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bluemeanie1
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July 08, 2014, 04:06:55 PM |
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I don't think EU citizens have much to look forward to as far as monetary freedom goes. Mostly the activity will be in the US and ex-Soviet regions. Some spots in South America(eg. Uruguay) might have some interesting developments. Also Israel is bound to be a major center of activity. In the US the states to watch are CA, NV, NH, AZ, TX, ND (maybe GA and SC). There has been some relevant legislation- all it needs is some public support and we can move it through congress. EU is a lost cause(in more ways than one) https://beta.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/77-bm
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unpure
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July 08, 2014, 04:11:35 PM |
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The concern from EBA is not without baseless claim.
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bluemeanie1
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July 08, 2014, 04:15:41 PM |
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ya most of these opinions are fairly predictable if you follow the discussions. The UK is caught between a rock and hard place, because if they install truly free markets they have to do deal with their much larger and powerful little brother- the United States of America, who have the tendency to make any industry they develop look like crap. Ireland of course chimes in with the typical wackadoo ranting they're well known for. Berlin is a fairly interesting contribution as always and no doubt you'll see interesting things come out of there- it's the only Western economy that has extensive relations with the ex-Soviet regions. I tend to think the future is going to fracture Europe along north and south lines which will cause enormous stress to places like Belgium and Ireland. It's generally not looking good for Europe or the parts of the US that depend on European markets( ie NYC ). What most Euros dont realize is the US is a vast country with a huge productive interior that they know virtually nothing about. France, Spain, Italy are going to have huge problems. -bm
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giveBTCpls
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July 08, 2014, 04:17:31 PM |
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if they regulate bitcoin, it will become the opposite of what Satoshi envisioned if they don't, it will always be seen as some crazy investment and not taken serious enough by most people
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Bogleg
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July 08, 2014, 04:20:41 PM |
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if they regulate bitcoin, it will become the opposite of what Satoshi envisioned if they don't, it will always be seen as some crazy investment and not taken serious enough by most people
To join the mainstream, it will need to be regulated at some point.
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Bit_Happy
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Activity: 2114
Merit: 1040
A Great Time to Start Something!
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July 08, 2014, 04:32:58 PM |
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blah blah bah
european announce incoming
"investor warning: trading in bitcoins is risky, investors can lose aswell as gain"
.. and now to get on with my life..
It is a refreshing upgrade from China "speaking" and having the market actually pay attention.
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giveBTCpls
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July 08, 2014, 04:39:32 PM |
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if they regulate bitcoin, it will become the opposite of what Satoshi envisioned if they don't, it will always be seen as some crazy investment and not taken serious enough by most people
To join the mainstream, it will need to be regulated at some point. So it becomes pointless as it becomes just another tool controled by the powers that be. This is not what satoshi wanted.
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LostDutchman
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July 08, 2014, 04:40:58 PM |
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if they regulate bitcoin, it will become the opposite of what Satoshi envisioned if they don't, it will always be seen as some crazy investment and not taken serious enough by most people
To join the mainstream, it will need to be regulated at some point. So it becomes pointless as it becomes just another tool controled by the powers that be. This is not what satoshi wanted. No but it IS what all those who advocate for Bitcoin "regulation" wanted. Assholes, anyway.
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Anders (OP)
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July 08, 2014, 05:06:07 PM |
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Notice that the EBA wants Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies to remain unregulated: "Other things being equal, this immediate response will allow VC schemes to innovate and develop outside of the financial services sector, including the development of solutions that would satisfy regulatory demands of the kind specified above. The immediate response would also still allow financial institutions to maintain, for example, a current account relationship with businesses active in the field of VCs." -- pp. 44: http://www.eba.europa.eu/documents/10180/657547/EBA-Op-2014-08+Opinion+on+Virtual+Currencies.pdfThe cryptocurrency regulated by an governing authority would then be a new kind of virtual currency, separate from Bitcoin and other unregulated currencies I guess.
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bluemeanie1
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July 08, 2014, 05:08:38 PM |
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The cryptocurrency regulated by an governing authority would then be a new kind of virtual currency, separate from Bitcoin and other unregulated currencies I guess. in other words, looks like Bitcoin, smells like Bitcoin- but isn't Bitcoin. They want to make a Bitcoin impostor to placate the masses so they believe they have the same monetary freedom as Americans. -bm
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Anders (OP)
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July 08, 2014, 07:29:33 PM |
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The cryptocurrency regulated by an governing authority would then be a new kind of virtual currency, separate from Bitcoin and other unregulated currencies I guess. in other words, looks like Bitcoin, smells like Bitcoin- but isn't Bitcoin. They want to make a Bitcoin impostor to placate the masses so they believe they have the same monetary freedom as Americans. -bm Competing cryptocurrencies are good for the market. The problem is that the virtual currency regulated by a governing authority would have the unfair advantage of being accepted by ordinary banks and other financial services, while Bitcoin and other unregulated cryptocurrencies would be shunned by the mainstream financial markets in the EU.
