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March 28, 2014, 09:18:26 PM |
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Money-Spinners: This Week’s Bitcoin ATM News Jon Southurst (@southtopia) | Published on March 28, 2014 at 17:30 GMT | Bitcoin ATM, Companies, Lifestyle, News
Step up, roll up your sleeve, and start smoothing out those crumpled banknotes as CoinDesk brings you the latest in bitcoin ATM and vending machine announcements from around the world.
We say ‘vending machines’ not as a joke, but because in some jurisdictions cash-in only machines are classified as exactly that, to remain free from additional banking regulations … or bans.
Speaking of which, the week began on a sour note in Dubai when the UAE Department of Economic Development (DED) told us there was no license to install a bitcoin ATM in the country as yet. To rub salt in the wounds, it was also revealed the 400 shiny blue terminals waiting in the warehouse weren’t even bitcoin ATMs, but everyday, unexciting bill-paying kiosks.
All that was quickly forgotten, though, when ATMs suddenly started popping up in new and exotic locations and even new currencies, like:
Tijuana, Mexico
Two Genesis1 ATMs began operating at the Bit Center in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico last Saturday. The previously little-seen Genesis1 machines are probably the most versatile out there – not only do they feature both cash-in and cash-out functions, this announcement gave us more:
“The Genesis1 ATMs differ from other Bitcoin ATM models in that the machine supports litecoin and dogecoin as well. Bitcoin42 acquired and deployed two machines, one accommodating Mexican pesos and the other US dollars.”
You heard that right: Dogecoin ATMs!
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Tijuana’s Bit Center is a local business development, innovation and technology centre, that also serves as a co-working space for Mexican startups.
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Singapore’s Numoni is the quiet achiever of the bitcoin ATM world, stealthily installing its cute and colorful bitcoin vending machines in various locations around Southeast Asia for us to discover, usually without much fanfare. So we were pleased to hear reports of another one this week, in the upscale Bangsar district on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur.
Numoni_Malaysia
There is reportedly another Numoni machine installed at a cellphone shop in Malaysia’s island state, Penang, although we haven’t seen photos of it yet.
Taipei, Taiwan
We briefly mentioned the Taiwan ATM last week, and are happy to report it is finally up and running smoothly at the colorful Cosi I cosi Gelateria ice-cream parlor in Taipei. For the record, the parlor also accepts bitcoin and challenges you to leave the store without spending some of your newly acquired bitcoin on something cold and sweet.
Taiwan
Sydney, Australia
Australia has been teasing us for too long. As early as February, a company called Australian Bitcoin ATMs announced it would be installing 100 machines across the country. However, the company’s website is frustratingly information-free, with a broken contact form and non-functional email address.
So we were a little skeptical when we saw this story in the Australian media earlier this week, promising ATM installations “within days”.
The CEO of the other company mentioned in the story, Robert Masters of Krypto Currency Solutions, was more helpful, telling us his company had indeed secured locations and would be unveiling machines very soon, but not this week. The company also made the following announcement:
“Krypto Currency Solutions Pty Ltd. have reached an agreement on a merger and acquisition with ABA Technologies Pty Ltd. for national and international roll out of bitcoin ATMs and related services.”
In the end, it was BitRocket Capital who delivered the goods with a Lamassu installation in a Sydney cafe on Thursday.
The machine has a few quirks: it accepts Australian dollars but converts them to USD value to purchase bitcoins. It also has a $10,000 BTC-equivalent withdrawal limit to comply with anti-money laundering regulations.
BitRocket says it wants to install at least 20 more machines in public places, and also has plans to expand overseas.
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March 28, 2014, 09:20:06 PM |
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Isle of Man Welcomes Digital Currency Exchanges ‘No License Required’ Robert Paul Davis | Published on March 28, 2014 at 19:31 GMT | Europe, Exchanges, Law, News, Regulation
R Paul Davis is Group General Counsel for the Counting House Services group of companies, headquartered in Canada, and lives and works in the Isle of Man. A Canadian barrister and solicitor, his practice is specialized in international payments law and technology.
_____________________________
The Isle of Man seems to be setting itself up as a hub for bitcoin-related businesses. The self-governing British Crown dependency is already appealing to conventional businesses and wealthy individuals, and the latest indications are that this fiscally liberal environment will be extended to cryptocurrency-related activities as well.
On Wednesday 26th March, the island’s Financial Supervision Commission, responding to a legal opinion written for Canadian clients by the author, confirmed that a bitcoin exchange that holds client funds with a licensed overseas payment service provider is not required to obtain a licence in the country for its activities.
The FSC confirmed that neither Class 2 of the Regulated Activities Order, “Investment Business,” nor Class 8 “Money Transmission Services” cover bitcoin activities.
This situation may not last forever, however.
The FSC ruling continues:
“[...] it is possible that legislation could be amended in the future to bring the proposed activities within regulated activity and/or to make the activity subject to the AML Code and thus subject to the draft Designated Businesses (Registration and Oversight) Bill 2014.
It is therefore important that if the client pursues its interest in operating from the Isle of Man that it keeps abreast of relevant legislative changes and remains prepared for these possible eventualities.”
While the thought of operating a digital exchange within the regulatory framework of the FSC might be considered an unwelcome addition to activities, in fact several exchange operators considering the Isle of Man as a base would welcome their business being subjected to regulation.
This would open the doors of at least two specialized island banks who are ready to offer facilities to regulated entities, but not to unlicensed businesses.
Only very minor changes to a statutory instrument, not even primary legislation, could achieve regulation. It is likely, however, that the FSC would want considerable time to enhance its understanding of the field and put appropriate mechanisms and staff training place before taking on a new vertical.
Desirable base
The Isle of Man is highly attractive to e-business not least because of its low tax regime, where resident individuals are taxed at 20% to a maximum of £120,000 per year, while businesses pay no corporate tax and banks only 10%.
The island also boasts massive bandwith and redundancy, with world-class DDoS protection and multiple options for secure hosting.
Long renowned as a safe and compliant financial centre, the cachet of an Isle of Man base is highly desirable and in the wake of the FSC decision, two well-known bitcoin exchanges have already incorporated on the island, have established facilities and are recruiting staff.
Eric Benz of the UK Digital Currency Association has said that up to 15 further exchanges may now seriously consider basing operations on the island.
Cryptocoin hub?
On 1st April, approximately 30 individuals from the Island with interests in the bitcoin arena, ranging from hosting services and bankers to miners and exchange operators, will meet to form the Manx Digital Currency Association.
Digital currency has attracted strong government interest and the Department of Economic Development, which offers among other things generous grants and support to businesses moving to the Crown dependency, has given serious attention to bitcoin and its relatives in recent weeks.
Many see the Isle of Man as a logical centre of digital currency activity and the excess of power and concentration of financial talent on the island make it a serious contender.
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March 28, 2014, 09:20:43 PM |
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Bitcoin Enthusiast Loses Price Bet, Eats Hat Nermin Hajdarbegovic | Published on March 28, 2014 at 21:14 GMT | Bitcoin Gambling, Lifestyle, News, Prices
An American bitcoin enthusiast has filmed himself eating his hat after losing a bet.
Acting in what, with hindsight, was extreme optimism, the man wagered that the bitcoin price would not fall below $1,000. Yes, we are fully aware that it was not a good bet to make, and so, now, is the unnamed fan of the digital currency.
The video – posted by someone titled, of course, ‘Hat Eater’ – showed up on reddit on Thursday, and soon spread through social networks and cryptocurrency communities.
Bitcoin bon appétit
What can we say? The 45-minute video depicts Hat Eater eating a hat. A red, cotton one. The unwelcome snack took him three days, a few sandwich, some ice tea and a couple of beers to force down. Some ketchup was also involved.
So far the video has notched up 120,000 views on YouTube and as you may expect, the comments are just as ridiculous as the video itself. Some called it integrity, others believed it was pointless and plain silly.
In any case, there’s one less hat in the world and bitcoin has slipped to around a half of the $1,000 minimum the naive gambler set. Let’s just hope it was a one-off bet and there’s nobody out there who made a similar wager at $500.
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March 28, 2014, 09:22:40 PM |
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Price of Bitcoin Remains Under $500 Amid China UncertaintyPete Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) | Published on March 28, 2014 at 20:58 GMT | Asia, News, Prices, Regulation The price of bitcoin on the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index (USD BPI) remained below $500 on Friday 28th March, amid continued uncertainty over whether the Chinese government would seek to prohibit banks from working with digital currency exchanges. Sources in China indicated that the reports, which first surfaced on 27th March, appear to be true, though the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, has yet to give any formal indication that its position on bitcoin and other digital currencies has shifted. Screen Shot 2014-03-28 at 4.27.27 PM At press time, the price of bitcoin had recovered slightly from an open of $478.16 on the CoinDesk USD BPI to $488.17, a rise of just over 2% or $10. The most recent decline began at roughly 13:00 GMT on 26th March, when the price, then holding at $588, dropped rapidly to a weekly low of $477 at 23:00 GMT on 27th March. The drop was caused by a report from China-based news source Caixin about China’s possible policy change. The media outlet has not retracted its story. One potentially troubling sign was that the PBOC has not yet come out to debunk the news, as it did on 21st March when China-based microblogging site Sina Weibo published false rumors that bitcoin would soon be banned in China. The PBOC has yet to make a similar announcement regarding this latest news. Exchanges keep options open Speaking to CoinDesk at CoinSummit, BTC China CEO Bobby Lee indicated that China’s current policy motive is to ensure its nationalized banking system stays healthy by keeping the volatile digital currency bitcoin separate from mainstream businesses. Further, Lee said he has been trying to convince the Chinese government to regulate exchanges, issue licenses and establish best practices for the industry. Speaking separately on how he would respond should the current rumors prove true, he said: “We will adjust our business model accordingly, and it’s too early to tell what all of the options are, and which directions we will proceed down.” CNY bitcoin prices sees similar decline The CoinDesk Chinese Yuan Bitcoin Price Index (CNY BPI), introduced on 26th March, has observed similar declines, falling from ¥3,603 at 13:00 GMT on 26th March to a low of ¥2,849 at 23:00 GMT on 27th March. Screen Shot 2014-03-28 at 4.05.00 PM At press time, the CNY BPI had increased nearly 5%, or ¥140.87 from the day’s opening price of ¥2856 to reach ¥2,996. The CNY BPI tracks price movements on BTC China and OKCoin. Latest USD BPI Prices At press time, the price of bitcoin across the three USD BPI exchanges – Bitstamp, Bitfinex and BTC-e – remained below $500. Bitfinex displayed the lowest selling price of $488.50, slightly below the $489.50 observed on UK-based exchange Bitstamp. Screen Shot 2014-03-28 at 4.10.20 PM BTC-e prices were the least affected by the decline, having fallen to $492.90. CoinDesk continues to monitor the developing China story. For more details, read our initial report here.
