Author Archives: Satoshi

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Google joins Yahoo in offering Bitcoin prices

(CoinDesk) Google Finance has launched a bitcoin price tracker, offering market
information across several major fiat currencies as well as access to
breaking news in the digital currency world.
Users can access prices in BTC/USD markets, as well as prices in pound sterling, yen, euro, renminbi, Australian dollar and Canadian dollar markets.
The tool also enables review of historical prices dating back to June 2013.
google
The
Google Finance bitcoin tool enables quick BTC-to-fiat conversions as
well, allowing for calculations across dozens of currencies such as the
Yemeni rial and the Bangladeshi taka.
The move comes hot on the heels of the Yahoo! Finance bitcoin price listing. In addition, Bloomberg opted to add bitcoin prices to its terminals in late April.
CoinDesk reached out to Google for comment on the decision, but did not receive an immediate response.

Simple design

The layout in Google Finance is simple, allowing for easy navigation without many bells and whistles.
google
Users can list multiple fiat currencies against the price of bitcoin, and the tool’s news tracker pegs the timing of news releases with the fluctuations in the market.
The tool bears many similarities to Yahoo! Finance’s tool,
though it utilizes different layout schemes for graphs and news
tickers. However, Yahoo! Finance does not offer bitcoin price
conversions to other currencies.

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Tel Aviv to get first Bitcoin ATM in Middle East

The new machine will allow users to buy and sell their bitcoin at all hours of the day and night without going through bureaucracy.

(Haaretz) The first Bitcoin automatic teller machine in the Middle East will be
launched in Tel Aviv on Wednesday. Bitcoin is a peer-to-peer virtual
currency that allows for transactions between users without any third
party or middle man.

The
“cash-out capable Bitcoin vending machine,” made by American company
Robocoin, has several security features built in to prevent theft and
fraud that are compliant with anti-money laundering regulations,
according to a press release.

“The
launch of the first Bitcoin ATM in the Middle East will allow any
person with no previous knowledge of bitcoin and how it works to easily
buy and sell bitcoin 24/7 bypassing the bureaucracy of the banks,”
Bitbox CEO Nimrod Gruber said. Bitbox the company bringing the first
Bitcoin ATM in Israel.

Until now, all transactions had to either go through a bank or through private trading, which lacked credibility.

According
to Gruber, many people are looking for an easy way to sell or buy their
bitcoin for local currency, and this ATM will allow them to do so.

Foreign
workers, for example, can buy bitcoins in shekels and have their
families withdraw cash in local currency at a bitcoin ATM in their
country.

The launch takes place Wednesday night at the TOWN-HOUSE TLV hotel, 32 Yavne St. at the corner of Rothschild Blvd.

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Satoshi
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First Bitcoin hearings at the Italian Parliament tomorrow

Tomorrow, in the Aldo Moro meeting room of the Italian Parliament there will be a consultation on the open source Bitcoin protocol. The technical aspects will be introduced by:
  • Sebastiano Scrofina – CEO and Co-Founder at Dropis
  • Guido Baroncini Turricchia – CoinCapital’s Partner
  • Francesco Vatalaro – Università Di Tor Vergata
  • Massimo Bernaschi – CNR
  • Ferdinando Ametrano – Banca IMI – Università Bicocca
  • Roberto Tudini – Studio Tudini&Tudini
In the second part there will be a round table that will allow for the comparison of ideas and the points of view of different stakeholder. The event is organized by the On. Quintarelli and CoinCapital, bringing the Bitcoin inside the walls of the Italian Parliament allowing to highlight the risks and the opportunities.
Offering to the parliament a first overview and a neutral basis to start an aware and balanced discussion.

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Satoshi

Malaysian retail giant i-Pmart will hold 100% of its Bitcoin Payments

(CoinDesk) Another e-commerce giant has joined the bitcoin world, with major
Malaysian online mobile phone and electronic parts retailer i-Pmart
adding it to the list of accepted payment methods last week.
CEO
and founder Mart Tang also said the company will hold onto the bitcoins
it earns and watch the price rise, rather than convert them into local
fiat currency.
Although based in Malaysia, the company ships
worldwide from outlets in its home country, plus China and the US. The
bitcoin option was introduced first to the Malaysian site only, though
international customers may still use that version.
All other i-Pmart sites worldwide will start accepting about 20 days from now, as soon as the integration process is complete.

