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1  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2018-04-04] Google To Implement Complete Ban Of Chrome Mining Extensions on: April 04, 2018, 10:40:48 AM
The ban is in line with their current policy of seemingly distancing themselves from crypto and the can of legal worms it may open should things go south. Unless crypto's start it's own house cleaning, established social media platforms may shy away from it.
2  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2018-04-03] Newly-Minted Bitcoin Millionaires Are Lining Up to Buy Lamborghinis on: April 04, 2018, 10:33:21 AM
I don't think that bitcoiner's are the types to splurge on a lambo or any exotic for that matter. A few may splurge on these cars but you would think that a hodler would be more interested in splurging his hard earned money towards something that gives a better return, like a vintage car perhaps.
3  Economy / Speculation / Re: Bitcoin will never reach $5,000 again. on: April 04, 2018, 08:24:16 AM
Anything is possible as the market is very fickle. Any time from now, bitcoin can actually dip below $5k and stay there for the rest of the year. And no amount of shaking and dicing can move it, if the market dictates it to be so.
4  Economy / Scam Accusations / If an ICO is a scam, should those who campaigned for it be penalized? on: April 04, 2018, 08:11:51 AM
Just wondering.

If an ICO is proven to be a scam, should the campaign manager and those who joined the campaign be penalized or something? After all, part of a said campaign's legitimacy rides on the reputation of the people spreading the word for it.
5  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: BelguaPay possible exit scam... on: April 04, 2018, 08:06:41 AM
Thanks for the heads up. Will be doing some digging of my own too to see if things are in the clear. Hope it's a false positive.
6  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: PayPro loses all investor funds... Scam? on: April 04, 2018, 07:47:12 AM
Scam. There should be an easy way to validate the identities behind the scheme and bring the full force of the law to prosecute them. Then keep them scammers locked up for good.
7  Economy / Speculation / Re: Bitcoin downtrend is limited. Here's why. on: April 04, 2018, 07:19:26 AM
I come to think that we can't fall massively below 5,000 dollars per BTC - if ever - unless some major whale - of the Mt. Gox trustee's scale - decides to cash out. I base my assumption on the premise that people who bought coins at high prices like over $12-$15k won't be selling at prices below some psychological limit because selling at such prices will be pointless and their only viable option will be to continue holding. So it is not just about demand building up, it is also as much about supply running dry at lower prices. That could potentially lead to less volatility, at least temporarily until a new long-term trend gets established.


Agree. There is always a limit to how low one can go and would instead start to buck the trend and play it long term instead. Hit the moon or go for broke if there's nothing more to lose.
8  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2018-04-03] Taiwan to Regulate Bitcoin Under Anti-Money Laundering Laws on: April 04, 2018, 05:45:04 AM
Protectionist policies like this will never do the sector it is trying to protect (traditional banking) any good as people will always find a way to push through with the methods which are more relevant for the times. Traditional banking will be on the way out in a few decades or so, and holding on to the past will just give the inevitable a slow and painful death.
9  Bitcoin / Press / [2018-03-21]Chinese Stock Exchanges Crack Down on Companies Falsely Claiming “Bl on: March 22, 2018, 12:10:14 AM
Blockchain Mania Sweeps China’s Stock Exchanges
Chinese Stock Exchange Cracks Down on Companies Falsely Claiming Blockchain AffiliationChina’s Shenzhen Exchange has announced its intention to crack down on businesses misleading investors by seeking to associate themselves with so called “distributed ledger technology”, or “blockchain”.

The crackdown appears to comprise a response to Zheijiang Enjoyor Electronics Co. Ltd’s recent spike in share price that followed a blockchain-related announcement on Wechat approximately one week ago. The announcement claimed that an affiliate company of Enjoyor Electronics had entered into a partnership with a forensic sciences center based in Zhengjiang which will see the launch of what the company described as the world’s first blockchain-based electrical data forensic certificate. The announcement triggered an immediate spike in the price of Enjoyor Electronics’ stock – reaching its 10% trading limit.

Upon Shenzhen Exchange’s insistence that the company divulge further details pertaining to the partnership – such as when the investment in the affiliate company was made, the number of shares owned by Enjoyor Electronics, the financial figures of said business, and evidence of the purported blockchain-based forensic procedure – Enjoyor Electronics deleted the Wechat announcement.

Shenzhen Exchange to Monitor Companies Claiming Blockchain Affiliation
Chinese Stock Exchange Cracks Down on Companies Falsely Claiming Blockchain AffiliationIn recent months, an increasing number of businesses have driven spikes in their share price by cashing in on the hype surrounding blockchain and cryptocurrency technology. In December 2017, for example, a small U.S beverage company saw its share price increase by over 400% after changing its name from Long Island Iced Tea Corp, to Long Blockchain Corporation. In a similar incident, Hong Kong-based Skypeople Fruit Juice appeared to double their share value by renaming to Future Fintech.

