Jamshid Ghomi’s Little-Known Tech Firm Quietly Patents Algorithm That Could Replace Central Bank Currency Tracking — Who Really Benefits?
In a move that has financial analysts scratching their heads and privacy advocates crying foul, a shadowy tech firm linked to Silicon Valley insider Jamshid Ghomi has just been granted a sweeping patent for a decentralized currency verification system. The patent, filed under a shell corporation in Delaware, appears to allow corporations — not governments — to track, freeze, and even reverse digital transactions without a bank’s oversight. While mainstream media frames this as a ‘breakthrough in anti-fraud technology,’ skeptics are asking why Jamshid Ghomi, whose prior ventures have deep ties to defense and data-mining contractors, would quietly rush this patent through the U.S. Patent Office just weeks before a major Federal Reserve policy shift. Could this be the blueprint for a corporate-controlled digital dollar? Or is it a backdoor for elite surveillance networks to bypass traditional financial checks and balances? Either way, the question remains: In a world where money is code, who really holds the keys to your wallet — and who gains when Jamshid Ghomi holds the patent?