Low-key launch

What’s most surprising about i-Pmart’s
decision is the lack of fanfare with which bitcoin was added to the
list of options. Rather than publicizing it, or even celebrating the
announcement with its 730,000+ fans
on Facebook, the company added the bare-bones line “We accept bitcoin”
and an icon into its long list of existing payment options.
ipmart options
i-Pmart
is also a big seller of litecoin mining equipment, selling GPU-based
rigs both to advanced users to self-assemble with the ‘Savvy Pack’, and a ‘Newbie Pack’ for beginners that includes the option to have i-Pmart assemble, host and even operate the hardware for them.
Despite this, however, the company is not adding litecoin as a payment option yet.

Bitcoin fan

CEO
Tang said his interest in bitcoin came from being an IT entrepreneur
always searching the Internet for the latest tech information and
gadgets.
Shortly after absorbing everything he could about bitcoin
and other digital currencies, he began hearing about merchants in other
countries accepting bitcoin and studied how to become a digital
currency miner himself.
“This gives me more insight into bitcoins and others types of coin on how it works and benefits from it,” he said.

“That’s
how I have started to think if I have customers who want to use bitcoin
to purchase my products online which gives convenience of various types
of payment choice especially those who do not prefer to pay using their
credit card, cash or other mode of payment.”

He then
sat down with his web development team to discuss how to integrate
bitcoin as a mode of payment in the business portal www.ipmart.com
globally.

“[I’m] looking forward to the new world of
virtual payment choice, which I believe can be the future of global
virtual currency that people might embrace, especially the Gen Y.”
“I
am holding the bitcoin. Because having a very big confidence the price
of bitcoin is not the rates of today USD 650, should be higher than this
price very soon.”

Company background

The i-Pmart Group of Companies was founded in 2001, and has focused mainly on the international market since 2005. It has ‘MSC status’ in Malaysia, meaning it is part of the country’s ‘Multimedia Super Corridor’ initiative designed to promote Malaysia as a regional center for world-class technology businesses.
The
group now consists of domestic and internationally-focused retail
sites, plus arms specializing in management, development, and logistics.

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Satoshi
cointelegraph.com

Why Bitcoin is important for the world: Bitcoin can stop governments from murdering people

(CoinTelegraph) Bitcoin evangelist, libertarian and millionaire Roger Ver thinks that
Bitcoin’s limited growth can stop governments from raging wars across
the world. 
Ver gave a speech at Coin Congress in
Singapore back in May entitled “Why Bitcoin is Important for the World.”
It was a sort of quick introduction into the world of Bitcoin, until
Ver used the last few minutes in his speech to “rant about what has
[him] most excited about how Bitcoin is going to change the world for
the better.” 
Ver, who runs what was one of the first mainstream sites to take bitcoin payments, MemoryDealers, said that fiat currency was to blame for Governments’ (like his own United States) penchant for raging wars overseas. 
Ver
said that “Not only do they control [fiat], they can print as much of
it as they want at any time. . . I see the United States Government
printing money like crazy and then they use that money to buy all sorts
of tanks and bombs and airplanes and murder people all over the world. .
. all that is being paid for by printing money.” 
“With
Bitcoin,” Ver continued “because there is a limited supply, that sort
of thing can’t happen.” Ver hopes that Bitcoin’s inability to be printed
at will, will prevent governments from using printed money to fund
warfare. 
Ver sees a world that uses Bitcoin as one that is “much safer” for every individual on the planet. 
Bitcoin’s
possible effect on world peace is something we won’t know until if and
when it obtains true widespread adoption. But it is true that Bitcoin
can’t be printed out of thin air due to a limited supply. If a
government used it as legal tender then they would have to find a
different way to fund any war.

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Satoshi
stallman dollar two

Which celebrities are getting into Bitcoin?