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March 29, 2014, 01:15:45 AM |
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Coinbase Launches App Store Danny Bradbury (@dannybradbury) | Published on March 29, 2014 at 01:12 GMT | Coinbase, Companies
Coinbase has launched an app store, showcasing firms that have integrated with its wallet service.
On the firm’s API page, it explains that it allows submissions from applications conducting “all major bitcoin operations”, that exchange bitcoin to local currency, send and request bit coins via email or bitcoin address, and create bitcoin wallets. It also allows merchant apps, and apps that provide access to raw bitcoin network data. Microtransactions are permitted, too.
Among the first apps to be included in the app store are OSX-based wallet Hive, and Gliph, a mobile app for making bitcoin payments, both of which have integrated with Coinbase. BitTip, the Reddit bitcoin tipping app, and a Coinbase WordPress plugin are also on the site.
And Coinbase Trader, an app that allows for the automated buying and selling of bit coins through Coinbase, is also listed.
The company did not to respond to queries about how closely those using its API would be security vetted, or any other criteria that it was using for inclusion in the store.
This appears to be part of a wider push for Coinbase to build a developer community for its bitcoin infrastructure, which exists off the block chain and includes a wallet, email-based transfers, and a merchant payment processing service. The company recently ran its BitHack competition, in which it awarded $18,000 in prizes. It announced the winners today.
The winner of that app, CoinPlanter, is an Android app that uses geotagging to let people store, share, or retrieve bitcoins based on their location. People can ‘dig’ while at any location to see if someone has left bitcoin to pick up. The tool, which received a $10,000 first prize, has some marketing potential for companies wanting to cash in on the geotagging craze and integrate the concept with their own campaigns.
The second prizewinner, Aircoin, got $5,000. It is a mobile app that lets people send bit coins to others nearby, using a drag and drop visual interface.
Finally, Coinery.io is an online site for selling digital products in bitcoin. The Coinbase-powered site charges no fees, it says. That site got $3,000.
None of these apps were listed in the Coinbase app store, although another entrant to the contest, Bitfluence, was listed on the app store. That service lets you use your Twitter identity to send and receive bitcoin, is listed on the site.
Coinbase has suffered from its own app store woes in the past, falling foul of Apple’s notorious anti-bitcoin stance. Apple removed its mobile iOS app from the app store in November, less than a month after it was launched.
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March 29, 2014, 01:09:28 PM |
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Court Grants Order to Freeze Hashfast’s Bitcoin Wallets Jon Southurst (@southtopia) | Published on March 29, 2014 at 12:42 GMT | Companies, Law, Mining, News
A court in Fort Worth, Texas, has granted a temporary restraining order to freeze the bitcoin wallets of ASIC mining hardware manufacturer HashFast Technologies LLC and HashFast LLC, after a customer claimed it failed to deliver hardware on time or negotiate a refund.
The TRO was part of a wider lawsuit filed against HashFast on 27th March by Cypher Enterprises, who claim it ordered and paid HashFast for several items of bitcoin mining hardware in early October last year. The complaint says HashFast failed to meet its promised delivery date later that month, prompting Cypher Enterprises to cancel its orders.
No refund
Cypher Enterprises had paid for the majority of the orders for the ‘Baby Jet’ mining hardware in bitcoin but said HashFast had failed to offer or pay a refund of any kind, or even reply to the cancelation.
The complaint, which has a Background section with the question “What the heck is a Bitcoin?” also contains an attachment of 30 pages of bitcointalk forum discussion detailing the history of the story from July-August 2013. HashFast had promoted the new hardware on the forum and even invited potential customers to tour their workplace in order to promote transparency.
At the time of the order, on 1st October 2013, 1 BTC was worth around $126.
It continued that HashFast had stated on the forum that in the event a refund was necessary, it would pay in bitcoin. After failing to meet the original delivery date it promised to ship no later than 31st December, a date it also missed.
Changing the game
The granting of a court order to freeze bitcoin assets of mining hardware companies who fail to deliver on time could have ramifications in an industry beset by delays as small and inexperienced participants grapple with issues related to cutting edge hardware design and production.
“Outside of the Mt. Gox bankruptcy proceedings, I’m not aware of any other Texas courts which have entered a restraining order like this,” said Cypher Enterprises’ lawyer, Robert Bogdanowicz.
“It speaks to the legitimacy of cryptocurrencies and a growing understanding of their value and importance to businesses.”
Several mining hardware startups have struggled to deliver product anywhere near the promised time, in a field so time-critical that even a month’s delay can render an expensive purchase worthless due to bitcoin’s constantly increasing difficulty rate.
HashFast, which had been under threat of legal action over the delays since the beginning of this year, was founded just last year and promotes itself on its website as “an industry leader in bitcoin mining technology”.
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March 29, 2014, 02:58:12 PM |
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Bitcoin is Key to Empowering Small Businesses Hemant Taneja (@htaneja) | Published on March 29, 2014 at 14:05 GMT | Analysis, Companies, Merchants, Startups
Small businesses are the bedrock of the American economy. Today, more than half of all workers in the US are employed by businesses with less than 500 employees, and they create some 66% of new jobs as well.
Despite their importance to the economy, however, small businesses have faced serious hurdles in successfully competing on the Internet. Bitcoin has the potential to finally unleash them and fuel their growth, but first we have to ensure that the currency is trustworthy through smart regulation.
Founders looking to build a new company today have access to many effective platforms they can use to go from vision to delivery. Flextronics accelerates product development by assisting companies in managing their supply chains. Once built, companies can sell their products on top of Amazon Web Services, easily scaling their server resources with demand.
Finding customers is much easier because platforms like Facebook and Twitter provide tools to engage potential audiences. Finally, once customers are ready, FedEx and UPS provide full logistics services to ensure that products are available and delivered on time.
While small businesses have had all of these platforms available to them for years, one area has been sorely lacking: payments. Today’s financial infrastructure is ill-suited for the online and mobile commerce that increasingly is at the core of business.
Issues like fraud and identity theft deeply harm small businesses, which can’t easily manage their financial risks. Credit card chargebacks made sense when most commerce was in-person and local, but in a globalized consumer market, such policies are cumbersome. Compared to large companies, small businesses simply don’t have the resources to accept payments online easily across the world.
As I discussed this week at CoinSummit, we now have the payment infrastructure we need with bitcoin. Together with other enabling platforms, bitcoin stands to provide small businesses with the leverage they need to aggressively compete in the marketplace.
This “economies of unscale” means that entrepreneurs from San Francisco to Mumbai can create a business that can rapidly grow with just a handful of people and a dream for the future.
“Compared to large companies, small businesses simply don't have the resources to accept payments online easily across the world.”
This has not been the case since the Industrial Age started two centuries ago. Scale has been the key watchword in building profitable companies, since large enterprises have the resources to develop proprietary systems, giving them unfair power in the marketplace.
They also have the ability to spread the cost of business processes and inefficiency over a greater number of sales. Entire categories of businesses, from manufacturing to the delivery of high-quality services, could only be conducted in near-monopoly conditions, and thus, innovation often fell by the wayside.
That’s why I was excited to meet with so many passionate bitcoin entrepreneurs at this week’s CoinSummit. The world economy is on the cusp of transformation. To get to the promised land though, bitcoin founders are going to have to take a very different approach than they have in the past in supporting the progress of the cryptocurrency.
Unlike the cavalier attitude that built the Internet services we use every day, bitcoin entrepreneurs must instead actively engage with regulators to ensure that consumers (and businesses) are properly protected.
Bitcoin has a plethora of thorny issues that have to be addressed in order for it to reach mass adoption. Consumers need the ability to hold secure digital wallets, and the bitcoin market itself needs better stability mechanisms. Since transactions in bitcoin cannot be reversed, entrepreneurs must develop a framework for adjudicating issues about returns or refunds.
Regulators are not necessarily against change, but they are often understandably worried about unfamiliar technology. Founders should see this as an opportunity and not a threat. Only through the intersection of technology, finance, and government can we be sure to build a system that will meet the needs of all stakeholders.
For these reasons, General Catalyst invested in the Series A round of Circle, which is building out the key infrastructure around bitcoin to make it safe and secure for everyday use. The co-founder of Circle, Jeremy Allaire, who built platform companies in the app server and Internet video markets, believes that Circle can create a two-sided platform that allows consumers to safely buy, store and use digital currency and businesses to accept transactions without risk of volatility.
We also invested in online payments company Stripe, which will soon allow its customers to accept bitcoin payments in lieu of credit cards.
If we can build trust in bitcoin, we can begin to empower the economies of unscale that will ensure that its ubiquity reaches the levels enjoyed by Visa and Mastercard today. That will mean that entrepreneurs across the world can accept payments from anyone, anywhere, with limited fees and headaches. That’s a revolution for small businesses, and our economy as well.
Hemant Taneja is a partner at General Catalyst. The firm has invested in BigCommerce, Circle, Stripe, and ZenPayroll. Follow him on Twitter @htaneja.
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March 29, 2014, 06:14:22 PM |
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The Benefits of Bitcoin in International Travel Nicholas Tomaino (@ntmoney) | Published on March 29, 2014 at 16:34 GMT | Analysis
Nick Tomaino is on the business development team at Coinbase, and is also a first-year business school student at the Yale School of Management.
