Let’s cut through the technocratic mumbo jumbo.
ISO 20022 (not “ISO 222” as it’s often mistyped) is a new global standard for financial messages. Banks, processors, and payment apps are using it to send richer, more detailed info every time money moves. And it’s not just amounts or account numbers anymore—it’s your name, address, date of birth, and even personal notes flying through the wires.
Why does this matter? Because that data sticks. And the more you send, the more they store. And guess who’s watching?
Since July 14, 2025, ISO 20022 has gone fully live on Fedwire, the same system used by your bank for large transfers. FedNow, the instant payment system designed to replace cash, was built on ISO 20022 from day one. And CHIPS, the interbank payment system, switched over last year.
Translation? Every major U.S. payment rail is now ISO 20022-compliant—which means you’re already in the system whether you like it or not.
Your payments now carry more than dollars. They carry your identity: birthdate, home address, even employer details. That info doesn’t stay with your bank—it’s passed from system to system, often across international borders. Every hop increases risk.
Bigger data = bigger target. And hackers, bureaucrats, and marketing firms are circling.
Because ISO 20022 is global by design, your payment data may land on foreign servers governed by European privacy laws (like GDPR), or worse—Chinese or corporate data centers with no accountability.
You’ll never know where your data ends up. But they will.
More fields = more “screening.” If your name or address sounds kinda like someone on a government blacklist, your account can get frozen, investigated, or flagged—even if you're 100% innocent.
That’s not banking. That’s pre-crime.
Old payment formats still coexist, which means your structured data gets “translated” between systems. Poorly. Data can break, get misread, or be re-entered manually.
Each failure means another pair of eyes on your private life.
Ever sent a payment with a note like “for July rent” or “thanks for dinner”? Now that note can carry emails, phone numbers, private memos—and it gets stored, scanned, and shared.
ISO 20022 doesn’t forget. Ever.
Instant payments = zero rollback. Hit send with a typo, or include private info by mistake? Too bad. It’s gone—forever.
Welcome to the age of irrevocable exposure.
With structured data now a goldmine for analytics, marketing, and compliance, most banks will keep it forever. Multiple systems. Multiple vendors. No clear limits.
It’s not just about privacy anymore. It’s about ownership of your life’s information.
No. ISO 20022 is not a law. It’s worse—it’s an industry standard, which means it slides in under the radar. It wasn’t debated. You didn’t vote on it. It’s just happening. Right now. Under your nose.
And while it doesn’t give the government new powers directly, it gives them something better: better data. Structured, sortable, and subpoena-ready. All served on a silver platter.
ISO 20022 is not progress. It’s a control grid. It’s how the banking elites, hand-in-hand with unelected bureaucrats, are building the infrastructure of financial surveillance—without your consent.
They want to eliminate cash. They want to normalize real-time data sharing. They want every payment, every transaction, every dollar to be tagged, tracked, and taxed.
And they’re doing it behind your back.
Download your FREE copy of
"Seven Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure" by Bill Brocius
Get into the fight. Join the Inner Circle for just $19.95/month.
Or get your physical copy of "The End of Banking as You Know It"—Free Shipping + Insurance.
A hacker just manipulated two AI systems into transferring roughly $200,000 in cryptocurrency using hidden…
Coinbase just launched 24/7 gold and silver perpetual futures settled in USDC stablecoins, and most…
Silver is suddenly outperforming gold, surging toward the critical $80 level as geopolitical tensions, weakening…
A recent analysis published by Mises Wire examined California’s accelerating economic and political decline through…
Gold is roaring back after a sharp correction, and the reasons behind it should have…
The crypto casino is cracking, and the latest Coinbase earnings disaster exposed what many independent…
This website uses cookies.
Read More