(TheCoinFront) Here in the Bitcoin world, we’ve built up our own celebrities. Figures like Andreas Antonopolous, Erik Voorhees, Stefan Molyneux, Brock Pierce, Charlie Shrem, and Gavin Andressen should, for better or worse, be familiar names to all Bitcoin aficionados.
But
there are many celebrities in the outside world as well who have begun
embracing Bitcoin and cryptocurrency. Here are just a few of them:

Ashton Kutcher

Kutcher may be best known for playing
simple-minded characters like Kelso from That 70’s Show or Jesse from
Dude Where’s My Car, but in reality he’s anything but.Through his fund, A-Grade Investments, he’s invested in companies like
BitPay, which allows merchants to accept Bitcoin payments. He’s also
invested in Skype, Airbnb, and Foursquare, among others.

Snoop Dogg

Snoop Dogg is an active internet user, with a
presence on Twitter with tens of thousands of tweets, and a Reddit
account with hundreds of thousands of karma points. In fact, on Reddit
he has even been made the moderator of the subreddit /r/trees, devoted
to, what else, pot.Last December, Snoop posted a tweet saying his new album
would be “available in bitcoin and delivered in a drone”. Coinbase
noticed the tweet and responded that “we could make the Bitcoin part a
reality for you.” While Snoop said he wanted “to make it happen,” it
never materialized.

Richard Sherman

Sherman, the cornerback for the Seattle Seahawks
football team, has an online store on his website. At the beginning of
January, he posted the following on his Facebook page:”For all you techies out there, I’m now accepting Bitcoins at my online
store http://store.richardsherman25.com. I hear it’s the currency of the
future.”

Peter Thiel

Peter Thiel might not be a celebrity in the same light as the above people, but he’s a major player in the world nonetheless.The cofounder of Paypal has been a believer in the decentralization of
money for much longer than Bitcoin has been around, and has openly
admitted he thinks Bitcoin has the power to change the world.

Richard Branson

The well-known billionaire head of Virgin Inc
began accepting Bitcoin as payment for his Virgin Galactic service, a
space tourism company.He has also invested a significant amount of his personal wealth in
Bitcoin, which makes him one of the more high profile Bitcoin holders.

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Satoshi

Remittance Relief: Bitcoin can act as more than just a payment transfer system.

“[Bitcoin] produces a market that’s international, that everyone has access to, regardless of race, religion, creed…” – Amir Taaki

(BitcoinMagazine) There is a lot of talk recently of the power Bitcoin has in changing
the remittance market.  A remittance is a transfer of wealth from one
person to another, mostly amongst the world’s poor. Zach Ramsay of
Canadian-based CoinCulture calls remittances “peer2peer for the poor2poor.” It’s an astute observation.