Prior to that, he worked in venture capital, most recently for Softbank Capital.
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Bitcoin is an open payment network that anyone in the world with an Internet connection can use.
The open, global nature of bitcoin has tremendous advantages over existing financial infrastructure for international travellers. These advantages became clear to me during a recent trip to South America.
Below are some of the problems that international travellers currently deal with.
Hassle of currency conversion
When travelling to foreign countries, it can be a major hassle to convert to local currencies and carry around local cash. I traveled to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, on my trip and had to worry about exchanging currency three times (when both entering and leaving a new country).
Wouldn’t it be great to be able to eliminate one of the major hassles of international trips? As a global currency used by consumers and merchants worldwide, bitcoin eliminates the need for dealing with multiple currency conversions and carrying a lot of cash.
High fees
In addition to the hassle of dealing with currency conversion and carrying cash, it can also be quite costly to get cash and make payments in new countries. During my time in Brazil, I incurred three approximately $15 ATM fees to withdraw Brazilian Reals from a local bank – a $10 charge from my large US-based bank, in addition to $5 from the local Brazilian bank – for each withdrawal. I incurred one $15 ATM fee in Buenos Aires, as well. Additionally, I was charged a fee every time I used my card to make a purchase.
The twelve times I swiped my card to buy something ended up costing me $36 dollars. The high fees I paid ($96 in total) on my trip highlight the massive friction that exists between existing payment networks worldwide.
An open, global payment network reduces friction and fees. As the world continues to become more inter-connected, I think this will become a more obvious benefit of bitcoin.
atm-cash-machine1
Payment fraud
When you use your credit card internationally, you give unfamiliar foreign merchants your payment credentials. These merchants can either intentionally or unintentionally expose those payment credentials to criminals.
While I was in Buenos Aires, I purchased water at a convenience store. The following day, I got a call from my bank telling me I had hundreds of dollars of fraudulent charges made with my debit card.
The unfamiliar merchant in Buenos Aires must have exposed my payment credentials to a fraudster. My bank account was compromised, and while the charges were covered, my bank told me it would take five to seven business days for them to mail me a new debit card. This left me without access to my bank account for a week in a foreign country.
Luckily, I had another card to cover me from the rest of the trip, but I’m not sure what I would have done if I did not. This is a scenario I suspect is all too familiar for many who have travelled internationally.
The solution
Bitcoin solves many problems that international travellers currently deal with. It eliminates the hassle and fees associated with converting to local currencies and carrying cash, and it securely protects the payment credentials of consumers to avoid fraud risk and the potential to lose bank account access in a foreign country.
While it is tough to travel with only bitcoin on international trips at the moment, the rapid merchant adoption of bitcoin is changing this.
Travel-focused merchants such as CheapAir.com, BTCTrip and Pointshound are just a few merchants generating significant bitcoin sales from international travellers. As more travel related merchants accept bitcoin, and consumers continue to realize the huge efficiencies that bitcoin provides, I expect the travel space to continue to lead bitcoin adoption.
Next time I travel internationally, I hope to be able to leave my credit and debit cards at home.
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March 30, 2014, 12:38:53 PM |
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Mt. Gox Used Client Money for Operations and Extravagances, Allege Staff Jon Southurst (@southtopia) | Published on March 30, 2014 at 12:35 BST | Companies, Exchanges, Mt. Gox, News
Mt. Gox allegedly spent money from its clients’ deposits on operating expenses including extravagances as early as two years before it went bankrupt, according to new claims by employees.
In a series of exclusive interviews given to Reuters in Tokyo, the small group of anonymous current and former Mt. Gox employees claim to have approached CEO Mark Karpeles about their concerns in early 2012, but their requests to view the company’s financial records were rebuffed.
Mt. Gox spent money, said Reuters‘ report, on rent in the same high-status Tokyo office building as Hulu and Google, office equipment that included a robot and a 3D printer, and a special edition Honda Civic imported for CEO Mark Karpeles from the UK.
This occurred just as the company, and bitcoin itself, were beginning to expand and gain interest from investors.
Staff kept in the dark
The employees, worried that Gox was spending more money than was coming in, requested a formal meeting with Karpeles and asked for proof that client deposit amounts were protected.
After a one-hour meeting, Karpeles assured them customer money was not being used improperly but would not provide any evidence, leaving them dissatisfied.
It fits with other unofficial reports of a general malaise in the office and personal dissatisfaction with Karpeles, who employees have claimed paid little attention to Mt. Gox’s exchange business and an excessive amount on side projects like the company’s planned Bitcoin Cafe and its transaction processing system.
Legally, Mt. Gox was under no obligation to release any financial details in the time it operated, since it was a privately-held company 88% owned by Karpeles.
Extensions and refusals
In other Gox news, the company website has been updated to announce that the deadline for an examination report issued by the Tokyo District Court has been extended to 9th May.
Late last week it was also revealed Karpeles is refusing to travel to the US for questioning, as part of the Gregory Greene lawsuit.
Greene and Joseph Lack had requested a US judge order Karpeles to the US to testify, “in order to protect domestic creditors.” Karpeles, apparently, has declined to go to the US and offered instead to go to Taiwan, for questioning by lawyers live or via video link.
Steven Woodrow, a lawyer for the plaintiffs in the case, expressed disapproval at Karpeles’ decision, saying anyone seeking protection from US courts should be prepared to enter the country to justify such protection in person.
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March 30, 2014, 12:39:54 PM |
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The Death of Windows XP Won’t Kill the ATM Industry, or Help Bitcoin Nermin Hajdarbegovic | Published on March 30, 2014 at 09:09 BST | Analysis, Bitcoin ATM, Technology
Microsoft is planning to cut off support for Windows XP next month, but the move won’t have the major impact on the ATM industry that many pundits believe.
And contrary to what some bitcoiners say, it won’t do anything to help the bitcoin economy of the fledgling bitcoin ATM industry, either.
Official support for Windows XP is set to end on 8th April, which has prompted many commentators to conclude that the ATM industry will be in a world of trouble as soon as the clock hits midnight. In some respects this echoes the ‘Millennium bug’ (Y2K) fear, uncertainty and doubt that spread 15 years ago as the year 2000 approached.
These statements also happen to be just as spectacularly wrong as the Y2K scaremongering. While the move by Microsoft is a nuisance and is already causing some problems for ATM operators, the impact of the decision has been greatly exaggerated.
What will really happen
Microsoft XPHere are the facts. Microsoft is going to end support for Windows XP on 8th April. This is not exactly an unexpected decision, Microsoft has delayed cutting off support for a while. In addition, it will not cut support entirely. It will still offer anti-malware updates, although security updates will stop.
Approximately 95% of all ATMs run Windows XP and it is estimated that more than 60% of these will keep running the OS after the cut-off date. However, these worrisome statistics do not paint the full picture.
It is important to understand that ATMs run different versions of Windows XP, and a sizeable number run stripped-down, embedded versions of the operating system. Microsoft is not ending support for embedded XP – support for these units will continue well into 2016.
It is also possible that ATM operators with non-embedded versions will get a temporary reprieve. The fact that Microsoft will end support for consumer products does not necessarily mean that ATM operators don’t have contingency plans that involve an extension of official support past the April deadline.
The logical upgrade path would require many ATMs to move to Windows 7, which might not be practical for some operators due to hardware compatibility problems or financial concerns. Effectively, it would mess up their hardware upgrade timetable and cost them money.
Compliance requirements
ATMs need to meet Payment Card Industry Security Standards (PCI SSC) in order to get a green light. Microsoft has said XP users will be considered “unprotected” after it cuts off support next month.
However, that’s just part of the story. In fact, Windows XP ATMs will still be able to meet the requirements even without a new OS. The industry had plenty of time to prepare for the cut-off.
The PCI SSC clearly states that Windows XP devices will be able to meet its standards after the cut-off, provided their operators make the necessary adjustments. In essence, ATM operators will know what to do when the time comes, as they had plenty of time to prepare.
“The bottom line is: don't buy into the hype. Come April 9th, your local ATM will still spit out cash.”
Even regular consumers and small businesses don’t need to be overly concerned. Lack of official support does not mean that XP boxes will turn into malware-ridden botnet zombies overnight. Apart from the promised official anti-malware releases, security firms will also be offering vendors third-party protection.
Malwarebytes has launched an updated version of its Anti-Malware Premium suite this week, and the company says it will support XP users for life. As many as 20% of Malwarebyte users are still running XP.
Coincidentally, the company recently got a bit of love from the cryptocurrecncy community, after it started accepting bitcoin for its products.
Alternatives to XP
LinuxAs pointed out, Microsoft’s decision to cut support for Windows XP has messed up ATM upgrade timetables. But if an ATM operator has a unit that currently runs XP, but for some reason it cannot be upgraded to Windows 7, there are a number of alternatives.
One is, of course, to patch XP and ensure compliance without Microsoft. This is possible, in theory, although the solution is neither simple nor elegant.
The second alternative is to go for an alternative OS altogether.
This is not as farfetched as it sounds: Linux has a much smaller footprint than Windows 7 and, as a result, some ATM operators are considering a switch to Linux rather than the Microsoft product.
This would not be the first time ATMs have transitioned to a different OS. Before the industry moved to XP, most ATM’s were running IBM’s OS/2 operating system.
Money talks
It’s a matter of economics, not tech. As Computerworld points out, a new ATM costs $15,000-$60,000 and the typical lifecycle is seven to 10 years. This explains why some operators are reluctant to upgrade their hardware – it just doesn’t make financial sense.
The bottom line is: don’t buy into the hype or fall for the FUD. Come April 9th, your local ATM will still spit out cash.
Over the next few months, many ATMs will get a new operating system, or tweaks to the old one, that will enable them to meet compliance standards until they are replaced or upgraded. The vast majority of people won’t notice a thing, apart from a nicer user interface on their local ATM.
People who think most ATMs will simply die without official support are probably the same people who bought into the Y2K hype all those years ago. Besides, even if they did, it wouldn’t have much of an effect on digital currencies and bitcoin ATMs. That’s a case of wishful thinking and nothing more.
