johnyj
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
|
|
May 04, 2013, 08:37:22 PM |
|
I'm surprised that the tone is very positive in this report, since CCTV is a government owned media, this indicate that some higher level government officials admitted their support. Typically chinese people only listen to what government agency says, so this is a green light for bitcoin in china actually Maybe these corrupt officials finally find a way to move their bribe money out of china You sure that they only listen to what government agency says? I'm pretty certain that the average Chinese national doesn't believe or take value from what their government says - trust in their government is probably at an all time low. Even if the government disapprove of Bitcoins, people there will still take interest in it, much like anything else. That is the mindset of people in US, not in china. I lived in China for some years and I know if you disagree with the government, you risk of being classified as "politic criminals" and put into prison, there are several major constitutions that classify anti-communist party activities to be criminal activities
|
|
|
|
penetration
Member
Offline
Activity: 109
Merit: 10
|
|
May 04, 2013, 08:38:17 PM |
|
I'm surprised that the tone is very positive in this report, since CCTV is a government owned media, this indicate that some higher level government officials admitted their support. Typically chinese people only listen to what government agency says, so this is a green light for bitcoin in china actually Maybe these corrupt officials finally find a way to move their bribe money out of china You sure that they only listen to what government agency says? I'm pretty certain that the average Chinese national doesn't believe or take value from what their government says - trust in their government is probably at an all time low. Even if the government disapprove of Bitcoins, people there will still take interest in it, much like anything else. That is the mindset of people in US, not in china. I lived in China for some years and I know if you disagree with the government, you risk of being classified as "politic criminals" and put into prison, there are several major constitutions that classify anti-communist party activities to be criminal activities Even though their economy is borderline capitalism. "Mixed" at best.
|
Pump & Dump Specialist
|
|
|
freethink2013
|
|
May 04, 2013, 08:40:19 PM |
|
prepare for a lot more spyware and hack attempts.
|
|
|
|
johnyj
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
|
|
May 04, 2013, 08:59:43 PM |
|
There are many chinese government officials have billions of private bribe money they want to move to oversea, this seems the best method for them
That will create a situation of rising BTC/CNY exchange price and falling BTC/USD exchange price, means the CNY/USD ratio should fall, but the chinese government fixed exchange rate of CNY/USD, so anyone want to exchange USD to CNY will go the bitcoin way since it is much cheaper than going through chinese commercial banks
BTC's problem as a world currency if some of the country do not have a flowing currency exchange rate
|
|
|
|
gogxmagog
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1456
Merit: 1010
Ad maiora!
|
|
May 04, 2013, 09:06:45 PM |
|
prepare for a lot more spyware and hack attempts.
+1 this. they will make the russians look like preschoolers.
|
|
|
|
Gabi
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008
If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat
|
|
May 04, 2013, 09:51:10 PM |
|
I'm surprised that the tone is very positive in this report, since CCTV is a government owned media, this indicate that some higher level government officials admitted their support. Typically chinese people only listen to what government agency says, so this is a green light for bitcoin in china actually Maybe these corrupt officials finally find a way to move their bribe money out of china You sure that they only listen to what government agency says? I'm pretty certain that the average Chinese national doesn't believe or take value from what their government says - trust in their government is probably at an all time low. Even if the government disapprove of Bitcoins, people there will still take interest in it, much like anything else. That is the mindset of people in US, not in china. I lived in China for some years and I know if you disagree with the government, you risk of being classified as "politic criminals" and put into prison, there are several major constitutions that classify anti-communist party activities to be criminal activities Well but this is a dictactorship related thing. noedaRDH was saying that the average chinese probably doesn't like the government. Sure, they will obey it because, as you said, otherwise you will get punished.