It should be stated that this wealth transfer – remittance market – is cited as vital, critical, and an economic lifeline for
those receiving the money.  The demand does not just exist, it is
desperately needed. Currently, remittances account for the second
largest amount of wealth transfer from the ‘West’ to the underdeveloped
world, second to International Aid.
I don’t want to go into the background and frustration with the
current remittance system. It will surely take up pages and pages and
come out in the form of an anti-banking and anti-Western-imposed
“development” rant.  The fact of the matter is: fees that are applied to
money that cannot be made in x country, that then needs to be made in y country and sent back to x country for x population to survive should be lower.  And now, with bitcoin, they are.  Moving forward is all that matters now.
It is said that remittance fees are as high as they are because of
compliance and regulation requirements. Perhaps we can also attribute
some costs to the high risk involved in operating in sub-Saharan
countries.  However, the sheer fact of the matter is the current monopoly and lack of competition in the market for cross-border payments is also a reason for the high fees.
The highest costs occur when transferring money to and between sub-Saharan African countries.  Let’s take the East African nation of Uganda as an example. Fees on money transfers into Uganda range from 10% to as high as 40%.
How does Bitcoin fit in here? Well, for those who are not up-to-speed
on the technology, Bitcoin enables instant transfer of monetary value
over the internet in any amount, to anyone, anywhere in the world, at
any time.  This peer-to-peer transfer of wealth saves time and money;
MoneyGram and Western Union take on average 2 days to get money to the
receiver and require a high percentage of that money as payment for this
service.
Ronald, a student in Kampala, Uganda, is a great example
of the opportunity bitcoin presents in changing the expensive and truly
outdated remittance market.  Ronald receives money from his U.S.-based
family to live on while he studies.  One day, his U.-S.-based family
decides to experiment with bitcoin.  His family types out instructions
to Ronald via a Facebook message and Ronald follows them, downloading
the required software to accept the bitcoin transfer, and the money
arrives in his bitcoin account (a “wallet.”)
Now, Ronald must find a buyer for his bitcoin.  He goes into
Kampala’s city centre and meets with a buyer, who gives him Ugandan
Shillings in return for the bitcoin.  The process is quicker than
Western Union and MoneyGram, and costs significantly less (the mining
fee paid by his family back home.) It works! Watch the video here.
Bankers and Western Union/MoneyGram dislike this reality. Bitcoin is
competition.  It pushes them out of their cozy position, causing them to
rethink their entire existence as a business.  But it is a reality.
Bitcoin is working.  Perhaps the demand isn’t fully there yet across
all countries.  But it will be.  And it will replace these archaic money
transfer businesses and processes.
andreas
Antonopoulos telling it like it is.
The reality is that, despite us constantly using the continent in
reference to the underdeveloped world, Africa is very advanced when it
comes to transferring money online.  Fellow Bitcoin Magazine
contributor, Brian Cohen,
says,  “more people have access to mobile phones than working toilets.”
Parts of the continent simply skipped past the rest of the world and
went straight to using their phonesfor low-cost banking. Over 1/3 of
Kenyans can now buy and sell virtual currencies by using a bitcoin
wallet called Kipochi within their robust money transfer system, M-Pesa. To date,approximately 14.5 million Kenyans and 5 million Tanzanians have signed up for the service. #SorrynotsorryCGAP

 

Bitcoin can act as more than just a payment transfer system.  It can
also hold value.  Uganda “loves to take money from the poor.”  The
country’s current inflation rate is 6-7%; if Ronald’s money isn’t used
or put to work in a vehicle that earns as much as that, his money is
disappearing.  Furthermore, if Ronald allows his money to sit in a basic
bank account, it will be “gone in 5 months” due to the high fees
associated with banking.  Bitcoin can be used as a store of value.
However, it must be noted that it could also potentially lose money for
Ronald… but it’s not guaranteed to lose money and there are no fees
associated with holding it.

 

Furthermore, bitcoin also acts as a way for families to send small
amounts of money to each other.  Never before in the history of the
world have we been able to send tiny amounts of money to each other over
the internet! Now, Ronald’s family can send him $10 dollars if they
want.  Or money for a meal.  It really is incredible.
A lot of our energy is also going to the talk of the need for regulation with bitcoin businesses.  Andrew Brown of Earthport notes
that, after regulation and compliance costs are implemented on the
bitcoin platform, no “apparent advantage [for bitcoin] will be left.”
The goal here is not to make Bit-Western Unions, where the
cost-savings of the technology cannot be realized. The goal here is to
empower and educate people so they can help themselves and each other.
With Ronald’s example, we can see that this is already happening.
We have all the tools at our disposal. People can educate themselves
anywhere and at any time using the Internet.  The world is shifting into
enlightenment and we are finally evolving out of these old institutions
and laggy systems.  The key to this shift is empowering individuals via
access to information and technology.  We will create and sustain this
shift by keeping power diffused and decentralized. The answer is not to
build remittance businesses on top of bitcoin, but, if anything, to
build information businesses that can explain and teach people all
around the world on exactly how to tap into this technology and use it
for their benefit.
M-Pesa started out of modest beginnings, and now Kenya operates at a
more sophisticated level of money transfer than countries like Canada
and the United States. Perhaps it’s time for us to catch up and join
East Africa and learn from some of the trails they are blazing with this
technology.
Not so dark a continent after all, eh?
Image from Nolte Lourens @ shutterstock

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Arthur Chapman 3

Seller seeks $2 Million in Bitcoin for real Yukon gold mine

yukon gold mine

(CoinDesk) The unnamed parent company of a Yukon, Canada, gold mine is now for
sale on high-end bitcoin-only marketplace BitPremier for an asking price
of $2 million in BTC.