What’s more, the fact that bitcoin ATMs are manufactured by small outfits means that in the long run could be in an even worse situation, as small companies don’t tend to offer much in the way of long-term software support.
They simply lack the resources and, in many cases, startups in niche industries don’t survive. That is not a concern for the time being, since bitcoin ATMs are practically brand new.
However, imagine a world with tens of thousands of unstandardised bitcoin ATMs, produced by dozens of companies over the course of a decade or so?
Nermin Hajdarbegovic is a freelance opinion and news writer for CoinDesk: his opinions do not necessarily reflect those of CoinDesk.
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March 31, 2014, 11:47:26 AM |
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Why Bitcoin Faces an Uphill Battle in the Remittance Market Pete Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 11:33 BST | Analysis, News, Regulation, Startups
One of the most routinely cited use cases for bitcoin is in the international remittance market – the financial sector worth over $500bn a year that specializes in facilitating transactions across borders at a markup that reduces the total money sent by 9% on average.
Given the high cost the remittance services, it’s no surprise that many in the bitcoin industry take its potential in the space for granted. After all, its underlying technology offers anyone the ability to conduct low-cost, peer-to-peer payments without restriction.
Due to the power of the technology, it can sound like the traditional remittance market is already dead in the water. However, what’s not often considered is that the technology might not be allowed to reach its full potential.
According to Andrew Brown, head of compliance at cross-border payments specialist Earthport, the current high fees in the traditional remittance market aren’t just imposed by greedy service providers.
Brown believes much of these charges come from the added costs of compliance and regulation, costs that won’t just disappear when bitcoin businesses enter the market. His prediction in light of this estimation is grim:
“By the time all those obligations have been applied, I don’t think any apparent advantage [for bitcoin] will be left.”
Although Brown doesn’t specialize in digital currency, testimonials from bitcoin entrepreneurs in the field suggest similar difficulties, if less dire, conclusions.
Tomas Alvarez, CEO of bitcoin remittance startup Coincove, for example, was forced back to the drawing board on his bitcoin remittance plans after being regulated out of the US market.
Explains Alvarez:
“We were banking on bitcoin being unregulated, allowing us to build, test and validate before regulations were enacted in our target countries. Unfortunately, the US beat us by a few months and effectively declared bitcoin as money, making it prohibitive for a startup to get licenses.”
As Alvarez’s story shows, bitcoin businesses are potentially facing a long, uphill battle on the remittance front.
The high cost of failure
Perhaps most notable of Brown’s concerns was that current regulation poses a formidable barrier even to new traditional remittance businesses. For example, Brown notes that the banking networks that service remittance providers are increasingly deciding not to serve aspiring entrants.
Brown cautioned that bitcoin can’t be seen as the “weak leak” when it comes to money laundering, a criticism that has been prevalent of bitcoin among law enforcement officials:
“There is so much invested by governments, international bodies and law enforcement agencies in the regulatory framework around trying to prevent organized crime [...] No government is going to suddenly leave open a back door to let some murky waters in.”
In particular, Brown cited the $1.9bn fine imposed on HSBC for facilitating money laundering through its remittance service in Somalia.
The catch-22 inherent in the current system was perhaps summed up by Forbes, when it wrote:
“Essentially, we can have a banking system with the current rules and regulations about money laundering or we can have a banking system that can handle remittances into Somalia. But what we cannot have is both: for the regulations are too expensive to allow the sending of small remittances into Somalia.”
Mexico, one of the markets in which Coincove is working, for example, has very strict AML guidelines due to the local drug trade, and high penalties for non-compliance. But, Alvarez said that he believes Coincove can adapt around this challenge, saying:
“We believe that as long as we start developing our own AML and KYC framework from this early stage, we will be well-prepared if and when the Mexican government decides to regulate bitcoin.”
Coincove is not considered a money business in Mexico, but it is following the guidelines as a preemptive measure, Alvarez says. Due to these steps, he says his group is now working with domestic payment processors and banks.
Juan Llanos, a risk and compliance expert who serves on the Bitcoin Foundation‘s regulatory affairs committee, however, notes that compliance is different from the risk of money laundering.
He told CoinDesk: “You can be non-compliant and still have low money-laundering risk because of the nature and size of your business.”
Regulatory uncertainty
The foremost reason Brown suggests bitcoin remittance businesses will struggle is because of the different ways digital currencies are being approached by regulators. He noted that in China its use is severely restricted, while in Norway it’s treated as an asset.
Due to these differences, Brown says, regulators will not provide bitcoin remittance businesses with the free reign they may need to innovate.
Alvarez echoed this danger. Coincove is now operating in Latin America, due in part to its slow response on digital currency regulation, providing it exactly this testing ground.
“Given the uncertainties around the state of bitcoin in most countries at this point, it’s probably wise to start off with jurisdictions that you are familiar with.”
However, as an early market entrant, he sees an opportunity to influence regulation through eventual dialogue in these countries.
Brown acknowledged that companies that facilitate remittances between certain lucrative markets may be the most likely to take hold, provided the legislative framework is complementary, and so far Coincove provides evidence to this claim.
However, as Alvarez indicates, it still finds itself locked out of the US, the largest sender of remittances, so such arrangements are inherently limiting to the expansion of his business.
Bank ‘discrimination’
Llanos was more optimistic than Brown, noting that technology always outpaces regulation and that, although there will be challenges ahead, bitcoin can find a way to overcome them.
Still, he mentioned similar challenges to those cited up by Brown, indicating that both Western Union and a new bitcoin remittance startup with no customers and no volume, would still be expected to meet the same licensing and anti-money laundering requirements.
Said Llanos:
“Granted, each is supposed to be treated differently by virtue of the basic and highly-touted ‘risk-based approach’ principle, but that doesn’t necessarily happen. The reality is that regulators and bankers more often than not expect 100% compliance without regard to the likelihood and impact of the risks, the size of the businesses or the reach of a product.”
With the right know-how and resources, he says, licensing can be achieved, but the inability to obtain banking services is yet another hurdle. However, Llanos suggested that the entire financial industry – from remittance to prepaid card providers, is facing these challenges:
“There are very few, too few, banks who are willing to consider opening an account [in these cases]. The regulatory pressures they themselves are under and the business case do not always justify taking the risk of banking this class of business. It’s really incredible, but an entire industry class is being discriminated against, just by virtue of the nature of the business.”
Furthermore, even once banks get on board, liquidity is another obstacle – due in part to the nature of the markets in which remittance businesses operate. Llanos explained:
“Because buyers of digital currency are so few in the biggest payout jurisdictions – Mexico, India, the Philippines, Africa – this is bound to continue to be a big roadblock for some time.”
What lies ahead
Of course, given that bitcoin can be transmitted freely by users without boundaries, it remains unclear exactly what function bitcoin remittance businesses would provide consumers.
Alvarez, however, disagrees with this notion. He believes bitcoin remittance companies will be essential, especially in the early stages, as there is very little overlap between his target market and current bitcoin users.
“From the insights that we gathered about remittance senders and receivers, we can foresee that bitcoin may not be a technology that they’d directly want to interact with for many years to come – many of them don’t even feel comfortable with traditional banking systems or credit/debit card services.”
Alvarez concluded:
“In this sense, I believe that the main value added by remittance businesses would be empathy: developing a product with a deep understanding of the unique needs and desires of the specific market that is remittance senders.”
As for when Alvarez may be able to reach such a goal in a cost-effective manner, Llanos says that is a matter bitcoin’s proponents will ultimately decide.
“The industry needs to band together, speak up and invest in formal and informal efforts to influence policymakers, legislators and regulators to really pay attention to the issues and effect the necessary changes. [...] The Bitcoin Foundation also has committees working on these issues and many other groups are forming worldwide with the same goals.”
Even though he supports this burgeoning industry, Llanos questions whether more traditional remittance businesses based on bitcoin will be necessary given the technology’s ability:
“I see the evolution of remittances from the regulated intermediaries of today to truly peer-to-peer remittances happening very soon.”
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March 31, 2014, 11:47:59 AM |
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UK Bitcoin Exchange Bit121 Temporarily Ceases Operations Nermin Hajdarbegovic | Published on March 31, 2014 at 12:35 BST | Exchanges, News
UK-based bitcoin exchange Bit121 has announced that it will suspend trading and temporarily close today, March 31st. Although the exchange has indicated that the closure is not permanent, it has not said when it will reopen.
Bit121 said most of the site’s functionality was removed on March 26th. However, users have been able to view account balances and statements, withdraw any sterling balance greater than £50 with no fee, and withdraw any bitcoins held with the exchange. All orders have been cancelled.
On Thursday (27th March), the exchange started carrying out withdrawal transactions on every account with a positive GBP balance.
Merely ‘hibernating’
Bit121 had urged all users to withdraw their bitcoins prior to today’s closure. The exchange maintained that it has been making every effort to contact all account holders individually to offer any help and support required.
Said the exchange:
“Despite regretfully closing our doors for now, we like to think we have simply gone into hibernation, and we fully intend to re-open at some point in the near future. We have learned a great deal and gained a lot of experience in our 4-5 months of running a bitcoin exchange. It has been a challenging few months without a doubt but also a lot of fun. We would like to thank all our customers for your business, your support, your feedback and your understanding.”
Bit121 added that it is closing down in an orderly fashion and that it has already refunded sterling balances. Returning all customers’ bitcoins, however, will take a little longer, as some customers do not hold personal wallets.
Payment issues
When it launched, Bit121 teamed up with payment service provider PacNet Services Ltd, which in turn worked with Barclays PLC. However, since then, the relationship with PacNet Services has broken down.
The exchange told CoinDesk that it decided to close because it was simply taking too long to secure an alternative banking partner.
Bit121 told CoinDesk:
“Rather than have the website sitting dormant with minimal activity, it made sense to temporarily close Bit121 until a suitable banking partner has been secured. The likelihood is that there will need to be some redesign of back-end processes anyway once we re-launch, so the closure will provide us with some time and space to make some necessary changes to our processes and potentially some improvements to both the back-end processes and the bit121 website.