The trend of making dubious claims of embracing blockchain innovation to boost stock prices appears to have begun to take off in mainland China. According to China Money Network, “More than 20 listed companies have been questioned by the Shenzhen and Shanghai exchanges about their suspicious speculation on blockchain.”

Shenzhen Exchange has stated that it “will closely monitor relative companies’ disclosure and their stocks in the secondary market. Companies that use blockchain to speculate and mislead investors will receive disciplinary punishment, and severe violations will be reported to the China Securities Regulatory Commission.”

Following the Shenzhen Exchange’s announcement, Shanghai Exchange followed suit, announcing that 20 companies listed on its exchange appear to be speculating on blockchain technology. Shanghai Exchange has stated that in several instances it has imposed trading halts and requested businesses to divulge information regarding ties to the blockchain industry from several.

https://news.bitcoin.com/chinese-stock-exchanges-crack-down-on-companies-falsely-claiming-blockchain/?utm_source=OneSignal%20Push&utm_medium=notification&utm_campaign=Push%20Notifications
10  Bitcoin / Press / [2018-03-21]Coinbase to Remove Support for Multisig Vaults Within a Month on: March 21, 2018, 11:03:44 PM
Coinbase is removing its support for an advanced security feature that it was not advantageous for the company to maintain. Multisig vaults were originally introduced as a way for customers to manage their private keys and control their own security while still using the same Coinbase interface.

Also Read: Survey Says 8% of the American Population Now Own Cryptocurrency

No More Coinbase Multisig Vaults
Coinbase to Remove Support for Multisig Vaults Within a MonthSan Francisco-based cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase has announced it will be winding down its support for existing multisig vaults (meaning accounts that require multiple signature to access) on the platform. The last day of support will be on April 19, 2018.

The company already disabled the creation of any new multisig vaults, citing customer feedback and low popularity and usage. Coinbase also explained that as bitcoin forks become more frequent, the complexity of multisig vaults makes it infeasible for it to support multisig withdrawals for each additional forked asset.

For these reasons it has decided to invest its resources elsewhere. “By removing this functionality, engineering time spent on supporting multisig vaults can be reallocated to continued investment in the security and reliability of our platform, which is of critical importance to our customers.”

Your Money, Your Responsibility
Coinbase to Remove Support for Multisig Vaults Within a MonthThe company explains that because this product is user-controlled, customers can move funds with the two keys they already control. This change will only result in Coinbase customers not being able to access the third key that the company controls.

Users of this feature should ensure they have access to their two keys before the change. Otherwise, it is recommend Coinbase customers withdraw all funds from a multisig vault prior to April 19, 2018. After this date, access to the multisig address associated with such a vault will require the use of third-party open-source software not controlled by Coinbase, and this multisig tool does not support group vaults as well.

https://news.bitcoin.com/coinbase-to-remove-support-for-multisig-vaults-within-a-month/?utm_source=OneSignal%20Push&utm_medium=notification&utm_campaign=Push%20Notifications
11  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Why Ripple XRP Could Be Bullish Long-term on: March 21, 2018, 03:05:50 PM
Once the cryptocurrency world started to move its focus away from Bitcoin and towards other players, a lot of attention started to settle on Ripple XRP. The reasons are obvious, XRP is backed by a number of banks and other major players, meaning that it has the exposure that should be required for success in the market. However, these underlying factors haven’t been reflected in the price of Ripple XRP, which has struggled to gain momentum in recent months. In this article, we’ll take a look at the factors which lie behind Ripple XRP’s recent performance and explore reasons why investors should feel more bullish than they currently do.

Ripple is only following the market panic

This is probably the main reason why Ripple XRP’s performance lags its true potential. The recent performance of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies has given many investors cold feet about the whole space. Since many of these investors can be very guilty of falling into a ‘herd mentality’ when events such as this take place, there is every chance that they are offloading cryptocurrency assets, regardless of the underlying fundamentals of any particular cryptocurrency.

The market is unaware of Ripple XRP’s value


While the backing that several major institutions have given to Ripple XRP is a very positive sign for the currency’s long-term prospects, it’s entirely possible that the market has not yet realised quite how important these will be. Despite the recent speculative bubble, no cryptocurrency has been adopted by a large number of mainstream users. It’s likely that Ripple XRP or another cryptocurrency will have to enter the public consciousness before the value of backing from financial institutions can be truly realised.

Ripple XRP’s fundamentals should give it a bright future. However, it may take some time for the market to catch up.

https://cryptodaily.co.uk/2018/03/why-ripple-xrp-could-be-bullish-long-term/
12  Other / Politics & Society / Report Claims Putin Aided Maduro in Creating Venezuela’s Crypto, Petro on: March 21, 2018, 01:33:53 PM
A Time investigation into the development of Venezuela’s state-backed cryptocurrency, petro, revealed strong anecdotal and circumstantial evidence connecting Russia to its launch. At least two Russians with ties to Vladimir Putin were present at petro’s unveiling, complete with the Venezuelan president’s thanks. Analysts are claiming the South American country is Mr. Putin’s crypto guinea pig as the two nations try to find innovative ways around US sanctions.

