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Author Topic: Is there a hole in FinCEN requirements?  (Read 1239 times)
keelba (OP)
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May 30, 2013, 07:47:41 PM
 #1

OK, maybe not a hole, per se, but I believe the whole spirit of the law suggests that the FinCEN requirements exist to prevent money laundering, terrorism financing, etc. The way they enforce this is through the use of trusted third parties, or businesses that have an AML policy in place and are registered Money Services Businesses. If a miner creates bitcoins and sells them on the open market, there is no way to track that, obviously. But why wouldn't a miner be able to sell through a trusted third party? If an exchange was a registered money transmitter, that should address FinCEN's concerns about money laundering as there would now be trackability and compliance for these newly created coins entering the economy. Why should the miner have to be registered himself? How could we get FinCEN to make provisions for this?

Even though I am not a miner, I am still concerned about buying some bitcoins and then turning around and selling them through Craigslist, for example, at a substantial mark up. I believe somehow, someway in FinCEN's view this could qualify me as an MSB and that's just stupid. I'd like to be able to sell my coins too. I'm not interested in breaking the law but I shouldn't have to register just to partake in the Bitcoin revolution.
TheButterZone
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May 30, 2013, 07:55:05 PM
 #2

The goal is to put down the bitcoin revolution. If you can't exchange them without paying $7 million for 50-state FinCEN bonding compliance, then we're fucking criminals.

Saying that you don't trust someone because of their behavior is completely valid.
pekv2
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May 30, 2013, 07:58:30 PM
 #3

The goal is to put down the bitcoin revolution. If you can't exchange them without paying $7 million for 50-state FinCEN bonding compliance, then we're fucking criminals.

I'm still stoned on the skull over this.
tutkarz
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May 30, 2013, 08:09:17 PM
 #4

I'm not interested in breaking the law but I shouldn't have to register just to partake in the Bitcoin revolution.
Many people support bitcoin and would like to see end of current governments not because they dont like laws but because laws become so stupid, that you almost cant do anything to not break one of them, not to mention everybody have to became basically  a lawyer to remember everything they invented. And they didnt stopped it as you can see. They are working full time to make laws even more stupid.

Zeke_Vermillion
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May 31, 2013, 12:14:06 AM
 #5

OK, maybe not a hole, per se, but I believe the whole spirit of the law suggests that the FinCEN requirements exist to prevent money laundering, terrorism financing, etc. The way they enforce this is through the use of trusted third parties, or businesses that have an AML policy in place and are registered Money Services Businesses. If a miner creates bitcoins and sells them on the open market, there is no way to track that, obviously. But why wouldn't a miner be able to sell through a trusted third party? If an exchange was a registered money transmitter, that should address FinCEN's concerns about money laundering as there would now be trackability and compliance for these newly created coins entering the economy. Why should the miner have to be registered himself? How could we get FinCEN to make provisions for this?

Even though I am not a miner, I am still concerned about buying some bitcoins and then turning around and selling them through Craigslist, for example, at a substantial mark up. I believe somehow, someway in FinCEN's view this could qualify me as an MSB and that's just stupid. I'd like to be able to sell my coins too. I'm not interested in breaking the law but I shouldn't have to register just to partake in the Bitcoin revolution.

An elegant AML regime would indeed focus on single points of failure. As long as the node is responsible, why should the spokes also have to jump through hoops? Similar concerns were raised a couple years ago by the prepaid industry, which is why there is now guidance from FinCen that makes the "provider of prepaid access" primarily responsible for AML compliance at the federal level. Crypto-currency lobby groups ought to be begging for a similar compliance regime so that only a few key gateways need to worry about this shit.
mgio
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May 31, 2013, 10:41:49 PM
 #6

OK, maybe not a hole, per se, but I believe the whole spirit of the law suggests that the FinCEN requirements exist to prevent money laundering, terrorism financing, etc. The way they enforce this is through the use of trusted third parties, or businesses that have an AML policy in place and are registered Money Services Businesses. If a miner creates bitcoins and sells them on the open market, there is no way to track that, obviously. But why wouldn't a miner be able to sell through a trusted third party? If an exchange was a registered money transmitter, that should address FinCEN's concerns about money laundering as there would now be trackability and compliance for these newly created coins entering the economy. Why should the miner have to be registered himself? How could we get FinCEN to make provisions for this?

