions carried out if something is needed at that exact moment and there is no physical means of exchange available?

A1: Currently, this is not the case. Fiber optic internet is quite stable, with no outages, except for the occasional one, which is normal anywhere in the world. Transactions are carried out normally, without delays, just as they are anywhere else.

2 - Does the population receive any incentives from the government to report bitcoin users?

A2: No, not really. Cryptocurrencies are legal to a certain extent. If you do everything correctly, there is no problem, and if you do not do it correctly, if you do not tell anyone and disclose it, there is no problem either.

3 - How do you access your usual websites, services, and messaging over the Internet? Do you use a VPN all the time, for everything? Tor? I2P? None of the above? Do you need to use a firewall?

R3: Not at all, we can access them normally. One or two platforms are blocked for Venezuela, but for the most part we can access them without any problems. Of course, some online work platforms, surveys, among others, are blocked for Venezuela, they don't send jobs, but we can access the page. However, there are no blocks in that sense, we can access most of the sites we want.

4 - Can a Bitcoin user without KYC live without headaches, or must they use an exchange to avoid being arrested?

A4: Yes, you can live without any problems. I am one of them. Nothing has happened to me in all these years, nor will it ever happen.

You do not need to respond if you believe it would expose you or compromise your operational security.