“Our top priority is our customers and the service that we provide to them. We will only re-launch, when we are certain that we can provide a high-quality and competitive service to our customers.”
About Bit121
Never a large exchange, Bit121 launched last November and a month later chief executive Jim Iddiols said daily trading volume was about £100,000, with more than 500 registered users.
The exchange suffered a few teething problems shortly after it was launched, forcing it to suspend trading in on 28th November. Shortly thereafter, Bit121 resumed services after it found that there was, in fact, no glitch at all.
The exchange stored most of its holdings in cold storage and it maintained only a very small number of bitcoins in its hot wallet. No security issues were reported and, for better or worse, Bit121 didn’t make that many headlines – usually a good thing when it comes to bitcoin exchanges.
For Brits despairing at the lack of exchange options, there is good news, however, as the departure of Bit121 coincides with the launch of Coinfloor, a new outfit that seems intent on becoming Britain’s premier bitcoin exchange.
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March 31, 2014, 11:49:00 AM |
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BTC-e Now Offers Trading in Chinese YuanJon Southurst (@southtopia) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 06:38 BST | BTC-e, Companies, Exchanges, News Popular digital currency exchange BTC-e announced today it would begin trading in Chinese ‘offshore yuan’ (CNH), becoming the first international bitcoin exchange to offer both US dollars and yuan, and opening a field of new opportunities for currency speculators. “We are pleased to inform that new trading instruments with Chinese offshore Yuan has been added. Now btc-e clients can trade 3 new instruments. A unique trading instruments that enables you to benefit either from price fall or increase are now available in your btc-e MetaTrader4 and WebTrader platforms under following symbols: USD/CNH (available on WebTrader only), BTC/CNH, LTC/CNH.” ‘Offshore yuan’ (CNH) refers to the amounts of Chinese yuan (CNY), also called renminbi (RMB), available for trade on international markets by businesses, usually at slightly higher value than the official version thanks to the added accessibility. Offshore yuan is the fourth fiat currency offered for trading on BTC-e, the others being US dollars, Euros, and Russian rubles. It also allows trading between these currencies, as well as bitcoin and a selection of seven alternative cryptocurrencies including litecoin, namecoin and peercoin. To fund a BTC-e account with CNH, users must wire money via a National Australia Bank (NAB) account in Sydney. BTC-e’s news came just as a local Chinese exchange, Bter, announced it will halt deposits from banks due to advice related to expected stricter controls over, or outright ban on, interactions between digital currency exchanges and Chinese banks. At publication time, the BTC/CNH price was ¥2594 ($417.5), slightly below the CNY-proper rates of ¥2755 ($443.46) on Huobi and BTC China. Screen Shot 2014-03-31 at 2.09.38 PM Limited trade only Thanks to strict capital controls, yuan is not freely tradable on world forex markets and its value is more rigid. It is not legal tender in Taiwan, Hong Kong or Macau, but often accepted and banks there offer yuan-denominated accounts. Hong Kong started the first offshore market in 2004. Banks in Singapore and London also allow trading to and from CNH, and Taiwanese banks were permitted to open yuan accounts beginning 2012. Forex convertibility is limited to businesses for trade, investment and borrowing purposes and there are few, if any, chances for individuals to join in. The Chinese government has allowed the yuan to float within a limited range since 2006, when a US dollar peg was removed. Bitcoin another option These controls are often listed as one of the main reasons for bitcoin’s popularity with speculators and wealthy investors in China – it offers them a far easier option to move money out of the country, trade it into another more liquid currency and invest in a wider range of foreign alternatives. Investment opportunities within China itself are limited largely to real estate or to a lesser extent, shares in local companies. Despite reports last week that the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) was about to clamp down with a complete ban on banks doing business with bitcoin exchanges, companies there have reported no official announcement yet. Still, the international bitcoin price fell below $500 after the news and remains around $445. BTC-e is one of the world’s three most popular bitcoin exchanges, and also the least compliant in the traditional financial sense, requiring only an email address to open an account and trade in any of the available currencies. Funding accounts with fiat is tricky, however, without going through a more compliant bank or payment processing company.
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March 31, 2014, 01:11:39 PM |
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IRS Bitcoin Ruling May Have a Bright Side Jon Matonis (@jonmatonis) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 13:28 BST | Analysis, News, Regulation, US & Canada
Last week’s guidance from the IRS on tax treatment for bitcoin transactions may have temporarily impeded one avenue in a single jurisdiction, but it has opened up another more significant avenue.
An IRS “property” classification for bitcoin reaffirms it’s status as “digital gold” because it tacitly encourages one type of monetary activity (store of value) over another (medium of exchange).
If bitcoin is digital gold, then gold is analog bitcoin. Both commodities have a significant economic role to play going forward because one is a consensual store of value based on chemical properties and the other is a consensual store of value based on mathematical properties.
This ruling was a lose-lose scenario for the IRS because an alternative tax ruling for treating bitcoin as a currency would have placed it in direct transactional competition with the US dollar. The Department of the Treasury was loath to do that at least from a tax perspective.
The big picture
In the big picture of so-called monetary transactions, economies support three basic types of transactions: person-to-business (P2B), business-to-business (B2B), and person-to-person (P2P). One could also include business-to-person (B2P), but I tend to leave that in the category of P2B.
These classifications hold up whether transactions are physical or digital and also whether transactions are domestic or international.
“Even prior to the Internet, practical monetary transactions demanded easy divisibility and reasonable carry costs.”
Regarding tax treatment in various jurisdictions, the only transaction classes affected would be P2B and some B2B in the jurisdictions enforcing merchant compliance for customer identity reporting. Hence, merchant compliance becomes a point of enforcement for authorities.
This is important because any tax rulings that bestow preferential treatment on bitcoin as a commodity will tend to nudge bitcoin (XBT) in the direction of a store of value perhaps backing alternate types of currency issuance or handling predominately large cross-border transactions – exactly the role played by gold (XAU) today.
Since gold and bitcoin are both monetary commodities that don’t represent another party’s liabilities, they become a medium of last resort for transactions without counterparty risk.
The two most prominent monetary metals in the world are gold and silver and while they might have established themselves initially in physical hand-to-hand exchanges, their usage has evolved beyond that. Even prior to the Internet, practical monetary transactions demanded easy divisibility and reasonable carry costs.
Dual properties
Bitcoin has the advantage of being both a potential long-term store of value and a useful medium in ordinary day-to-day transaction settings. The fact that bitcoin accommodates both makes its ultimate outcome more a function of jurisdictional treatment than commodity properties.
Remember, two of bitcoin’s medium-of-exchange advantages over gold are its near-infinite sub-divisibility and its near-zero transportation cost over long distances.
Cypherpunk hacker juno moneta tweeted:
What does this statement mean? Who wants to transform bitcoin?
To understand the answer to that, one must understand how PayPal willingly transformed itself in the regulatory sphere to get mainstream adoption. If the bitcoin innovators end up with a PayPal-like system saddled with third-party choke points, what has really changed in the payments world? Our twitter commentator states that the current IRS ruling happily steers bitcoin in the opposite direction.
Whereas PayPal never had the capability to evolve in the opposite direction, the distributed bitcoin network and its corresponding unit of value bitcoin certainly does. This is where the really big boys play.
The IRS ruling is also likely to elevate digital gold bitcoin into some form of reserve currency status and the vehicle of choice for large cross-border transactions. It would not be unusual to see this emergence as different jurisdictions will undoubtedly have varying treatments for “official” bitcoin classification.
Additionally, this outcome would support the thesis that larger international exchanges operate like bitcoin clearing houses while the domestic or regional exchanges satisfy the local markets.
About reserve currency
reserve
Reserve currency status refers to the use of a favored monetary instrument or commodity that is commonly held by nation-states and institutions for foreign exchange reserves and large cross-border transactions.
Reserve currencies, like gold, can also be used for the ultimate backing of a government’s own monetary regimes as in the currency substitution cases of Panama, Barbados, Bermuda, and Uruguay.
Bitcoin as a reserve currency asset has appeal because it is non-governmental and global in nature. Its sustainability will not be affected by regional political instability and it has the potential to outlast certain countries and their form of government. Bitcoin is governed by the laws of mathematics.
In the case of large cross-border transactions, bitcoin has appeal because it knows no political boundaries nor is it hampered by capital controls, orchestrated payment blockades, and foreign exchange restrictions. As these transactions are typically performed by sovereigns or large institutions, the jurisdictional tax treatment will probably not be a concern. Possible use cases include closed-loop diamond brokers settling intra-network trades or even partner countries within a trading bloc seeking a pricing and settlement unit other than USD.
Institutional and sovereign transactions fall under the B2B payments category and they also could provide the valuable underpinning for bitcoin price discovery absent sufficient retail price discovery. Just as end-to-end encrypted email messaging, on-network P2P bitcoin transactions exist in a world of their own.
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March 31, 2014, 04:16:32 PM |
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$46k Spent on Mining Hardware: Who Will Deliver the Goods? Dario Di Pardo (@dariodipardo) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 14:38 BST | Analysis, Cointerra, KnCMiner, Mining, Technology
Manufacturers of digital currency mining equipment have become notorious for their long delays in shipments and poor customer service. But is this general perception actually the case?
In this personal mining hardware roundup, Dario Di Pardo gives us his insight into the world of the frustrated miner, after personally dealing with a number of mining hardware makers over the last five months, and dealing with widely varying levels of delay, customer services and offers of compensation or refund.
Black Arrow
Prospero X3
Product: Prospero X-3 (2 TH/s) Price including shipping: $4,978 Order date: November 18th, 2013 Anticipated shipping date: February 24th, 2014 Expected delay: 2-3 months
After ordering in November and expecting delivery in February, shipping has now been delayed till May 1st due to power consumption issues with Black Arrow’s 28nm ASIC chip.
To compensate for the delay, however, the company offered free cloud hashing power for six months – effectively worth 25% of the purchased hashing power.
Tape-out of the improved chip was completed on February 23rd, and no further issues that could endanger the new shipping date are foreseen.
Customer support has been somewhat slow, but still reasonable.