Also read: Bitcoiners Demand More Crypto CFDs and Spread-Betting in the UK

Report Claims Putin and Maduro Teamed to Launch Petro
Time online is referring to Tuesday’s official sale of petro as “a half-hidden joint venture between Venezuelan and Russian officials and businessmen, whose aim was to erode the power of U.S. sanctions,” finding “Moscow’s fingerprints all over the creation of the petro.”

Such revelations come at an interesting time for all three countries. In the US, the present administration has been accused of being too close to re-elected Russian President Putin. Mr. Putin is under international pressure for alleged acts of assassination on foreign shores along with meddling in elections abroad. Venezuela has long been a client state of Russia, and has equally been the object of scorn for several US administrations. The three were tied together, somewhat unknowingly (on the US side at least) by President Trump’s recent Executive Order forbidding formal participation in the petro. 



And truth be told it is Russia who would rather tread lightly at this point. Indeed, as Mr. Putin’s economic advisor, Igor Shuvalov, explained, “For Russia, it’s too dangerous. If we say that the only reason we do it is to avoid U.S. sanctions, then the United States is definitely going to be displeased about it. Venezuela has nothing to lose. For them it’s the only chance.” The Venezuelan economy is the daily subject of press accounts, documenting economic horrors.

So it might have seemed somewhat brazen to have no fewer than two Russian nationals connected front and center at petro’s media scrum launch last month. Denis Druzhkov and Fyodor Bogorodsky were thanked publicly by Mr. Maduro, and Mr. Bogorodsky stands at the one hour and eight minute mark to give a congratulatory speech in Russian (see video inset).

Covering Tracks on a Gamble
The two men were initially identified as representatives of a shadowy company, Aerotrading, which claims blockchain specialty. Within days of the presser, presumably to establish the company’s legitimacy, a sudden website and Twitter account were set up. Of the two men, Mr. Bogorodsky was the only to comment publicly.

Mr. Druzhkov is well connected to a Russian billionaire, while Mr. Bogorodsky is a former banking executive living in South America. The report describes him as having “close business ties with Russia and other former Soviet states.” It appears he’s been involved with petro since its inception late last year. Mr. Bogorodsky stresses, “Russia has been moving in this direction for a while now, trying to draft laws to regulate cryptocurrencies.” Venezuela’s pace has evidently been much quicker. Dismissing potential US concerns, he laughs, “Any citizen of the world can do what he wants. We offer freedom of choice. So I think there will be lots of investors, big and small, from all over the world.”

Report Claims Putin Aided Maduro in Creating Venezuela’s Crypto, Petro

According to an anonymous “executive at a Russian state bank who deals with cryptocurrencies, senior advisers to the Kremlin have overseen the effort in Venezuela, and President Vladimir Putin signed off on it last year. ‘People close to Putin, they told him this is how to avoid the sanctions,’ says the executive. ‘This is how the whole thing started,’” the report explained. Russia is insisting it had nothing to do with the petro’s creation.

State apparatchiks, on the other hand, have made plenty of statements about US financial sanctions. The head of Russia’s second largest bank, VTB, Andrei Kostin spoke openly recently about how “The reign of the dollar must end. This whip that the Americans use in the form of the dollar would then, to a great extent, not have such a serious impact on the global financial system.”

US regulators are quoted as not being too worried about petro nor the possibility of a crypto-ruble. It is hard to say if state-backed cryptocurrencies could ultimately work. Such ideas have always suffered from violating key tenants of crypto: censorship resistance and decentralization. By definition, state-backed currencies violate both.

https://news.bitcoin.com/report-claims-putin-aided-maduro-in-creating-venezuelas-crypto-petro/?utm_source=OneSignal%20Push&utm_medium=notification&utm_campaign=Push%20Notifications
13  Bitcoin / Press / [2018-03-21]Mastercard Want To Help Banks Issue Digital Coins on: March 21, 2018, 12:06:13 PM
Ari Sarker, the Co-President of Mastercard’s Asia-Pacific, said that they would be happy to consider facilitating the use of digital currencies that are issued by central banks across the world.

Mastercard’s Co-President of Asia-Pacific Ari Sarker said the payment company would happily look into facilitating the use of digital currencies that are issued by central banks around the world.

In an interview with The Financial Times, Sarker said Mastercard would be willing to facilitate if the coin in question was a national cryptocurrency that was legitimate and was used as a national digital currency issued by central banks.

“If governments look to create national digital currency, we’d be very happy to look at those in a more favorable way [compared with existing cryptocurrencies],” Sarker said. “So long as it’s backed by a regulator and the value … is not anonymous [and] it is meeting all the regulatory requirements, I think that would be of greater interest for us to explore.”

Mastercard is one of several credit card companies that have made it tougher for customers to use their payment cards to purchase Bitcoin. By reclassifying such purchases as cash transactions, more fees are levied when customers purchase cryptocurrency. Sarker told the FT that the company is currently running a test in which it will enable customers to cash out of Bitcoin to a Mastercard. However, the executive said stringent Know Your Customer and anti-money laundering controls have been put in place. He warned the credit card company has no exposure to the wild swings of Bitcoin’s price.


