Author Archives: Satoshi

MasterCard lobbyist adds Bitcoin to list of topics

(Bloomberg) When MasterCard Inc. paid a team of
lobbyists about $70,000 earlier this year to promote the bank-card network’s views, a new topic made their list: bitcoin.

Washington-based Peck Madigan Jones had five of its
lobbyists, including Jeff Peck, who leads the firm’s financial
services and capital markets practice, work on subjects
including “bitcoin and mobile payments” in the House of
Representatives and Senate during the first quarter, according
to a regulatory filing. Other topics the firm handled for
MasterCard included data breaches, interchange fees and gift
cards.

As big financial companies dismiss bitcoin’s prospects, the
document shows MasterCard is at least talking with lawmakers
about the virtual currency, which entrepreneurs pitch as a cheap
alternative to established payment systems. Investors in bitcoin
businesses are working to head off burdensome regulation and
capture some of the combined $61.3 billion in annual revenue
generated by the four largest U.S. credit-card networks.

“We were gathering information in connection with recent
congressional hearings to better understand the policy issues
around virtual and anonymous currencies,” said Jim Issokson, a
spokesman for Purchase, New York-based MasterCard.

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Satoshi

Bitcoin Regulation Update – 03/07/14

(BitcoinMagazine) This
week saw the outing (or not) of Satoshi Nakamoto, Bitcoin’s alleged
inventor, who is said to have abruptly disappeared from the online
forums he was known to frequent in Bitcoin’s early days. Though the man
alleged to be Nakamoto, who was living under a different name in the
United States, denied involvement with Bitcoin, Newsweek, the
publication that broke the story, stands behind their work. The early
response from the online Bitcoin community could best be described as a
low grade form of moral outrage, combined with a dash of horror. What
seems to have upset Bitcoiners most is the fact that a media outlet was
able to identify and publicly name a person who clearly was not
interested in being identified, using little more than public
information and basic detective work. To the extent that the majority of
crypto enthusiasts value privacy, if not anonymity, the Satoshi
Nakamoto affair does not bode well.
Canada-based Bitcoin exchange Vault of Satoshi announced via Facebook on Thursday that it would discontinue
support for US customers due to an “increasingly hostile” regulatory
environment. The exchange, which connects users with others looking to
trade crypto currencies for fiat currencies, claimed to be facing
considerable difficulties complying with FinCEN’s anti-money laundering
rules, not the least of which was FinCEN’s policy disallowing the filing
of paper reports by money service businesses and the seeming
incompatibility of the online reporting system with foreign businesses.
The decision to abandon the US market entirely seems to be a fairly
drastic response to US law, which could rightly be described as overly
complicated. Vault of Satoshi is neither the first nor the only non-US
based company to face US regulatory requirements, so it isn’t clear why
it seems to be having unusual difficulty in this area.  The company’s
Bitcoin to US dollar volume on Friday stood at 280 coins as of 5:00 PM
CST, compared to 314 for Bitcoin to Canadian dollars. Under the new
policy, US traders will be unable to deposit or withdraw cash from the
exchange, but will be permitted to trade coins.
Yet another exchange, this time Canadian company Flexcoin, informed customers this week that it is insolvent
as the result of a hack induced theft and would have no choice but to
cease operations. The exchange lost an estimated $500,000 worth of coins
in its hot wallet, but a spokesman said that customer coins in cold
storage would be returned to their owners.  Flexcoin referred to its
terms of service, reminding its customers that they agreed not to hold
Flexcoin liable for theft, while informing everyone else that they were
out of luck. The operative verbiage states that “Flexcoin is not
responsible for insuring any bitcoins stored in the Flexcoin system.”
Whether this will be sufficient to ward off civil liability remains to
be seen.
Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs service in the United Kingdom has reportedly dropped
a plan to apply value added taxes to mined bitcoins and Bitcoin
exchange transactions. However, the treasury maintained in a brief
delivered to British lawmakers that the 20% VAT still applies to goods
and services purchased with bitcoins, just the same as it would if those
same goods and services were purchased with Pounds. After a careful
review, HM Treasury was more likely to have discovered the near
impossibility of taxing Bitcoin at the point of exchange or the point of
creation, than to have determined that it falls outside the scope of
transactions subject to the tax.  Merchants, on the other hand, are
already accustomed to collecting VAT and equipped with the
infrastructure both to report it and to comply with the audit
requirements of the British government. The UK has developed a
reputation in the Bitcoin community of late for being comparatively
friendly to crypto currency from a regulatory standpoint and more
accessible than US regulators.
Vietnam’s Communist government has officially banned
all Bitcoin transactions. The Vietnamese central bank announced the
policy, citing Bitcoin’s alleged role in promoting money laundering and
other criminal activity. The bank did not specify how the ban would be
enforced or what the penalties for non-compliance would be. The
Vietnamese government maintains restrictive capital controls (ostensibly
to protect the Dong against speculators), that Bitcoin could be used to
subvert. Few exchanges offer the ability to convert from Bitcoin to the
Vietnamese Dong.  However, other currencies, such as the US dollar, are
in common use on Vietnam’s streets, especially in urban centers.
Japan has announced
that it will not attempt to regulate Bitcoin transactions carried out
within its borders on the grounds that bitcoins are not considered a
currency. However, Japanese banks will be prohibited from buying or
selling bitcoins. The Japanese government also clarified that it intends
to treat Bitcoin as a commodity and subject it to the applicable
taxation regime. Japan is the home of Mt. Gox, the collapsed Bitcoin
exchange which is currently the subject of a bankruptcy filing in that
country, along with at least one criminal probe and numerous civil
suits.