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ljudotina
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July 08, 2014, 07:34:47 PM |
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and warns financial institutions to keep their distance until the industry is regulated What's so bad about it? BTC is not going anywhere (in large scale) untill there is legal background. USA, EU or anywhere else in the world. Yes, BTC does not need regulation as it has no boundaries, but legal infrastructure can greatly help and speed up adoption, and that's what we really want, isnt it? BTC lovers want it, BTC investors want it, there is practicly not anyone who doesnt want it....
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Beliathon
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July 08, 2014, 08:36:36 PM |
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and warns financial institutions to keep their distance until the industry is regulated What's so bad about it? BTC is not going anywhere (in large scale) untill there is legal background. USA, EU or anywhere else in the world. Yes, BTC does not need regulation as it has no boundaries, but legal infrastructure can greatly help and speed up adoption, and that's what we really want, isnt it? BTC lovers want it, BTC investors want it, there is practicly not anyone who doesnt want it.... The beauty (and true power) of any decentralized pseudonymous cryptocurrecy is that unlike banked fiat, but like cash and digital information, obedience to any regulation is strictly optional. These regulations are fundamentally unenforceable. In other words:
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Anders (OP)
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July 09, 2014, 11:33:38 AM |
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Bitcoin has shaken up the thousand years old banking sector. That's pretty impressive. The EBA report makes it clear that the top banking authorities take cryptocurrencies very seriously. They even seem to want to implement their own virtual currency with strict regulations and personal ID requirements etc. Is it because the current EU currency, the euro, sucks? If they will try to launch a mainstream cryptocurrency I hope they will make it peer-to-peer and that the tough regulations will be for banks and exchange services etc, not for us ordinary people who should be able to make transactions directly person to person (physical or legal), and with ZERO transaction fees. And with super fast transactions, say a fraction of a second for micro payments and payments in shops etc. Is it possible to have transaction speeds below a second and still have it secure? Bitcoin has a transaction speed of about 10 minutes per transaction.
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herzmeister
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July 09, 2014, 01:05:01 PM |
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Is it possible to have transaction speeds below a second and still have it secure? Bitcoin has a transaction speed of about 10 minutes per transaction. if it's centralized, sure. Also Ripple has instant transaction verification, and it's decentralized (in theory), as it's practically a web of trust. Banks could implement Ripple, or just rip (ahem) it off.
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Anders (OP)
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July 09, 2014, 02:22:30 PM |
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Is it possible to have transaction speeds below a second and still have it secure? Bitcoin has a transaction speed of about 10 minutes per transaction. if it's centralized, sure. Also Ripple has instant transaction verification, and it's decentralized (in theory), as it's practically a web of trust. Banks could implement Ripple, or just rip (ahem) it off. Only the standard for the protocol etc will be centralized; the actual operation of the virtual currency will be decentralized it seems: "A governance authority may, at first, appear incompatible with the conceptual origins of VCs as a decentralised scheme that does not require the involvement of a central bank or government. However, the mandatory creation of a scheme governance body does not imply that VC units have to be centrally issued. This function can remain decentralised and be run through, for example, a protocol and a transaction ledger." -- pp. 40: http://www.eba.europa.eu/documents/10180/657547/EBA-Op-2014-08+Opinion+on+Virtual+Currencies.pdfI wonder if the currency can remain decentralized and have super fast transaction times of under a second. Maybe it's possible! The miners don't have to function exactly as in Bitcoin. Some proof of work algorithm would probably still be needed though for security reasons.
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herzmeister
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July 09, 2014, 04:15:34 PM |
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well whateves, their effort will be in vain, trying to replace something open with something proprietary, it will be like Email vs De-Mail
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Anders (OP)
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July 09, 2014, 04:30:08 PM |
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well whateves, their effort will be in vain, trying to replace something open with something proprietary, it will be like Email vs De-Mail It seems that the EBA is aiming at something that is like Bitcoin for transactions between personal wallets: "With transfers and exchanges of VC units (other than person-to-person transactions between wallets), information on the payer and the payee has to be exchanged with the relevant scheme governance authority." -- pp. 40: http://www.eba.europa.eu/documents/10180/657547/EBA-Op-2014-08+Opinion+on+Virtual+Currencies.pdfSo surprisingly consumer-to-consumer transactions will go peer-to-peer without any authority or middleman interfering.
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