Of course, we have. I speak for everyone when I say that all our countries have been so helpful and open-minded with everything Bitcoin. They have offered free education, tax benefits, and a simple reporting and administrative process to declare our crypto holdings. It's a one-click task. It's so good giving back when you have had so much support by your local authorities. Not
I didn't quite catch what you were saying until this second time I read it again, so the delayed merit is for that.
this is how it works in the united states:
Under the law, no one can be required to disclose any information, whether verbal or written, that was confidentially exchanged within the following relationships:
husband and wife
lawyer and client
doctor and patient, and
religious advisor and advisee (although this privilege is often referred to as "priest-penitent," it applies more generally to any confidential conversation between a member of the clergy of a recognized religion and a person seeking spiritual counsel).
AFAIK similar laws exist in most industrialized countries but those kind of laws do not prevent your ex-wife (or your still wife but in the process of divorce) from testifying against you if she willingly wants to.