|
|
|
|
noedaRDH
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
Finding Satoshi
|
|
May 04, 2013, 10:16:45 PM |
|
I'm surprised that the tone is very positive in this report, since CCTV is a government owned media, this indicate that some higher level government officials admitted their support. Typically chinese people only listen to what government agency says, so this is a green light for bitcoin in china actually Maybe these corrupt officials finally find a way to move their bribe money out of china You sure that they only listen to what government agency says? I'm pretty certain that the average Chinese national doesn't believe or take value from what their government says - trust in their government is probably at an all time low. Even if the government disapprove of Bitcoins, people there will still take interest in it, much like anything else. That is the mindset of people in US, not in china. I lived in China for some years and I know if you disagree with the government, you risk of being classified as "politic criminals" and put into prison, there are several major constitutions that classify anti-communist party activities to be criminal activities Well but this is a dictactorship related thing. noedaRDH was saying that the average chinese probably doesn't like the government. Sure, they will obey it because, as you said, otherwise you will get punished. It's not so much about obeying. I mean, that guy said there's many organizations set up to look for political opponents and put them in prison. But do you realize that with the amount of things going on China, with a population of that size, it's almost impossible for those organizations to enforce anything? How are you going to stop your average joe who don't give a shit about what the gov thinks about Bitcoins, from buying a few? They can't even stop your average internet savvy 20 and 30 something person from breaking through their firewall. So I don't think it's a matter of "obeying". It'd be more accurate to say, people in public will pretend it's all on the level and obey the laws. But in private (when they're sitting at home with a laptop), it's a different story. However, at this point in time, even if you went out on the street and became very vocal in your discussion of Bitcoins, I doubt anyone will raise and eyebrow, much less arrest you, for something that's so trivial.
|
1NwGKiLcAngD1KiCCivxT6EDJmyXMGqM9q
Ask not what Bitcoin can do for you - ask what you can do for Bitcoin.
|
|
|
noedaRDH
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
Finding Satoshi
|
|
May 04, 2013, 10:20:39 PM |
|
I'm surprised that the tone is very positive in this report, since CCTV is a government owned media, this indicate that some higher level government officials admitted their support. Typically chinese people only listen to what government agency says, so this is a green light for bitcoin in china actually Maybe these corrupt officials finally find a way to move their bribe money out of china You sure that they only listen to what government agency says? I'm pretty certain that the average Chinese national doesn't believe or take value from what their government says - trust in their government is probably at an all time low. Even if the government disapprove of Bitcoins, people there will still take interest in it, much like anything else. That is the mindset of people in US, not in china. I lived in China for some years and I know if you disagree with the government, you risk of being classified as "politic criminals" and put into prison, there are several major constitutions that classify anti-communist party activities to be criminal activities Guess what? Almost EVERYONE disagree with the government. Even those within the government who are corrupt and are profiting big time don't agree with all that much with their party. It's just a matter of agreeing enough and not disagreeing too much when you're out in public or when you're dealing with certain people with ties with officials. The Wild Wild West nature of Bitcoin fits perfectly with China (country of cowboys and bandits).
|
1NwGKiLcAngD1KiCCivxT6EDJmyXMGqM9q
Ask not what Bitcoin can do for you - ask what you can do for Bitcoin.
|
|
|
nyusternie
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 211
Merit: 100
"Living the Kewl Life"
|
|
May 04, 2013, 10:32:01 PM |
|
BTC's problem as a world currency if some of the country do not have a flowing currency exchange rate
It is not really a problem for bitcoin, it's a problem for the "fixed rate" currency. Bitcoin will only show the "true" value of the RMB.that would be an incredibly interesting thing to watch. there's currently only 1 cny exchange (as far as i know), so i'd also be concerned if it could be state influenced. not sure where btcchina its located, but i'd like to see cny exchanges in shenzhen and hong kong just registered with btcchina to check it out and what i found absolutely surprising is the "mainstream" funding options currently available to the exchange: - alipay (equivalent to paypal)
- tenpay (equivalent to i dunno facebook credits?)
and there seems to be an exit to EVERY national bank (i'm actually trying to fund my ccb account now) so basically in china, bitcoin is accepted and just works??? none of that aml, kyc bullshit??? if this remains china's "official" position, HO-LY SHIT talk about too good to be true
|
|
|
|
Frozenlock
|
|
May 04, 2013, 10:36:07 PM |
|
Wait, you mean that not everyone works on a half-assed legacy banking system crippled by transit time and fascist laws?
|
|
|
|
|
Elwar
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3598
Merit: 2386
Viva Ut Vivas
|
|
May 04, 2013, 10:42:48 PM |
|
I watched the entire thing. I understand nothing. I watched it too and they were just talking gibberish. This is bad news for Bitcoin.
|
First seastead company actually selling sea homes: Ocean Builders https://ocean.builders Of course we accept bitcoin.
|
|
|
Mike Christ
aka snapsunny
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1003
|
|
May 04, 2013, 10:57:15 PM |
|
Very very interesting. The largest country in the world taking an interest in FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY MORE FREEDOM
So any news on how India feels about Bitcoin?