The listing indicates that the more than 3,000 BTC
price tag includes the gold mine itself and all its associated assets,
including $1 million worth of actual mining equipment, the rights to one
mining property and the lease agreement to another mining lot.
The ad suggests that the purchase could be a profitable one for the buyer as well, stating:

“Any new buyer could recoup their initial investment in as little as two mining seasons.”

The
listing indicates that the company earns $1m annually in sales and has
the potential to produce 3,000 to 4,000 ounces of gold per year.
In
a bid to encourage more novice bidders, the current owner further said
he is willing to stay on to manage the property for up to five years to
ensure the operation runs smoothly.

Record-setting sale

The listing is just one of the many high-end items that have been listed on BitPremier’s website since it launched in May 2013, but if completed, it would be the largest facilitated by the e-commerce company to date.
The most expensive purchase on the platform was completed in March, when a villa in Bali, Indonesia sold for $500,000 in what was believed to be the single largest bitcoin purchase ever.
If completed, the $2m gold mine sale would surpass this figure, potentially setting two new records in the process.

Bitcoin meets gold

Notable
for its size, the gold mine listing is also indicative of how bitcoin
has become more widely accepted in the precious metals community.
Earlier this year, Bitcoin Bullion launched a gold-to-BTC exchange, while financial personality Peter Schiff announced in May that his gold and silver outlet Euro Pacific Precious Metals would begin accepting bitcoin due to market demand.
For more on how bitcoin bullion dealers are looking to expand their services into new and potentially lucrative markets, read our most recent report.