HashFast
Hashfast minerProduct: Sierra (1.2 TH/s) Price including shipping: $6,696 Order date: November 18th, 2013 ‘Guaranteed’ delivery date: February 15th, 2014 Expected delay: 2.5 months
In December, a production update was communicated via email. Unfortunately, it also contained the email addresses of all HashFast customers, thus compromising their privacy, as well as mine.
My initial order confirmation gave February 15th as the ‘guaranteed delivery date’ (deliveries after this date entitle buyers to a refund). In January, however, I received an email giving March 31st as the new ‘guaranteed delivery date’. The email came without any complementary information whatsoever.
I received a further email on 28th March concerning shipping updates. Basically in my case (Batch 3), I must accept another month of delay (May shipment) or I can ‘upgrade’ my order to the new Sierra EVO (2 TH/s).
The latter option would also mean later shipment (end of May) and because it will be a kit, I would have to buy my own power supplies.
Ironically enough, people who placed an order for the Sierra EVO (available as of 20th February) will seemingly get theirs before I do, in April, this is despite the fact that I ordered mine three months before them.
Bitcoin refund requests from early customers who paid their order in bitcoins were refused and offered refunds in fiat at USD hardware pricing at the time of purchase instead. According some displeased customers, who are now considering legal action against HashFast, the terms of service clearly stated that orders paid in bitcoins would be refunded with the same amount of bitcoins.
Facing a one-week backlog, their customer support strikes me as questionable: some emails are ignored, while others are answered with generic replies.
No compensation for the delivery delay has been offered at this time.
Virtual Mining Corporation (VMC)
VMC miner
Product: Fast-Hash One Platinum Edition (1 TH/s) Price including shipping: $6,479 Order date: November 24th, 2013 Anticipated shipping date: January 2014 Delay: 8 months?
Production of VMC’s consumer mining machines is subject to a significant delay, due to underperformance of the 28nm ASIC chip manufactured by eASIC.
According Kenneth E. Slaughter, CEO of VMC, which is a subsidiary of Active Mining Corporation, customers who wish to cancel their pre-order will be refunded in full.
Strangely enough, this delay is not being communicated to the company’s customers, neither by email nor via the website. One can only discover this information by checking the forums.
Considering the delay and lack of communication, I decided to apply for a refund on January 10th.
The only refund method is by cheque, and I received mine about a month after my application. Unfortunately the cheque came with a misspelling in my name, so that cashing it in was impossible.
The cheque was sent back with an accompanying letter clearly stating the correct spelling of the recipient’s name, just to be sure.
However, mid-March a new cheque arrived containing the same misspelling and, this time, it wasn’t signed either. At this point I started to wonder whether these errors were being done on purpose to delay the refund.
Declining my request to have the funds wired to my bank account instead, VMC will now be sending a third cheque (after receiving the unsigned one back from me).
So, maybe with some luck, some four to five months after applying for a refund, I will actually get my money back.
Despite all this, their customer service team has pretty good response times to email inquiries.
Bitmine
Coincraft minerProduct: CoinCraft Desk (1 TH/s) Price including shipping: $5,758 Order date: November 28th, 2013 Anticipated shipping date: February (week 1) Expected delay: 2.5 to 3 months
After a three months’ delay, Bitmine began shipping their first CoinCraft Desk units on the 12th of February.
According to CEO Giorgio Massarotto, exactly one month thereafter, about 250 units were delivered, which would average out at a production capacity of 12 units a day.
Some customers have claimed the slow production rate is due to a deal Bitmine made with PETA-MINE, allowing them to cut in front of the delivery queue, causing extra delay for ordinary customers. This has not been confirmed, however.
In addition, Bitmine is currently experiencing a shortage of 1300W power supplies, which are needed for a fully populated (1 TH/s) CoinCraft Desk. Also a result of the PETA-MINE deal, according to some commenters.
Early recipients of the hardware have also reported that the Desk’s ‘turbo mode’ doesn’t work as advertised. For a 1 TH/s Desk ‘turbo mode’ would allow hash rates up to 1.5 TH/s. In reality it doesn’t even come close to that number, they said.
Those who have ordered a CoinCraft Rig unit will have to cope with yet more delay, in the sense that shipment of these units has yet to be started. A recently published news update on the company website says this is expected in early April.
To compensate for the delay, Bitmine has a customer protection plan in place, which the company says consists of the following:
1) Shipment can be late up to a maximum of 10 days from the agreed shipment date. 2) For each subsequent 10 days of late shipping, we will add for free 10% more hashing power to your order as penalty. 3) After the 61st day of late shipment, you have the right to request a full refund and we will pay you an additional penalty of 10% of the initial order amount.
However, Bitmine recently announced on its official forum (just before it was closed down for about a week due to personal insults towards the CEO) that the maximum bonus hashing power was limited to 50% – a fact not mentioned in their customer protection plan.
This fact, in addition to the PETA-MINE story and the CoinCraft Desk’s ‘turbo mode’ issues, has led to many upset customers.
From the end of February till mid-March emails were answered with a delay of one to two weeks. During this period it was also very difficult to get a support representative on the phone.
Bitmine has worked through its support tickets backlog, however, and you can now expect a response time of about one day.
So far, Bitmine has been unable to provide an estimated shipment date for my order.
KnCMiner
KNCminer
Product: Neptune (3 TH/s) Price including shipping: $10,175 Pre-order date: January 7th, 2014 Anticipated shipping date: Q2 2014 Expected delay: None
Having taped out their 20nm ASIC chip in February, KnCMiner seems on track for the Q2 delivery of the 3 TH/s SHA-256 mining rig.
In case a delay should occur, KnCMiner has said it will compensate customers with a free hosted hashing package as part of its so-called ‘Plan B’.
Alpha Technology
Alpha Viper minerProduct: Viper (Scrypt) Miner (90 MH/s) Price excluding shipping: £5,450 ($8,984) Pre-order date: January 10th, 2014 Anticipated shipping date: July 2014 Expected delay: None
Shortly after the KnCMiner 100 MH/s scrypt miner announcement on March 3rd, Alpha Technology struck back with updated specifications for both of its upcoming miners.
The hash rate of the 5 MH/s scrypt miner has increased to 16 MH/s, while the 25 MH/s rig will be mining at 90 MH/s. Prices have not increased as a result.
Regular development updates contribute to a good customer experience so far.
CoinTerra
CoinTerra miner
Product: TerraMiner IV (2 TH/s) Price including shipping: $6,569 Order date: January 12th, 2014 Anticipated shipping date: May 2014 Expected delay: None
CoinTerra’s January and February batches were shipped out with a delay of about a month.
Because hardware specifications have been lower than anticipated – with a hash rate up to 1.72 TH/s instead of the advertised 2 TH/s and a 20% power draw increase – early customers were offered a 15% discount coupon redeemable against their next CoinTerra hardware purchase.
Seemingly now on track for delivery of later batches, they are working on improving the miner’s performance and power efficiency to meet its initial specifications.
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March 31, 2014, 04:17:14 PM |
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‘Micky’ Malka on How Bitcoin Can Help the World’s Unbanked Carrie Kirby (@carriekirby) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 16:01 BST | Analysis, Bitcoin Foundation, Coinbase, Investors, News, Regulation,
Meyer ‘Micky’ Malka – a director at the Bitcoin Foundation – has been a financial industry entrepreneur since the age of 18, first in his native Venezuela and later in Europe and the US, where he most recently founded mobile payments company Lemon Inc., now part of LifeLock.
Also founder of Ribbit Capital, Malka says he wants to use the firm “as an agent for change in the ossified and slow-to-change financial services category.” Besides investing in five companies in the space, Ribbit is investing directly in bitcoin – reportedly, along with Social+Capital Partnership, controlling 5% of the bitcoins currently in existence.
Malka sat down with CoinDesk at CoinSummit San Francisco to talk about why his firm is leading the charge to invest in the bitcoin space, how bitcoin can help people all over the world, and what needs to happen before bitcoin is ready for prime time.
Hands with coins
CoinDesk: How has your experience with hyperinflation and bank failures in Venezuela influenced your interest in bitcoin?
Malka: In Venezuela for the last 12 years, it’s been prohibitive to buy dollars, and it’s an economy where everything works in dollars. It’s become a giant black market. There’s an official exchange rate if you are importing medicine and basic goods, another exchange rate if you are a tourist, there’s another exchange rate if you are a businessman. There is another exchange rate if you want to buy dollars. It’s crazy.
There is no price if you want to hold assets outside of your country – in theory you can’t. It’s crazy that in 2014 we still have places like that.
What bitcoin can do and has been doing is: one, embracing transparency in a country where there isn’t any. It’s an asset for when you do not trust your government, which is a real aspect of what’s going on down there right now. And, two, allowing the economy to have to escape valves – ways to let this pressure out of the market.
Are there bitcoin startups in Venezuela filling this need?
No. There are no formal companies. It’s more informal entrepreneurs trying to start. Right now Venezuela is in crisis mode. It’s very hard to find people who are wiling to back entrepreneurs and fund companies when you’re in the middle of this. However, LocalBitcoins and Bitcoin Venezuela, gatherings, meetups and exchanges are coming up informally all over the country.
How does the interest in Venezuela compare to in the US?
It’s different because [here in the US] people think of bitcoins as speculation. Over there they think of it as a way to store value. There’s a big difference of mentality … what you can do with this.
When you don’t trust your government and you don’t trust their currency, the whole concept of having some sort of asset that is decentralized, that no one controls, that is scarce or limited, it’s very refreshing.
People like cars as an asset. My first car – my parents gave it to me – cost $6,000. I sold it for $11,000. That mentality is very different from what we have here.
So because bitcoin is so potentially useful to Venezuelans, does a larger portion of the population there know what it is?
No, not yet. Mainly because the country is going through so much crisis that no one is paying attention to it. But you’re starting to see more and more momentum.
You have warned that because bitcoin is in its infancy, no one should invest in it more than they can afford to lose. Yet, you have also spoken very confidently about the future of bitcoin, and Ribbit has purchased a large amount of bitcoin. Are you less cautious than you advise other people to be?