“We are not operating trading of Bitcoin through the Mastercard network,” Sarker said. “[The pilot] is a toe in the water; we’re fully cognizant of the reputational risk.”

The cryptocurrency pilot, which is not widespread as of yet, is taking currently being tested in Singapore and Japan. A Mastercard spokesperson declined to provide the FT with more details. However, the spokesperson did say the company’s research and development arm has filed for “more than 30 patents related to blockchain technology and cryptocurrency.” Sarker added that Mastercard has also had “25 to 30 engagement discussions” with Asian cities about rolling out contactless payment systems that are similar to the one being used by Transport for London.

https://cryptodaily.co.uk/2018/03/mastercard-want-help-banks-issue-digital-coins/
14  Bitcoin / Press / [2018-03-21]G20 Argentina Ends With No New Cryptocurrency Regulation on: March 21, 2018, 08:39:11 AM
Nations forming the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Argentina this week issued Comunicado oficial de la primera reunión de ministros de Hacienda y presidentes de Bancos Centrales del G20, or first communication from the world’s central bankers concerning their work. The two page document is crammed with statements, and on the final page bankers seemed to table cryptocurrency regulations, while acknowledging both their potential for “efficiency and inclusiveness” but also “tax evasion, money laundering and terrorist financing.” Bankers urged the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to apply their standards to “crypto-assets” in order to “advance global implementation.”

Also read: Bitcoiners Demand More Crypto CFDs and Spread-Betting in the UK

G20 Will Tackle Crypto Regs Mañana
“We acknowledge that technological innovation, including that underlying crypto-assets, has the potential to improve the efficiency and inclusiveness of the financial system and the economy more broadly,” G20 central bankers noted in their publication, Communiqué: Finance Ministers & Central Bank Governors,19-20 March 2018, Buenos Aires, Argentina. “Crypto-assets do, however, raise issues with respect to consumer and investor protection, market integrity, tax evasion, money laundering and terrorist financing. Crypto-assets lack the key attributes of sovereign currencies. At some point they could have financial stability implications.”

G20 Argentina Ends With No New Cryptocurrency Regulation

The G20 is an international forum for governments and central bankers from Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Republic of Korea, the Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union, (plus Spain as a permanent guest member). Collectively, they represent two-thirds of the world’s population and over 80% of the globe’s economic output.

“We commit to implement the FATF standards as they apply to crypto-assets,” the online posting continued, “look forward to the FATF review of those standards, and call on the FATF to advance global implementation. We call on international standard-setting bodies (SSBs) to continue their monitoring of crypto-assets and their risks, according to their mandates, and assess multilateral responses as needed.”

Crypto Enthusiasts Breathe a Sigh of Relief
The FATF ahead of this week’s meeting issued their own report, FATF Report to G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors March 2018. The 12 page document discusses standards for “virtual currencies,” noting “Virtual Currency Payment Products and Services (VCPPS)” will continue to be monitored, especially “particular methods of terrorist financing activity that pose an emerging threat, as well as at products and services that may represent an emerging vulnerability.” Later, they describe the current state of crypto as a patchwork of “regulatory framework across different countries” which “can be exploited by criminals, stifle innovation and create uncertainty,” stressing the how “FATF will continue its work on FinTech and virtual currencies, including considering how to promote and ensure a more coherent and consistent approach by countries to mitigating the risks and supporting financial innovation.”

G20 Argentina Ends With No New Cryptocurrency Regulation
Mark Carney
The Paris-based FATF is an intergovernmental organization (also known as Groupe d’action financière) focused mainly on money laundering with a particular emphasis on terrorism financing. Its jurisdiction is among 37 member states, operating a blacklist of uncooperative nations … which can amount to severe financial pressure without formal sanction.

Overall, cryptocurrency enthusiasts took a giant breath of relief. Prior to the meeting, crypto markets were tanking. The run-up to Argentina was largely seen as a black cloud, as many member nations had openly called for tighter crypto restrictions on a global level. But then, seemingly out of nowhere, a letter from the chair of the Financial Stability Board (FSB), Mark Carney, advised the G20 against new rules regarding crypto, suggesting what eventually became evident: there is no consensus among global leaders with regard to regulation. News sent markets into bull mode with bitcoin’s price rising above 9,000 USD as of this writing.

https://news.bitcoin.com/g20-argentina-ends-with-no-new-cryptocurrency-regulation/?utm_source=OneSignal%20Push&utm_medium=notification&utm_campaign=Push%20Notifications
15  Bitcoin / Press / [2018-03-19]Criminals are Racing to Cash Out Their Bitcoin on: March 20, 2018, 06:40:03 AM
The bitcoin scam worked — almost too well. In 2012, back when almost no one had heard of the digital coin, he’d started modestly, asking people he found on the dark web for $200 or $300 worth of bitcoin as a way to test out his investment scheme. He told them he could exploit the then huge price differences between various bitcoin exchanges and promised huge rewards. But once they sent the funds, he vanished into the ether to find his next stooge.

