Title: Beware Coeptis aka cœptis "global standard currency” Post by: bitpop on January 31, 2014, 07:23:44 PM Coeptis aka cœptis "global standard currency” brought to you by the people from egold and liberty reserve, is trying to ride the Bitcoin bandwagon and scam the public with another virtual currency. Beware.
Even more shocking, their attorney, Carol Van Cleef - Partner, Patton Boggs, was at the new York hearing representing them. And the panel after were prosecutors who convicted egold and liberty reserve. They even stated how the sentences were too light, they had no clue the criminals are working on their third currency and tying it to Bitcoin. This will incriminate Bitcoin and if they want those criminal founders stopped, they may have to stop all virtual currencies. If they get associated with Bitcoin and the regulators figure out that attorney was right in front of their eyes, Bitcoin could have more regulations because of them. Let's make sure Coeptis aka cœptis "global standard currency” never gets off the ground and goes straight to hell with their centralized currency. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f7488616-561a-11e3-96f5-00144feabdc0.html Title: Article Post by: bitpop on January 31, 2014, 07:32:21 PM E-gold founder backs new Bitcoin rival
By Stephen Foley in New York The founder of one of the earliest virtual currencies has re-emerged with a rival to Bitcoin, more than five years after his first venture, e-gold, was shut down by the US Department of Justice. Douglas Jackson is consulting for a membership organisation called Coeptis that hopes to launch a new version of his gold-backed currency, which attracted millions of users at its height. The aim is to lure many of the people who have been attracted to Bitcoin and other virtual currencies this year, including businesses that are looking for a cheap way to process payments outside the traditional banking system. Coeptis’s “global standard currency” would be fully backed by reserves of gold, held in a trust, in effect turning the precious metal into a medium of exchange. Mr Jackson and two others pleaded guilty in July 2008 to running an illegal money transmitting business and to aiding money laundering, after federal investigators charged that “criminals of every stripe gravitated to e-gold as a place to move their money with impunity”. Bill Cunningham, chief executive of CMO, the Florida company behind Coeptis, said the technology behind e-gold has been updated and expanded to ensure it complies with the emerging regulations covering virtual currencies. Unlike e-gold, it would verify members’ identities before allowing them to trade. “We believe we will have better anti-money laundering procedures than any other virtual currency business and that we will compare well with the banking industry,” Mr Cunningham said. “One of the advantages of seeing what happened to the e-gold system is we understand where we fell down before.” CMO is planning to buy its currency system from Mr Jackson, but because of his conviction, he will not have an operational role in the company. For several years, Mr Jackson had hoped to resurrect e-gold himself, but it became clear he would not be able to obtain the money transmitter licences required in most US states. Mr Cunningham said CMO had begun approaching state regulators about obtaining licences itself and hopes to launch before the middle of next year. The membership organisation’s name comes from the phrase annuit coeptis, meaning “he has favoured our undertakings”, which appears on US banknotes. The emergence of Bitcoin has sparked a wave of experimentation in currencies and in online payments. Regulators and monetary authorities have so far been content to allow such currencies, but have pressured exchanges and brokers to introduce the same money-laundering checks as traditional financial institutions. A European Central Bank study last year concluded virtual currencies were too small to worry about yet, but their growth should be monitored lest they start to threaten financial stability. |