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Satoshi
Australianflagatnewport

Australian writers awarded 12 BTC in Bitcoin Essay Competition

(CoinDesk) The winners of Australia’s first bitcoin essay competition were announced this week, with 12 BTC in prizes awarded to three writers.
The writing contest, sponsored by Sydney-based exchange Bit Trade Australia, posed the question: ‘Digital Currencies and the future: Will Bitcoin change the world?’.
The
competition opened in November last year to Australian and New Zealand
citizens with the intention to drive bitcoin and digital currency
awareness.
The prize has increased in value considerably since
the contest was announced. The 7 BTC first prize was worth around
AU$1,000 when announced, but is now worth over AU$4,000, despite this
week’s price turmoil.

First prize went to Gareth Williams, a New Zealand native who lives in Sydney and works full time as a Java programmer.

“I
feel that Bitcoin, just like the Internet in the early 1990s, is a
technology with enormous potential which is largely under-appreciated in
the mainstream,”
he said.

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Satoshi
bitcoin bars nyc

Lawsky says New York will adapt money transfer rules for Bitcoin

 

(Bloomberg) New York state will adapt existing rules on money transmission to license digital currency firms, financial services Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky said in remarks prepared for a conference in Washington today.

We do not have to throw out all of our existing rules for money transmitters or banks, which have generally served consumers well when vigorously enforced,” Lawsky said in a statement delivered to a New America Foundation forum on Bitcoin. “Indeed, certain aspects of virtual currency could dovetail with existing regulations.

New York will “likely have to proceed with issuing some form of specially tailored BitLicense that adapts those rules to the world of virtual currency,” Lawsky said.

The Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network said in March that virtual currency businesses may be regulated as money transmitters. Since states license such companies, the decision set off a scramble by states to decide how to treat the embryonic industry.

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Satoshi

Reserve Bank of India closely examining digital currencies

(The Hindu) A number of countries around the world are taking a close look at the use of bitcoin and other digital currencies, and India is no exception. It is being reported that the country’s government on Tuesday said that the Reserve Bank of India (commonly known as RBI) is taking a close look at both the legal and security elements of digital currencies.

“The RBI is presently examining the issues associated with the usage, holding and trading of virtual currencies, including bitcoins, under the extant legal and regulatory framework of the country, including foreign exchange and payment systems laws and regulations,” said P. Chidambaram, Finance Minister.

seal reserve bank indiaThis isn’t the RBI’s first run-in with digital currencies, though. Late last year (Christmas Eve, in fact), it was reported that the RBI issued a public advisory on bitcoin, warning citizens if its potential pitfalls. “No regulatory approvals, registration or authorization has been obtained by entities concerned for carrying on such activities. As such, they may pose several risks to their users,” said Chidambaram.

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Satoshi
bitcoin foundation

Bitcoin Foundation: Update on Transaction Malleability


(Bitcoin Foundation) You may have noticed that some exchanges have temporarily suspended withdrawals and wondering what’s going on or more importantly, what’s being done about it. You can be rest assured that we have identified the issue and are collectively and collaboratively working on a solution.   Somebody (or several somebodies) is taking advantage of the transaction malleability issue and relaying mutated versions of transactions. This is exposing bugs in both the reference implementation and some exchange’s software.  We (core dev team, developers at the exchanges, and even big mining pools) are creating workarounds and fixes right now. This is a denial-of-service attack; whoever is doing this is not stealing coins, but is succeeding in preventing some transactions from confirming. It’s important to note that DoS attacks do not affect people’s bitcoin wallets or funds.   Users of the reference implementation who are bitten by this bug may see their bitcoins “tied up” in unconfirmed transactions; we need to update the software to fix that bug, so when they upgrade those coins are returned to the wallet and are available to spend again. Only users who make multiple transactions in a short period of time will be affected.  As a result, exchanges are temporarily suspending withdrawals to protect customer funds and prevent funds from being misdirected.