Even though I am not a miner, I am still concerned about buying some bitcoins and then turning around and selling them through Craigslist, for example, at a substantial mark up. I believe somehow, someway in FinCEN's view this could qualify me as an MSB and that's just stupid. I'd like to be able to sell my coins too. I'm not interested in breaking the law but I shouldn't have to register just to partake in the Bitcoin revolution.

Isn't this what liberty reserve was doing? You couldn't wire them directly. They relied on 3rd party services to accept money and exchange it for LR dollars. They were still breaking AML laws though.
BTCBuyer
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June 01, 2013, 07:34:52 AM
 #7

OK, maybe not a hole, per se, but I believe the whole spirit of the law suggests that the FinCEN requirements exist to prevent money laundering, terrorism financing, etc. The way they enforce this is through the use of trusted third parties, or businesses that have an AML policy in place and are registered Money Services Businesses. If a miner creates bitcoins and sells them on the open market, there is no way to track that, obviously. But why wouldn't a miner be able to sell through a trusted third party? If an exchange was a registered money transmitter, that should address FinCEN's concerns about money laundering as there would now be trackability and compliance for these newly created coins entering the economy. Why should the miner have to be registered himself? How could we get FinCEN to make provisions for this?

Even though I am not a miner, I am still concerned about buying some bitcoins and then turning around and selling them through Craigslist, for example, at a substantial mark up. I believe somehow, someway in FinCEN's view this could qualify me as an MSB and that's just stupid. I'd like to be able to sell my coins too. I'm not interested in breaking the law but I shouldn't have to register just to partake in the Bitcoin revolution.

Isn't this what liberty reserve was doing? You couldn't wire them directly. They relied on 3rd party services to accept money and exchange it for LR dollars. They were still breaking AML laws though.

I believe that FinCen is suggesting a centralized party, where the government could monitor Bitcoin transactions. However, this system would refute the very idea behind the Bitcoin community.

These two competing values (1) privacy in transaction and (2) institutionalized government overseeing have put Bitcoin under legal scrutiny. I do not know how the government will weight these two values. However, my gut feeling tells me that FinCen will use the "public policy concern" card to extend its reach into the virtual currency realm, to ensure that the government will get a piece of the pie.
SylTi
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June 01, 2013, 09:56:45 AM
 #8

OK, maybe not a hole, per se, but I believe the whole spirit of the law suggests that the FinCEN requirements exist to prevent money laundering, terrorism financing, etc. The way they enforce this is through the use of trusted third parties, or businesses that have an AML policy in place and are registered Money Services Businesses. If a miner creates bitcoins and sells them on the open market, there is no way to track that, obviously. But why wouldn't a miner be able to sell through a trusted third party? If an exchange was a registered money transmitter, that should address FinCEN's concerns about money laundering as there would now be trackability and compliance for these newly created coins entering the economy. Why should the miner have to be registered himself? How could we get FinCEN to make provisions for this?

Even though I am not a miner, I am still concerned about buying some bitcoins and then turning around and selling them through Craigslist, for example, at a substantial mark up. I believe somehow, someway in FinCEN's view this could qualify me as an MSB and that's just stupid. I'd like to be able to sell my coins too. I'm not interested in breaking the law but I shouldn't have to register just to partake in the Bitcoin revolution.

Miner do not create anything, they help the network and get rewarded by it. The network itself create the new bitcoins.

Stampbit
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June 01, 2013, 09:56:13 PM
 #9

If all the money handlers in a network have to pay $7m in state licensing fees, how will networks such as ripple exist?
Jazkal
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June 02, 2013, 10:21:15 PM
 #10

Miner do not create anything, they help the network and get rewarded by it. The network itself create the new bitcoins.
FinCEN disagrees with you. They see miners as the creators of new BTC.
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