“In bitcoin,” Austin Craig repeated to the young woman behind the
counter at the Lean Crust Pizza parlor in the Fort Greene neighborhood
of Brooklyn, N.Y. “Can we pay in bitcoin?”
“In what?” came the reply.
Mr. Craig, 30
years old, was struggling to convince Nadia Alamgir of the existence of
the virtual currency that has gained traction across the world, and
whose value—after months of wild swings—on Wednesday reached records
around $400 per bitcoin.
It was midway through a tricontinental
odyssey taken with his wife, Beccy Bingham-Craig, 29, and a film crew
documenting their travails, which started in Provo, Utah. Their mission:
to live on bitcoin alone.
“It’s been consistently inconvenient
and occasionally frustrating,” Mr. Craig said outside Lean Crust, “but
never impossible.” Lean Crust advertised itself as bitcoin-friendly but
hadn’t seen much virtual foot traffic. Ms. Alamgir eventually contacted
the store’s owner, who arrived and processed the transaction, allowing
Mr. Craig to munch on several slices.
Lean Crust, though, is one
of a tiny but growing number of stores, travel agents and online
merchants starting to accept the once-obscure digital currency as a
means of payment. Bitcoin doesn’t exist, except in the virtual world,
and can only be passed from one person to another electronically. Its
origins are murky: Conventional wisdom says a man or group of people
going by the name Satoshi Nakamoto created bitcoin in 2009, stoking
demand by making it obtainable only through complicated algorithmic
searches by powerful computers.
But in the past 12 months, the
bitcoin zeitgeist has taken on a life of its own. The currency is
discussed at investing conferences now. The Winklevoss twins, known for
their fight with Facebook Inc. founder Mark Zuckerberg, have started a
bitcoin fund. It also has gained the attention of regulators who worry
it can be used to launder money.
For the Craigs, bitcoin represented a chance at adventure—and an underground movie career.
They
began their trek in October by driving east from Provo in Ms.
Bingham-Craig’s 2004 Volkswagen Jetta. After arriving in New York on
Oct 17, they flew to Stockholm, Berlin and Singapore before eventually
returning to Provo. In the end, they lasted 101 days, from July 23 to
Nov 1.
The Craigs weren’t part of the bitcoin underground when
they began the project. Mr. Craig said he first heard of the currency in
2011 and then came up with the plan to live and travel solely on
bitcoin.
“I’m really excited about bitcoin and its future,” Mr. Craig said. “It’s a reimagining of money.”
Starting
July 23, the day they returned from their honeymoon, the Craigs paid
for everything with bitcoin, from rent to food to gas. At that time, one
bitcoin was worth about $98, based on trading at the Tokyo-based Mt.
Gox exchange, a primary exchange bitcoin enthusiasts have tracked.
“In the end,” Mr. James said, “it hasn’t been as much of
an inconvenience as I thought it would be.” While he hasn’t become a
convert, he did say he thought the experiment sounded like fun and was
“happy to be a part of it.”
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(CoinDesk) With the US Senate setting 18th November as the start date for its committee hearings into bitcoin, it’s time to
take a look at some of the more significant events in bitcoin’s short but colorful legal history.
The early Bitcoin timeline featured hacks, heists, drugs, demands for refunds and the first appeals to law enforcement, but 2013 saw official scrutiny rise almost as quickly as bitcoin’s value.
Whether or not bitcoin requires, or should seek, regulatory approval is a major source of heated debate on bitcoin discussion forums, but the regulation issue will remain prominent as long as significant amounts of wealth are at stake.
FinCEN issued guidelines that bitcoin-related businesses counted as “Money Service Businesses” (MSBs) under US law.
This meant bitcoin businesses were now officially required to provide authorities with information about potentially suspicious transactions and introduce policies to prevent money laundering. These regulations also affect the more centralized virtual currencies and point systems used in social networks and online games, including Facebook and Second Life. Lack of a centralized authority meant bitcoin itself could not comply, but any business associated with its use would need to — including individual miners, if they converted their bitcoin to fiat currency.
In something of a rare public compliment for bitcoin from the world of traditional finance, François R. Velde, senior economist of the Federal Reserve in Chicago wrote a glowing paper titled “Bitcoin: A Primer” in which he wrote bitcoin was a “remarkable conceptual and technical achievement, which may well be used by existing financial institutions.” He further described bitcoin as an “elegant solution” to the digital currency problem and claimed its value derived from certain beliefs about the nature and function of money, and the amounts of fiat currencies traded for it.
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Regulation Of Bitcoin at the European Bitcoin Convention
Wieske
Ebbe (Dutch Central Bank), Michael Maier (Fidor Bank), Niels Ploeger
(Amsterdam Police), Joerg Platzer (Crypto Economics Consulting Group)
& Casper Riekerk (Finnius Lawyers)
Recorded By IamSatoshi
Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.
Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.
Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.
Because Bitcoins are neither the currency of any country nor negotiable instruments, Bitcoins are not ‘money’ under commission regulations. Therefore, a political committee that receives Bitcoin contributions may not treat them as monetary contributions.
Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.
Bitcoin, the world’s first decentralised digital currency, entered mainstream consciousness this year: Bitcoin-focused startups are accessing venture capital and industry commentators talk about it as an important international payment mechanism of the future. But are we interpreting its significance too narrowly? In this video, Richard Brown, IBM Executive Architect for Banking and Financial Markets Industry Innovation, argues that Bitcoin’s true significance lies in its potential as a global digital asset register and in the lessons it teaches us for design of complex distributed systems. He also explains why recent law-enforcement action against operators of illegal websites that transacted in Bitcoin will help accelerate adoption by legitimate businesses.”
Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.
Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.
Open your free digital wallet here to store your cryptocurrencies in a safe place.