I am that cautious. I think this is an experiment in society. This is not a currency experiment. Can society trust an electronic ledger more than they can trust other aspects of life? Can they trust a ledger the same way they can trust gold or the governments printing money? That’s a big experiment. It doesn’t happen overnight. It took gold thousands of years to become what it is. It took governments three, four hundred years to become who they are.
You cannot expect bitcoin at four years old to take all that responsibility and act like a grown-up. It is still a toddler. That is a reality of this. Only as you see more people embracing it is it growing up. We’re not there yet. We’re super early. This is something you do from a venture capital perspective, something you do with what you’re willing to lose. This is not where you put your savings. That’s the difference.
I have a mandate. I’m getting paid by my investors to find asymmetric risks. That’s what a venture investor does. I cannot find anything more compelling than bitcoin to deliver that. But I also have to be able to go back to my investors and say, “Sorry, it didn’t work.” There’s nothing other than bitcoin that has that asymmetrical return right now in financial services. And also at the same time, it’s something that can really change society for the good.
At peak in the world there were a billion landlines. Now we have six billion mobile lines. It’s no coincidence that there are a billion bank accounts, but there are seven billion people. What are the chances of the banks banking the other six billion people, and what are the chances of something like bitcoin helping solve financial problems for that six billion? It’s just too big of an opportunity. That’s why I find nothing more interesting than this right now.
Are you disclosing how many bitcoins Ribbit is holding now?
No. It’s a very large position.
Will Ribbit buy more bitcoins?
No, because our mandate is to find the companies. When we bought our bitcoin position, it was in a time when there were no entrepreneurs or companies that were worth backing. Right now we’re seeing a great number of entrepreneurs and business ideas, and more interest from the ecosystem, so we’d rather back those.
Can you walk us through Ribbit’s investments in the digital currency space – what companies, how much is invested in each, and why you chose them?
We’ve announced four out of the five that we’re funding. Coinbase, Xapo, BTCjam and Pantera. Coinbase because it’s the most trusted brand in the US for consumers to buy into bitcoins. Xapo is the ultimate and the best storage solution for bitcoins in the world right now – it gives you protection and insurance. BTCjam is building the first worldwide lending network on top of bitcoin. Pantera is the largest bitcoin currency fund in the world and is structured as a hedge fund.
In aggregate, we are probably the venture investor with the most exposure in the world to bitcoins, between those investments and the coins, of course.
What are your further plans for investing in the space through Ribbit? What are the big unmet needs that you would like to see new companies filling?
Right now we need a combination of two things:
More companies that are helping customers embrace bitcoin. We need more customers in this ecosystem. We need to add zeros. Whatever is building trust in the consumer, and making them understand what bitcoin can do for them, that’s what we’re interested in investing in. Ribbit is a fund that only invests in consumer financial services. We only invest in companies that are disrupting the consumer experience with financial products. That’s our mandate, the only thing we look at. We’re very consumer-centric.
Once that happens – and it hasn’t happened yet – the second thing is using bitcoins as a protocol, not so much as a service but as a protocol. That’s something that hasn’t been done yet in things that will matter to consumers. One company that we are backing super early is creating a lending network around the world. They’re using bitcoin not as a currency, not as an asset, but as a protocol to allow people to invest and borrow from other people all over the world. That’s a user case. Somebody in India is saying I need to borrow money, and someone in Germany is willing to lend them money. You put them together.
You were recently elected to the board of the Bitcoin Foundation. Why did you want to be involved with the organization, and do you have goals for your tenure?
Meyer Micky MalkaI’ve been a serial entrepreneur in this space for 20 years. I built four companies. I’ve been regulated by eight central banks. I lived in Europe, I lived in Latin America, I now live in the US. I thought that if I really believe in bitcoin, I had to also contribute back to it. Being part of the foundation with that kind of background was a good way of getting involved in trying to shape how regulators think of bitcoin and how to expand the foundation to something global, not something US-centric.
You have said that Mt. Gox’s failure was more a case of one bad apple than a sign of a troubled system. Can you explain why you see it that way?
There were too many signals for too long that they were really inefficiently running their business. This is a company that a year ago had troubles with the law in the US; the government froze their money. They started to impede deposits and withdrawals eight months ago. It was like a slow death. It was not like overnight something blew up and trust got destroyed. This was a slow motion movie of a company going under for awhile. It shows that this is a problem of early entrepreneurs not being backed by the right investors, not having checks and balances, not working with regulators, not being transparent to their customer base. They were never transparent. They never communicated what was going on.
When you look at Coinbase’s weekly blogs or Bitstamp’s communications or Bitpay’s investors or Xapos’ insurance policies, it’s a whole different system. There are much better entrepreneurs and companies out there.
What are the biggest problems that need to be worked out with bitcoin before it can reach its potential?
Number one, we need more entrepreneurs willing to work with regulators. You cannot only depend on the foundation to solve your regulatory issues.
Two, you want to see more simple user cases that are daily life, not corner cases. We need to see more simple usages of bitcoin solving real daily problems. The ecosystem is not behaving like that, still. You need more financial institutions willing to embrace bitcoins. They don’t know if bitcoin is a friend or a foe.
With those things in place, venture capital will keep coming in, and then you create this ecosystem.
A lot of the talk about bitcoin is about who might get rich from it. Given your background in banking and low-cost financial services, can you talk about bitcoin’s promise for low-income people internationally?
This is the way I think about it: six billion people have the same device I have [Malka holds up his phone]. Can they buy a $1 app the same way you and I can? They can’t, for a few reasons. Sometimes they make $1 salaries, so they cannot afford a $1 app. Second, they don’t have a bank account to buy a $1 app. They have the same device, but they can’t use it the same way. Would they buy that app if it cost 1 cent? Probably yes. Can somebody charge 1 cent? Probably not, because Visa and MasterCard and bank transactions are more expensive than that. Can bitcoin solve that issue? Definitely. Microtransations for the six billion people. So there’s a clear user case right there, which is simply letting anybody in the world buy the same apps you and I buy, which is not happening right now.
The other one is, people want to store value in something other than gold or dollars, or something other than local currency. This has a chance of being one of those solutions.
This article has been edited for length and clarity.
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March 31, 2014, 05:49:43 PM |
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How Israel Can, and Should, Become Ground Zero for Bitcoin Michael Eisenberg (@mikeeisenberg) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 17:36 BST | Analysis, Investors, Regulation
Michael Eisenberg is a partner at early-stage venture capital fund Aleph. A key figure in Internet and software investing in Israel, he currently resides in Jerusalem and lectures on entrepreneurship at Hebrew University.
Here, he makes a case for Israel as a potential hub for digital currency innovation.
jerusalem
This week, the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) handed Israel a golden opportunity on a silver platter. Or, shall I say, a virtual gold opportunity. By deciding to tax bitcoin as an asset, like gold, the US Government effectively doomed bitcoin as a currency.
As Robinson Meyer correctly writes in The Atlantic:
“To tax bitcoin as property … destroys its fungibility: one bitcoin can no longer be exchanged for another …This was one of the original intents behind the service. Bitcoin aimed to function as a kind of digital money, meaning it had to work as a unit of account, a medium of exchange, and a store of value.”
To be clear, this does not doom bitcoin. The protocol and architecture of the block chain-based ledger will still enable endless disruption of existing industries.
However, it does cripple some of the nascent US-based entrepreneurial efforts to boost bitcoin-based commerce until the currency abstraction layer arrives on top of the bitcoin block chain. This Chamath Palihapitiya tweet is instructive in that regard:
Meyer, quoting Prof. Levitin of Georgetown, points out just how complex this tax treatment is for the common man:
“The price at which a particular bitcoin was acquired (and this is traceable) determines the capital gains on that particular bitcoin when spent. If I spend bitcoin A, which I bought at $10, but is now worth $400, I’ve got a very different tax treatment than if I spend bitcoin B, which I bought at $390. […] This means bitcoins are not fungible, and that makes it unworkable as a currency.”
I believe this opens the door for another jurisdiction, with appropriate regulatory and tax regulations, the right technology ecosystem and interested entrepreneurs to become the epicentre of bitcoin and virtual currency innovation. Israel should become exactly that place.
Israel is currently working on its bitcoin regulatory framework. The Bank of Israel and Israeli Tax Authorities should treat bitcoin as a currency and apply sure but light regulation. They should not, as Professor Danny Tziddon suggested at our Aleph Bitcoin event, simply follow the US Federal Reserve or government.
The Israeli regulators should “zag” where the US “zigged”. They should take a simple approach and not the United States’ complex approach. This would increase the velocity of bitcoin purchased by Israelis by making it a medium of exchange.
That increased velocity, and hence use, would also speed up the innovation around bitcoin, its protocol and the general commercial applications of virtual currency in Israel. Critically, it will also attract global bitcoin entrepreneurs to Israel.
Critical mass
Israel already has a critical mass of the crypto expertise and the entrepreneurial verve to enable bitcoin innovation to flourish here. We also have another advantage: we are a small country, a community, with our own currency that is not the world’s reserve currency.
Our economic system is not threatened by the emergence of a digital and decentralized currency. Our community ethos breeds trust, which is so necessary for new currencies. Hence, Israel can uniquely enable virtual currency and innovation to flourish around this digital currency revolution.
We are one of the few countries that stands to gain more as a country from the export of innovation engendered by bitcoin and virtual currencies than we stand to lose by having an alternative currency to fiat currency. Thus, we should be encouraging our legislators and regulators in Israel to be avant-garde, daring and world-leading in their policy approach toward bitcoin and virtual currencies.
This article was originally posted on Aleph.vc, and has been republished here with permission.
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March 31, 2014, 08:25:27 PM |
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Mobile Gamers Can Now Buy In-Game Perks with BTC Through SuperRewards Pete Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 20:57 BST | News
San Francisco-based social and mobile game monetization specialist SuperRewards announced on 31st March that it will allow users to buy in-game virtual currencies from publishers such as A Thinking Ape, East Side Games Studio and Ninja Kiwi using bitcoin.