There was a certain genius criminal irony to it: He would hype an untraceable anonymous digital currency, then get paid in it.

But something happened in the cryptocurrency world, slowly at first, then all at once. The public and investors started pushing their money in, inflating bitcoin’s value. The Winkelvi became bitcoin billionaires. ICOs became hotter than IPOs. Even Jim Cramer started talking about bitcoin. After its price peaked at $20,000 late last year, the guy’s cache should have been worth $20 million.

But he had a problem. It was getting harder to turn the most overhyped currency since the tulip into actual cash.

The guy found himself among a growing number of dark web vendors — people who use anonymous networks to sell drugs, counterfeit currency, and malware — who are struggling to convert their bitcoins into real money. (VICE News heard his account from a Swiss private banker who said he’s received several messages from scammers and criminals looking for help with cryptocurrency.) These dark web vendors were among the early investors in bitcoin, and, arguably, the drivers of its initial value when no one else was interested. Now, those holding virtual millions are stuck in limbo.

Such is the insanity of the bitcoin market over the last 12 months, with law enforcement and regulators attempting to bring order to a world where the price of a single coin can fluctuate by hundreds of dollars in the space of minutes. Earlier this month, for example, the price of bitcoin dropped $1,000 after rumors surfaced that an exchange had been hacked and the SEC was planning a clampdown. Increasingly, companies are getting spooked about potential losses or lawsuits. Facebook and Google both banned ads for cryptocurrencies from their platforms in recent weeks, citing fears of users being tricked out of their money.

It’s always been difficult for anyone to trade in bitcoin for a fiat currency like dollars or euros. Until recently, financial institutions wanted little to do with cryptocurrency because of its volatile price and perceived (and real) links to criminal activity.

Exchanges such as Coinbase, founded in 2011, offer the easiest way for the general public to buy and sell mainstream cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, litecoin, and ethereum. But users have to register with their real identities and prove their cryptocurrency was acquired legally. That makes them less appealing for criminals. Cashing out small amounts of bitcoin is still possible, but it’s becoming more difficult to do so without attracting law enforcement attention.

Dark web vendors were among the early investors in bitcoin. Now, those holding virtual millions are stuck in limbo.
And because of the explosion in demand for cryptocurrency, anyone using bitcoin today faces rising transaction fees and lengthy wait times for payments to be processed.

All of this means that people like our guy who are very rich on paper (or, more accurately, on the blockchain) must devise highly complex methods to convert their ill-gotten gains, or risk losing quite a bit of value, said Tom Robinson, co-founder of the blockchain analytics company Elliptic. “Funds from illicit activities are just lying dormant, and they are waiting to find effective means of cashing out,” he said.

Yet if we know anything about criminals, it’s that they’re resourceful. As financial institutions and regulators the world over grapple with bitcoin’s adaptation to mainstream use, some of these criminals have devised ingenious hacks for converting their money; still others are turning to alternative coins as they seek greater privacy for their transactions and to stay ahead of the law.

BITCOIN LAUNCHED in 2008 with the grand vision of replacing the traditional banking system. Its immunity from regulation and the relative anonymity of transactions on the network — at least at first — made it appealing to dark web vendors, as well as arms dealers, hitmen, and pedophiles. Six years ago, up to 30 percent of all bitcoin transactions were sent to the dark web. Today, that figure has plummeted to 1 percent as more and more people use bitcoin for legitimate trading and investment.

Starting in 2013, law enforcement caught on to bitcoin’s use on dark web marketplaces. That year, the FBI shut down the Silk Road — described by an agent at the time as “the most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace on the internet today.” Silk Road’s takedown came after it gained widespread attention in the mainstream media for making it easy to buy everything from Class A drugs to guns. The FBI seized 144,000 bitcoin in the raid — worth $1.2 billion at today’s valuation — drawing more attention to the cryptocurrency, though it was still years away from mass appeal.

Last July, a joint law enforcement operation between the FBI, DEA, and officials from Canada and Thailand brought down two of the biggest hidden drug markets, AlphaBay and Hansa, instantly wiping out a huge portion of the illicit activity conducted on the dark web.

By pooling intelligence across agencies, undercover law enforcement agents were able to infiltrate these markets, targeting administrators and ultimately taking them offline. Dutch police went further and operated Hansa in secret for a month before taking it down, hoovering up huge amounts of data on the people using the site — as well as millions in bitcoin, ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies.

All this has led to a sense of paranoia among vendors and buyers. One dark web vendor of malware in Eastern Europe who goes by the handle LeagueMode told VICE News that he rigged his computers and smartphones so that he could erase everything with the push of a single button.

Growing concerns about bitcoin’s security also happened to coincide with a rapid rise in the currency’s price (it’s since dropped to about $11,000). Investor speculation drove up the value, and the currency gained broader acceptance among Wall Street and financial institutions. It was the perfect time to sell.