|
|
|
|
Gabi
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008
If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat
|
|
May 04, 2013, 10:59:55 PM |
|
BTC's problem as a world currency if some of the country do not have a flowing currency exchange rate
It is not really a problem for bitcoin, it's a problem for the "fixed rate" currency. Bitcoin will only show the "true" value of the RMB.that would be an incredibly interesting thing to watch. there's currently only 1 cny exchange (as far as i know), so i'd also be concerned if it could be state influenced. not sure where btcchina its located, but i'd like to see cny exchanges in shenzhen and hong kong just registered with btcchina to check it out and what i found absolutely surprising is the "mainstream" funding options currently available to the exchange: - alipay (equivalent to paypal)
- tenpay (equivalent to i dunno facebook credits?)
and there seems to be an exit to EVERY national bank (i'm actually trying to fund my ccb account now) so basically in china, bitcoin is accepted and just works??? none of that aml, kyc bullshit??? if this remains china's "official" position, HO-LY SHIT talk about too good to be true Or, simply, it is like in the beginning of bitcoin, when people still accepted paypal and credit cards. Maybe the same will happen in china, they will discover that these systems are NOT ok to sell bitcoins.
|
|
|
|
nyusternie
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 211
Merit: 100
"Living the Kewl Life"
|
|
May 04, 2013, 11:00:36 PM |
|
agreed. but none of this is really adding up to me; imo the threat of an anonymous gambling platform ALONE would have been enough to KILL bitcoin in the mainland so i did a little digging; btcchina.com is using amazon aws out of japan; so they are NOT in the mainland plus, their site doesn't have an icp# listed so they're not licensed either i don't know how exactly they're doing that they're doing, but i have a feeling that it won't last -- that level of convenience? again, too good to be true but.. i will enjoy it for as long as it lasts -- no more traveling with $9,999 USD in cash
|
|
|
|
Frozenlock
|
|
May 04, 2013, 11:03:24 PM |
|
Or, simply, it is like in the beginning of bitcoin, when people still accepted paypal and credit cards. Maybe the same will happen in china, they will discover that these systems are NOT ok to sell bitcoins.
Depends if chargebacks are easy with those methods.
|
|
|
|
oakpacific
|
|
May 05, 2013, 01:49:56 AM |
|
I'm surprised that the tone is very positive in this report, since CCTV is a government owned media, this indicate that some higher level government officials admitted their support. Typically chinese people only listen to what government agency says, so this is a green light for bitcoin in china actually Maybe these corrupt officials finally find a way to move their bribe money out of china You sure that they only listen to what government agency says? I'm pretty certain that the average Chinese national doesn't believe or take value from what their government says - trust in their government is probably at an all time low. Even if the government disapprove of Bitcoins, people there will still take interest in it, much like anything else. That is the mindset of people in US, not in china. I lived in China for some years and I know if you disagree with the government, you risk of being classified as "politic criminals" and put into prison, there are several major constitutions that classify anti-communist party activities to be criminal activities Nobody gives a damn about "constitutions" here. Bottomline is: as long as you pay your bribe and don't meddle with politics, CCP would want to stay as far from you as it can, in case you may seek help and support from it. Another interesting thing to note: unlike in the West, there are still a lot of high-level CCP leaders with a science/engineering background, it might be a remote possibility that they might "get" it quicker than their Western counterparts.
|
|
|
|
massivebitman
|
|
May 05, 2013, 02:24:57 AM |
|
China will be the first country to crack down on Bitcoin.
It's trivial for them to block Bitcoin communications over their network, they have the most advanced proxy filtering systems in the world.
Maybe... But if the government were against it, why would they let it go on CCTV then?
|
|
|
|
Stunna
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3192
Merit: 1279
Primedice.com, Stake.com
|
|
May 05, 2013, 02:28:32 AM |
|
Will be interesting to see how this plays out, maybe it's time for me to pick up some more btc
|
|
|
|
nyusternie
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 211
Merit: 100
"Living the Kewl Life"
|
|
May 05, 2013, 02:34:13 AM |
|
China will be the first country to crack down on Bitcoin.
It's trivial for them to block Bitcoin communications over their network, they have the most advanced proxy filtering systems in the world.
Maybe... But if the government were against it, why would they let it go on CCTV then?that's the million bitcoin question fyi, started out promising, but thus far my experience on btcchina has NOT been fun. WTF is that how it works? as soon as people start to care and show you love, you fold under the pressure? (will try again tomorrow)
|
|
|
|
|