Bitcoin payments made by SuperRewards customers will be processed and converted to fiat currency by fellow San Francisco-based startup Coinbase. SuperRewards will then pay game publishers in US dollars.
Speaking to CoinDesk, SuperRewards co-founder Lyal Avery, indicated that adding bitcoin as a payment option lets his company take advantage of a natural overlap between its customer base and the digital currency’s avid users.
Explained Avery:
“We feel that it’s a natural fit for someone that wants to buy virtual currency to use a digital currency.”
Unlike digital currencies, which can be exchanged for real-world money, virtual game currencies have value only within a specific game title or series of developer titles.
The most notable example would be popular social game Farmville’s Farm Bucks, which can be purchased and traded for exclusive in-game items or special advantages.
Customer demand for bitcoin
Though SuperRewards supports a number of other payment options – from scratchable prepaid cards to pay by fax, Avery says that customer demand for bitcoin has been strong.
Said Avery:
“We’ve had a bunch of emails in our support queue asking when we were going to accept bitcoin. It’s something we want to be ahead of the curve on.”
This may not be surprising given the company’s business model of facilitating alternative payments for global audiences. For example, Avery notes that he’s been following bitcoin with interest for years.
Digital currencies in gaming
Bitcoin’s potential to increase in-app payments for mobile games has been heralded as one of its most promising use cases, one encouraged by news that companies like social gaming giant Zynga and now SuperRewards are testing the waters.
However, while it may seem that digital currencies and virtual currencies are either extremely similar or competing options, Avery clarifies that they each have a specific role in online transactions. Digital currencies provide the potential to reduce publisher losses from fraud and chargebacks because they redefine the protocol of an online transaction. Virtual currencies allow those same publishers to construct digital economies and drive engagement among users.
Due to these benefits of digital currencies, Avery suggests that their expansion in the mobile and social game markets may come quickly:
“What I do see as being really interesting is the intersection between the mid-core and hardcore gaming market and how fast they’re adopting bitcoins.”
Avery notes that publishers have asked about receiving payment in bitcoin, though for the moment, this isn’t something SuperRewards is prepared to offer due to legal complexities.
About SuperRewards
Founded in 2007, SuperRewards has partnerships with more than 2,500 publishers, and was purchased by game monetization company Playerize in 2012.
Further, it is not strictly a payments company. In addition to letting users pay directly for in-game currencies, SuperRewards also allows publishers to offer free virtual currencies to users who watch videos, sign up for a new service or take a survey through its offers program.
Playerize has raised a total of $2.5m from investors that include Real Ventures and Rho Ventures.
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March 31, 2014, 08:27:58 PM |
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PBOC Officials Discuss Bitcoin as China’s Central Bank Stays Silent on RumoursPete Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 19:26 BST | Asia, News, Prices, Regulation Following as-yet-unconfirmed rumours that the People’s Bank of China would move to block domestic banks from working with digital currency exchanges this April, the price of bitcoin has declined substantially since 26th March, dropping from a high of just over $580 to today’s low of $442 on the CoinDesk USD Bitcoin Price Index. The decline has been exacerbated by the fact the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the country’s central bank, has not yet issued a formal response. Notably, this lack of action sharply contrasts the events of 21st March, when the PBOC reacted quickly to quash rumours it would ban bitcoin. As of press time on 31st March, no official word had yet been given as to whether the PBOC’s stance toward bitcoin exchanges has altered. However, two PBOC officials had independently addressed bitcoin, one via his personal microblogging site and the other at a speaking engagement at last Friday’s 2014 China Internet Conference. The officials offered seemingly contrasting takes on bitcoin and other digital currencies – with the former advising Chinese citizens to “cherish life, walk away from bitcoin”, according to The Wall Street Journal, and the latter suggesting that bitcoin was a novel currency. Though the statements may not reflect attitudes at the PBOC, they provide an insight into how the issue is perhaps being discussed at the major financial organisation. Bitcoin exchanges compared to casinos PBOC official Zhang Niannian took to his Sina Weibo account on Friday, 28th March, to compare bitcoin exchanges to casinos. Further, he called into question the legitimacy of the businesses, which he suggested could abscond with customer funds, leaving Chinese consumers with little recourse. The Wall Street Journal reported that Zhang stated that his views do not represent those of the PBOC, but that he declined its requests for further comment. According to the media outlet, it is unclear what Zhang’s official position at the bank is, though he has been named as the PBOC’s media contact on the subject of bitcoin in previous documents. Bitcoin is a currency, not legal tender The second notable statements allegedly come from Xu Nuojin, deputy head of the PBOC’s Statistics and Analysis Department, who gave the keynote speech at the 2014 China Internet Conference on Friday, 28th March. Informal translations of that speech indicate that Nuojin touched on the subject of bitcoin albeit briefly, calling bitcoin a currency, not a legal tender. Further, he seemed to acknowledge the big picture implications of digital currencies, saying: “You can understand [bitcoin] as a kind of folk currency, so it is a currency, but it is not a legal tender. This is a breakthrough concept of sovereignty currency.” Noujin went on to say that bitcoin is still not recognized by central banks as a currency, and that it lacked the recognition of an institution like the US Federal Reserve that would ensure its use. Prices remain depressed Though the comments highlight the conversations perhaps taking place between Chinese government officials, they are likely to do little to stem bitcoin’s recent slide in value. At press time, the price of bitcoin on the CoinDesk USD BPI was down 0.41%, or $1.90, for the day at $459.97. Screen Shot 2014-03-31 at 1.45.51 PM Prices have been similarly low on the CoinDesk CNY BPI, which tracks price movements at major China-based exchanges BTC China and OKCoin.
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April 01, 2014, 09:26:18 AM |
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Mt. Gox Hearing Preview: Mark Karpeles Aims for Deposition in Taiwan Pete Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) | Published on April 1, 2014 at 03:25 BST | Events, Exchanges, Law, Mt. Gox, News
The next hearing in the ongoing Chapter 15 US bankruptcy case involving troubled Japan-based bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox is set to take place in a Dallas, Texas, courtroom tomorrow (1st April).
Although the hearing follows the release of more sensational news – such as a new Reuters report that suggests Mt. Gox may have mishandled client funds as far back as early 2012, Tuesday’s court case will deal with more routine aspects of the proceedings.
At the hearing, Mt. Gox will reportedly seek to extend its US bankruptcy protection until the resolution of its Japanese bankruptcy filing, while US lawyers representing former exchange’s users will try to obtain the court’s approval to hold the deposition of former CEO Mark Karpeles in the US.
Speaking to CoinDesk, Steven Woodrow, the lawyer heading the US class action case against Mt. Gox, indicated that Karpeles is attempting to block this motion – instead suggesting that the US legal team, as well as former exchange users, depose him in Taipei, Taiwan. Those who could not attend, Karpeles suggested, could follow along remotely via a video conference link.
A deposition is a form of preliminary testimony that allow both sides to learn the facts that will presented by a witness in the formal court case. It usually takes place out of court, but those under questioning must answer under oath.
Woodrow, a partner at the Edelson law firm in Denver, believes that Karpeles should be physically present in the US for the proceedings, though, especially because he has visited the country in the past – most recently to meet with his US legal team prior to its bankruptcy filing.
Perhaps more importantly, Woodrow explains that his clients are entitled to straightforward answers from the embattled CEO:
“Really what this comes down to is a lack of transparency, there are things happening, bitcoins being moved, supposed proceedings that are occurring, other investigations that are ongoing and US creditors are at a real disadvantage.
They receive this information piecemeal in confusing ways and they don’t know what to believe. Given that lack of transparency, we need to have Mr Karpeles come to the US to answer questions in a fluid way, not force everyone to fly around the globe to depose him through an interpreter.”
Should Karpeles not be willing to visit the US, Woodrow suggested that Karpeles, and by extension his Japan-based Mt. Gox entity, should not be entitled to the protection of the US courts.
Currently, there are three court cases pending against Mt. Gox in the US, its Chapter 15 bankruptcy filing, the US class action lawsuit as well as the still-unresolved dispute with former partner CoinLab.
Questions to answer
Though the Mt. Gox bankruptcy case has been proceeding for some time, Woodrow indicated that his team is still in the discovery process, and that bringing Karpeles to the US for questioning will help it obtain the information it needs for future aspects of the case.
For example, he said, this questioning will help resolve inconsistencies with how Mt. Gox has so far handled its filings.
Woodrow notes that in Mt. Gox K.K.’s Japanese bankruptcy filing, it wrote that its primary assets in the US consisted of accounts, while in the US filing, it indicated its assets amounted to only “backup data on a server”.
Said Woodrow:
“We’re very interested in understanding where Mt. Gox’s assets are in the US, and other information that’s relevant to them coming here and saying, ‘recognize our Japanese bankruptcy’.”
Recent case updates
Woodrow also discussed how recent events have impacted the case and clarified how his team will seek to involve Japan-based financial giant Mizuho in the proceedings. Mizuho was named a defendant in the case on 16th March, as it served as the exchange’s banking partner.
Said Woodrow:
“We view [Mizuho] in a little different light, as we told the Illinois court. We view them globally as an honest dealer, whereas we have strong reason to believe that Mt. Gox was more of a fraudulent enterprise.”
As such, he noted that his team will primarily seek to obtain information from Mizuho about its relationship with Mt. Gox.
Woodrow also touched on the recent Internal Revenue Service (IRS) decision to treat digital currencies as property, but noted that exactly how this could impact the case it unknown.
He added: “It’s something that class members are going to want to pay attention to.”
Fact-finding discussions
In addition to the question of where the deposition against Karpeles will be held, Woodrow indicated the hearing would also include unspecified scheduling discussions.
While seemingly small, a thorough examination of Karpeles at this stage could prove instrumental to the case.
Woodrow notes that his team is not allowed to seek information about Mt. Gox K.K. because the bankruptcy court has frozen all related proceedings, but that it is allowed to conduct fact-finding against Mt. Gox Inc., the company’s US entity, as well as Tibanne KK, and perhaps most importantly, the company’s lead decision-maker Karpeles.
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