“They are ready to pay big time.”
LIKE MANY aspiring international criminals before him, our guy eventually turned to a Swiss private banker. In January, he approached Olivier Cohen, an experienced broker based in Geneva who recently established a company called Altcoinomy to help high-net-worth individuals invest in cryptocurrencies. At first, the guy claimed to have built up his bitcoin cache running a trading service. Cohen was skeptical of bitcoin and its origins, as bankers tend to be, so he traced the payments. The journey ultimately took him back to the dark web.

“After digging and digging, I found that he was not legit. The bitcoins have been tainted,” Cohen said. He told the scammer: “Look, this is black-market; I can’t on-board you.”

The guy was up front about how much he was willing to pay to convert his bitcoin into fiat currency. Cohen said he’s fielded three or four similar requests following a message he posted on Reddit on Christmas Eve about the difficulties in cashing out bitcoin.

“They are ready to pay big time,” he said. “They tell you very straightforwardly, ‘If you get me out of the situation, you will get 10 percent.’”

That would have meant a windfall of $2 million for Cohen at the going bitcoin rate. But even if Cohen had wanted to do it, it was unlikely he could complete the task. Despite Wall Street and financial institutions investing heavily in blockchain technology, banks are still ultra-wary of bitcoin — particularly large amounts with no history attached. As a result, banks will delay such transactions and request a lot of documentation, and they may ultimately reject anyone looking to cash out bitcoin in bulk simply because of its links to the dark web.

“I don't think there is any way to process eight- or nine- or 10-figure transactions in bitcoin,” said John Bambenek, a cyber-security researcher who tracks bitcoin payments. “Coinbase allows you cash out up to $15,000 per week. That's not bad, but if I'm sitting on nine figures, I want to cash out more than that, faster.”

It’s possible to slowly cash out little chunks here and there, but doing so brings the risk of attracting unwanted attention, since it looks like structuring, a practice of transferring many small amounts in order to avoid federal regulations.

Bitcoin hoarders who are willing to get a little creative — and be a little patient — can still reap the currency’s rewards, however. VICE News spoke dark web vendors who use bitcoin on a daily basis about their ways of cashing out. (None of them wanted to use their real names, for obvious reasons.)

How criminals are cashing out bitcoin before it’s too late:

The drop and run: LeagueMode operates on the Wall Street Market, one of the most popular dark web markets, and has traded in malware and stolen banking credentials since 2010. He said most vendors use multiple bitcoin wallets — he has more than a dozen himself — combined with automated, personalized scripts to “mix” the bitcoin through micro-transactions to avoid detection. He found a person living locally who wants to regularly buy bitcoin. So once or twice a week, he transfers bitcoin into this person’s account, “and a few hours later he brings a bag of cash to my porch,” he explained. “One-to-one exchange, no fees, and we both stay happy.”

An oldie but a goodie: A vendor using the handle Med3l1n sells stolen credit cards and IDs on the Wall Street Market. The 24-year-old, who is also a moderator of the WSM forum, said there are a number of ways of cashing out, if you know what you’re doing. One way is to send your bitcoin to a company that charges a prepaid debit card that can be used in the real world. “The card emitter doesn't even know that it was recharged with bitcoins because there's a company that does this service for you,” he said. You can get around demands for ID simply by buying fake documentation on the dark web — using bitcoin or another cryptocurrency, of course.

Go to Western Union: Alpha_xxx, a 24-year-old U.S.-based drug dealer on the Point dark web marketplace, said he goes through Western Union to help cash out bitcoin. First he uses one of a number of services that automatically transfer bitcoin to Western Union accounts, then has a third-party — called a picker — collect the cash as a further layer of protection.

It’s easy, if you know how: Dr Lysergic, who sells cocaine, LSD, and MDMA, dismissed claims that you can’t cash out bitcoin anymore. “If anything, it’s becoming easier to cash out for me than when I first began,” he said. He wouldn’t reveal what method he uses to offload his bitcoin, but he said he typically cashes out $3,000 at a time, losing around 2 percent in the process. “If some of these novice vendors were smart and sit and think about it, there are so many ways to do it,” he said. “Sometimes it may be tedious and a long process, but that’s what we signed up for.”

Still, most criminals with large stashes of bitcoin who want to cash out quickly have no easy way of doing so, and few of them really know the ropes, Cohen said.

“Some people have thought about innovative ways of cashing out,” he said. “But this is at most 20 percent of those people — 80 percent have no idea how to do it.”

THERE’S ALWAYS the option of playing it straight and declaring illicit bitcoin to a government authority with the hope they simply won’t do any checking. Cohen said he knew of cases where this worked, but he also knew of incidents where it didn’t.

Another less risky option is to seek out a bank in Eastern Europe, where regulations are much more lax.

