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March 30, 2013, 05:09:18 PM |
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It's very easy to trace Bitcoins, the chain is public, even when they are washed through "tumblers" it's still very easy to track them, because they don't magically disappear, they just get mixed up making the tracking more complex. The problem with freezing or blacklisting stolen coins is that you could break the whole market, because you yourself may be in possession of stolen coins unknowingly, and so you could end up freezing a section of everyone's accounts. You'd undermine the implicit trust that exists in the market, that when you purchase a Bitcoin, you know own it, and it would cause a panic sell by everyone crashing the market. Added to that it would be impossible to enforce, because part of the beauty of Bitcoins is that they aren't policed by any central authority.
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