Shouldn't the Federal Reserve PAY People for Following Notes with TrackDollar.com?

@mythociate (21437)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
November 20, 2015 1:01pm CST
I can't think of any reason they *should*, but ... I wonder if the team at TrackDollar.com (or TrackEveryDollar.com) might ask the Federal Reserve officials. If they do, I'm tracking almost 7000 (trackdollar.com/report.htm?url=0H35D7027D968CE3734B33CC5B431D544337B8A55E)!
3 people like this
2 responses
@Jessicalynnt (50525)
• Centralia, Missouri
23 Nov 15
the what? tracking money? is this something that sees where money moves around? It would be neat to see how far a bill can travel in it's life. How many people own it. That kind of thing
1 person likes this
@mythociate (21437)
• Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
28 Nov 15
then go to the address, enter the serial-numbers of all the bills you have with you and maybe write/stamp " on some clear space (I use 'the space above a serial-number' or (if those spaces have "art" in them) 'the clear space around the bill's edge' )
• Centralia, Missouri
29 Nov 15
@mythociate it's a fun idea. I do something like that with geocache bugs
1 person likes this
@mythociate (21437)
• Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
1 Dec 15
@Jessicalynnt FR notes ARE like geocache bugs, except people actually use them and pass them on! (although they don't usually 'record' their passing-it-on)
1 person likes this
• India
10 Jul 20
How could it be possible. I do not have a US dollar. I would definitely want to try that. But large transactions do not take place in cash form. Does it reveal the gps location?
1 person likes this
@mythociate (21437)
• Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
10 Jul 20
No. When people have cash (in America ... I don't know if this is "international" or -is connected to any other currency-tracking programs), they can enter its serial-number (and date, and possibly some information about where & how they got it & where they intend to spend it) in their profile at (There's also "Where's George".com, but TrackDollar seems to be a more-practical name