Back in 2013, the U.S. led the way in regulating the burgeoning use and trading of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. That year, the Senate held the first hearings on bitcoin, the Department of the Treasury released guidance on virtual currencies, the IRS became the world’s first tax authority to clarify the tax treatment of bitcoin, and New York state established BitLicense, a set of regulations for companies that deal in digital currencies.

Robinson’s company Elliptic, along with others like Chainalysis, works closely with U.S. law enforcement, providing tools for agents to track bitcoin payments through the blockchain. “We can distinguish the average bitcoin user from a dark marketplace vendor, for example,” Robinson said.

All of this made it much harder for any criminals to launder money through exchanges based in the U.S. But just like anything, criminals will find the weakest link in the chain. At the moment, that weak link is Europe.

A recent report by Elliptic, in partnership with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies’ Center on Sanctions and Illicit Finance, found that Europe was the “wild west” of cryptocurrency regulation.

A disproportionate amount of illicit bitcoin transactions are funnelled through Europe, with criminals taking advantage of cryptocurrency gambling and mixing sites to launder their money. With a complete lack of regulation in this area, these services don’t need to perform due diligence on their customers or report suspicious activity.

“European exchanges have a serious issue with policing illicit activity on their platforms,” said Yaya Fanusie, an ex-CIA counterterrorism analyst who currently works as CSIF’s director of analysis.

In December, the 28 EU member states agreed on stricter rules to prevent money laundering and terrorism financing on exchange platforms for bitcoin and other virtual currencies. The new rules will mean exchanges and companies providing wallet services will be required to identify their customers, just as U.S. companies are. But they have another 18 months to implement the new directives, meaning gaps remain for criminals to exploit. The European Central Bank just last month said that cryptocurrency regulation is “not exactly very high on its to-do list.”

Rob Wainwright, who heads Europol, the EU’s law enforcement arm, predicts that a coming shift away from bitcoin and toward alternative cryptocurrencies will make it even tougher for agencies to track these transactions.

The leader of the Europol team tracking illicit cryptocurrency transactions said the agency has found more and more people are using alternatives to bitcoin on the dark web. “We have seen in 2017 and 2018 a move of some criminals and criminal groups over from bitcoin to currencies that guarantee higher levels of anonymity," said the expert, who himself requested anonymity out of concern the criminals he pursues would target him.

DESPITE ITS HEADACHES, bitcoin remains the gold standard on dark web marketplaces largely because it’s the easiest digital currency for customers to get hold of. But it’s clear from speaking to more than a dozen experts, researchers, academics, and dark web vendors that the Europol agents are right: Criminals are starting to favor newer cryptocurrencies.

The takedown of AlphaBay spurred more people to move away from bitcoin. The speed of that shift depends on who you ask, but there are three clear frontrunners to take bitcoin’s crown as the digital currency of choice for the underworld. These all essentially operate in the same way as bitcoin, with payments transferred on a public blockchain, but they each have built-in privacy functions that make it harder for law enforcement to track transactions.

Monero, for example, has gained a major following on the dark web due to its privacy attributes, with one darknet vendor based in eastern Europe telling VICE News that up to 45 percent of his transactions are now in monero. Zcash, created by cryptographers at Johns Hopkins University, is also gaining traction; last year, Shadow Brokers, the Russian hacking group selling stolen NSA hacking tools, said they are now only accepting Zcash from customers. Litecoin and Dash are among the other alternatives being embraced on the dark web.

Neither the FBI nor Europol would discuss how difficult it is to track the movement of privacy-focused cryptocurrencies like monero. Doing so “would give people a step-by-step guide to avoiding detection,” the Europol expert said.

The FBI and DEA also declined to comment on how they are dealing with the current use of cryptocurrencies by criminals.

Even in the U.S., where there are stricter regulations, law enforcement is struggling. Jason Kichen, an ex-CIA intelligence expert, said he thinks that agencies will find it hard to win the battle against criminals using cryptocurrencies.

“I don't necessarily believe it’s because they are technically unable, I suspect it’s just the scale of the problem,” he said. “As large and well-resourced as they are, illicit use of cryptocurrencies is such a large issue that I don't think the organizations can scale to meet the problem.”

Just like many others in the nascent cryptocurrency world, law enforcement is often fumbling around in the dark. But they do have powerful tools to quickly and easily track bitcoin transactions, specifically, across the blockchain.

It’s these tools that make life so difficult for those who want to quickly convert bitcoin into hard cash. For now, potential ways out are limited to finding a buyer via an Eastern European bank that won’t ask too many questions or coming clean and hoping the tax authorities don’t really understand how bitcoin works.