Follow @BTCFoundation for update.

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Satoshi
coinmap 2014

Over 3,000 Bitcoin-friendly merchants are already registered at CoinMap

(BitcoinExaminer) Bitcoin’s amazing ride into the mainstream is not just happening online with the help of big retailers like Overstock or TigerDirect. There are now more than 3,000 brick-and-mortar merchants spread across the world that accept cryptocurrency, according to CoinMap.
The online map allows retailers to register once they start accepting BTC and the number of members has been growing exponentially. After the price peak registered in November of 2013, CoinMap went from almost 1,000 to 2,004 merchants.
coinmap 2014 bitcoin

 

And now the platform took another big leap, currently listing 3,003 physical retailers. This means that the number of businesses registered at CoinMap grew about 50 percent in less than two months.
The place with the biggest number of retailers is still the United States – with 1,294 businesses -, but Europe is giving America a run for its money with more than 1,200 companies and stores that already accept Bitcoin.
Cryptocurrency is even present in more secluded places like Iceland or Siberia, as you can see on the website.
According to the calculations made by the Redditor ‘LiveBeef’CoinMap’s next big jump should happen in March, when the platform could reach 4,000 merchants.

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Satoshi
1293778

The Washington Post thinks Bitcoin will stabilize in the future

(Washington Post) The Bitcoin economy will prove to be stable in the future, according to the The Washington Post’s Timothy B. Lee, who illustrates this in four charts and in-depth analysis.
“This pattern suggests that the extreme price volatility that has bedeviled Bitcoin since its inception is likely to prove a temporary phenomenon,” wrote Lee. “Bitcoin prices become volatile when a wave of media attention attracts a swarm of new users. As the Bitcoin economy grows and matures, these growing pains will become less frequent and less severe.”

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Satoshi

French authority forces Bitcoin exchanges to register

(BitcoinExaminer) Every Bitcoin exchange currently operating in France must now be registered with the local authorities and ask for a license in order to legally function in the country. The news was announced by the French Prudential Supervisory Authority (ACPR).

 

The institution, which is responsible for the regulation of the French banks, has issued a statement clarifying the status of Bitcoin and related exchanges in the country. Besides revealing several concerns and leaving warnings for the users, the ACPR also states that anyone operating an exchange in France must mandatorily have a license.

 

lACP_b
The move means that every exchange will have to become a provider of payment services
under the authority’s supervision. So all cryptocurrency transactions
that involve exchanges must go through a registered provider, whether we
are talking about a credit institution, payment institution or an
electronic money institution, Coindesk reports.

 

The ACPR used the same statement to
remind the public that Bitcoin has its hazards. “Risk of fraud and money
laundering and terrorist financing” are just some of the dangers set
forth by the French authority, which also recalled that the European
Banking Authority (EBA) has already issued other public warnings about
digital currencies.

 

Despite the consequences for the
exchanges, the statement doesn’t force the individual users living in
France to adapt to any changes.

Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.

Satoshi
WashingtonDC

Washington considers digital currencies are included in the definition of “money”

(BitcoinExaminer) The state of Washington, in the United States, has declared that digital currencies are included in the definition of “money”, within the state’s Uniform Money Services Act (UMSA).

The new definition can be consulted at the Department of Financial Institutions’ (DFI) website, where the state’s authority provides information to money transmitters and currency exchangers.

The virtual page reads that “virtual
currency, also known as digital currency or cryptocurrency, is a medium
of exchange not authorized or adopted by a government. There are many
different digital currencies being used over the internet, the most
commonly known being Bitcoin. In Washington, digital currency is included in the definition of ‘money’  in the Uniform Money Services Act”.

According to the legislature of
Washington state, “money means a medium of exchange that is authorized
or adopted by the United States or a foreign government or other
recognized medium of exchange. ‘Money’ includes a monetary unit of
account established by an intergovernmental organization or by agreement
between two or more governments”. Nevertheless, the state considers
that digital currencies can be part of this definition.

Washington’s recent alteration to the status of Bitcoin and other virtual coins was quite discreet, but a Redditor shared the information on the platform.

The department’s website also adds that
“companies wishing to transmit money for Washington residents in a
digital currency form can contact the DFI for a determination whether licensure under the UMSA is required. If it is, a license is required before the company can engage in the activity”.

The decision made by the Department of Financial Institutions opens a precedent that will surely affect how the financial authorities, courts and judges across the state (and maybe even out of it) look at cases that include Bitcoin or other digital currencies.

Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.

Satoshi