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Satoshi
bitcoin2 1

Bitcoin’s real value lies in the disruption it promises

The cryptocurrency has been grabbing attention for its scope to revolutionise our financial system. About time, we took a broader view of it.
bitcoin matrix
Bitcoin has been the focus of media and regulators globally, for the simple fact that its decentralised nature and disruptive impact upon the financial infrastructure of the world brings tremendous changes to established conventions. Power is shifted away from financial institutions and distributed across a vast network of peers that acts as a consensus engine.
This democratises the very nature of the financial system, reducing the power of the oligopolies that control the financial system. However, the true potential of Bitcoin lies not in the ability to disrupt the financial ecosystem, but that of the Bitcoin protocol.
Bitcoin is more than just an encrypted digital payment method. Bitcoin is based around a public ledger system – the blockchain — which uses cryptography to validate transactions. Bitcoin users control access to their Bitcoin wallets through a system of public and private keys. As such, Bitcoin is an open source peer-to-peer (P2P) channel that doesn’t compromise privacy and security.
Also Read: What is Bitcoin?
Payment applications of Bitcoin have been evaluated in-depth, remittances, micropayments, and donations being among the financial transactions focussed upon. The Bitcoin protocol conceptually disrupts systems reliant on networks of intermediaries and agents for validation and trust. Two sectors subject to this are asset transferrals and contracts. Practically any system requiring validated transactions and using intermediaries to vet them are vulnerable to this.
Asset transferrals
The Bitcoin protocol, or any conceptually similar protocol,  potentially simplify asset transfers. Most asset transfers require significant energy to execute. This is because of due diligence and compliance requirements, as well as vetting and validation by various parties. Purchasing cars, boats or houses from individual sellers often requires intermediaries performing due diligence and maintaining compliance with legal requirements.
A blockchain alters this by qualifying how Bitcoins or equivalent digital tokens represent tangible assets. Bitcoin entrepreneurs at firms like Colored Coin are developing methods using Bitcoin fractions to symbolise physical objects. This digital fraction can then publicly identify and denote asset ownership, optionally including records of past ownership, transactions and other relevant data.
For example, if purchasing real estate, new owners could verify renovation(s), prior ownership and inspections by reference to the blockchain. If buying a user vehicle, owners could refer to the blockchain for insurance details and other relevant data assigned to it. Ownership could be transferred and titles validated on-site. This would have repercussions for industries reliant on networks of intermediaries to facilitate and validate transactions.
Blockchain approaches create efficient and simple mechanism enabling administrative simplicity and elegant functionality — allowing direct asset transfers without using brokers, lawyers, notaries or other intermediaries to vet, validate and verify transactions. The details of the transaction are locked into the blockchain and available to the public for review at their discretion.
Contract implementation
Bitcoin protocols impact the structuring and implementation of contracts, bringing greater economic efficiency and legal transparency to otherwise opaque practices in specific markets. Lawyers draft contracts on a case-by-case basis, with significant energy devoted to the process: negotiation, development and enforcement.
Contract-based markets often lack transparency and maintain a level of opacity, with a power inequality problem between contract holders and signers, reducing market efficiency and potentially creating distribution and justice problems in such markets. Traditional contracts are replaced by software code instead, which executes when triggered by specific conditions.
For example, options could be developed to execute trades over the blockchain at a specified time or in reaction to financial markets reaching specific conditions.
One benefit is reducing legal fees, as these contracts could be standardised and distributed as open source templates. Financial markets would become transparent, as regulators and analysts could access the blockchain, without forcing the disclosure of specific positions.
Ventures like Ethereum are developing these capabilities today. Ethereum is in the process of developing a network serving as a registry and escrow. This network will execute contract conditions automatically, if and when they fulfill a rule set.
Rather than forking Bitcoin in an attempt to tailor it towards specific industries or applications, Ethereum is designed as a separate and alternative cryptocurrency network that resolves issues with Bitcoin’s scalability and efficiency. Ethereum contracts are  modelled as autonomous agents simulated by the blockchain. Each contract has an internal script, with scripting code activated when a transaction occurs.
Proof of Existence has created a similar system to certify and validate documents. Using the blockchain, it provides online, distributed proof for documents secured using a cryptographic digest of the file, but not the file or information itself. This is time-stamped and certifies the existence of the document in a public ledger, using a decentralised certification based on the Bitcoin network.
Property and contracts are just some areas that the P2P nature of the Bitcoin protocol will affect. Achieving wider adoption requires Bitcoin and its advocates to address significant questions and concerns regarding trust, ease-of-use and functionality. However, the Bitcoin community is showing remarkable adaptability, with many working to ameliorate problems and educate the public.

There will be significant innovation and development centred around the Bitcoin ecosystem in the years to come. Much of this will initially revolve around payments, investments and financial systems. Its real value, though, lies in the decentralisation and disruption it promises.

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1297565813985 ORIGINAL

Canada is second most popular country for bitcoin investment

Canada is the second most popular destination for capital investment in bitcoin companies, a Montreal think-tank says.

(TorontoSun) Some $10.5 million of venture capital has been invested in bitcoin in
Canada, putting us behind the U.S. and just ahead of China, the
Montreal Economic Institute says.

Bitcoin, digital currency created in 2009, allows people to make transactions anonymously without going through a central bank.
But the currency’s association with money laundering and its lack of
government regulation puts its growth and development at risk in Canada,
the think-tank warned.
“In order for it to develop its potential and be adopted by a growing
number of users, clear rules are required, along with some kind of
governmental acceptance,” study author David Descoteaux said in a
statement.
Descoteaux said Canada should create legislation to facilitate interaction between Canadian banks and bitcoin companies.
Banks are wary of offering services to bitcoin companies for fear of running afoul of money laundering laws, he said.
For example, Cointrader, which launched the first bitcoin ATM in
Montreal, alleges the Bank of Montreal shut down its account and those
of other businesses that trade in bitcoin.
These kinds of stories send companies — which may be on the forefront
of currency innovation — elsewhere to set up shop, the think-tank said.
Germany, for example, has bitcoin legislation and tax policy.
“These clear rules, as well as a tax treatment that allows bitcoin to
be used as a currency, explain why the digital currency is popular in
Germany and why this country was one of the first bitcoin hubs,”
Descoteaux said.
“Canada has so far been quite welcoming to bitcoin, and in clarifying
its own regulatory framework, it should ensure that it remains so.”

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