These are among the options now being explored by the dark web scammer, who continues to search for ways to turn his virtual fortune into a real one.

https://news.vice.com/en_ca/article/7xdzqa/criminals-are-racing-to-cash-out-their-bitcoin-heres-how-theyre-doing-it
16  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2018-03-10] Venezuelan President Claims Petro Pre-Sale Raked in $5 Billion on: March 20, 2018, 06:32:31 AM
Remember the cheat in star craft where you get a boost on your available resources - Show Me The Money! Everyone should be skeptical of any statements coming from Maduro and whoever fronts as his mouthpiece. Talk is cheap and the the Petro developers have not actually shown any tangible evidence to support their wild claims. I hope there is a more straightforward way to review Maduro's claim and claims made by similar enterprises. We would be much better off with some transparency on how well these investments really are.
17  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2018-03-18] Tokyo Whale Stopped Selling; Will Bitcoin Price Increase? on: March 19, 2018, 02:30:14 AM
I think we'll still be seeing a movement below $6000 as we still have to account for the signals coming from the G-20. Things don't look very positive as of this time so a short term dip may still be in the offing before price would bounce back to 10k levels by mid April.
18  Economy / Speculation / Re: **WHALES ARE ACTUALLY BUYING....NOT SELLING** on: March 17, 2018, 07:48:28 AM
I believe that these hodlers have a lot of influence on bitcoin's value even if they do not liquidate their position. Aside from that, I also believe that they are actively working on manipulating bitcoin's market value, with the intended goal of increasing their position in bitcoins to ensure that they have more control on the market. 2 ways of looking at these whales position right now. One is that they are hoarding and coordinating their efforts, would then do a dump to shatter people's confidence on bitcoin in the hopes that people would abandon it. They can afford to lose billions should they short the system as they are betting on something else that'll benefit from bitcoin's demise. The opposite reason is that they are holding on to their bitcoins to act as a control of sorts, ensuring that bitcoins value stay high - bitcoin's value has been on the rise every year. We're trying to avoid a central bank of sorts, but these whales may be working on consolidating their holdings to act as a central bank of sorts, as majority of the coins would fall under their control.
19  Bitcoin / Press / [2018-03-16] Fortune Bitcoin Mining Was Just Banned in a Small Town on: March 17, 2018, 06:47:12 AM
A small lakeside town in upstate New York is fed up with Bitcoin miners using up so much of its low-cost electricity.

Plattsburgh, whose residents are a quick jaunt from the Canadian border, has put an 18-month moratorium on cryptocurrency mining to preserve natural resources, the health of its residents, and the “character and direction” of the city.

“It is the purpose of this Local Law to facilitate the adoption of land use and zoning and/or municipal lighting department regulations to protect and enhance the City’s natural, historic, cultural and electrical resources,” Plattsburgh said after holding a public hearing on the matter Thursday.

For a year and a half, the almost 20,000-resident city will not consider new applications for commercial cryptocurrency mining. And if you break the rules, you’ll owe Plattsburgh up to $1,000 for each day you violate the moratorium.

Mining, a process by which individuals or groups get paid in new Bitcoins to run complex mathematical equations on high-powered computers in order to confirm the validity of transactions, has drawn scrutiny from environmentalists who say it’s sucking up too much electricity. Some have estimated that Bitcoin miners will use more power than electric cars in the near term.

Plattsburgh gets cheap power from the St. Lawrence River, driving down electricity costs for residents, but it exceeded its allotted amount of hydropower in December and January, according to a local newspaper. Some complained that their bills surged as much as $300.

The city council said it needs time to consider zoning laws and lighting regulations “before commercial cryptocurrency mining operations results in irreversible change to the character and direction of the city.”

Want to Mine Bitcoin in New York? You’ll Have to Pay a Premium

http://fortune.com/2018/03/16/plattsburgh-new-york-bitcoin-mining-ban/
20  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / [2018-03-17] Bittorrent Client Joystream Aims to Go Live on Bitcoin Cash Mainnet on: March 17, 2018, 06:39:26 AM
Joystream Plans to Go Live on Bitcoin Cash Mainnet in Days
JoystreamBittorrent Client Joystream Aims to Go Live on Bitcoin Cash Mainnet is a Bittorrent application that offers rewards for downloading and seeding torrent files. The startup was founded by Dr. Bedeho Mender, and the development team first launched its alpha clients back 2015. The original Bittorrent software enables peer-to-peer file sharing, but Joystream hopes micropayment incentives for sharing files and bandwidth can help create a more robust torrenting atmosphere. Dr. Mender told news.Bitcoin.com back in 2015 that for cryptocurrencies like bitcoin to have value they should be distributed widely.     

“For transferable proof of work tokens to have value, they must have monetary value — To have monetary value, they must be transferred within a very large network,” the founder of Joystream explained.

Now the company has revealed it is integrating with the Bitcoin Cash mainnet shortly. Joystream says when the very first version was designed back in 2014, the cryptocurrency environment operated a whole lot different. For instance, the application relied on low-value payments and faster confirmation times. The team explains that even though there’s been some improvement with Segwit and UTXO batching it is still hard to rely on the BTC chain.

“The Bitcoin blockchain no longer reliably operates within reasonable bounds of our initial assumptions,” explains Joystream. 

....

https://news.bitcoin.com/bittorrent-client-joystream-aims-to-go-live-on-bitcoin-cash-mainnet/?utm_source=OneSignal%20Push&utm_medium=notification&utm_campaign=Push%20Notifications
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