Thursday, October 30, 2014

Bitreserve Launches With Real-Time Transparency Data


Bitreserve, the latest attempt to introduce bitcoin to the mass market, opened for business today. The platform lets users store their bitcoin and convert it to a number of different currencies. It also promises users total transparency in the form of a balance sheet updated in real-time.


The platform has been operating in beta since May, but its promised transparency options have only now become available to users. At launch, a new status page has gone live, detailing Bitreserve's assets and its obligations to its users.


At press time, Bitreserve's assets stood at $166,091 and its obligations were $113,025. According to those figures, it has 103% more assets than obligations.



Monday, October 27, 2014

Gallery: 'Eye of God' Painting Sells for €10,000 in Bitcoin


A painting depicting bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto sold for 35 BTC (roughly €10,000) at the most recent Inside Bitcoins Conference and Expo in Israel.


Called 'The Eye of God', the work was created by local artist Xania Dorfman and bought by Yoshi Goto, CEO of bitcoin ASIC developer Bitmain. Goto got his first glimpse of the work when setting up his booth at the two-day conference, which ran from 19th to 20th October and included speakers such as Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin and bitcoin developer Peter Todd.


"It was there, and it was tempting," Goto said. "I was thinking if I don't purchase the picture, I wouldn't have a right to make a copy or distribute it. I thought, maybe I was crazy, but I wanted to find a way to use it."



CoinDesk BPI Spike Caused By LakeBTC Price Ticker Error


The Bitcoin News BPI spiked this weekend due to an error in the data reported by the LakeBTC exchange.


From 09:18 UTC to 12:24 UTC on 26th October, LakeBTC's price ticker reported a bid value of $1,000. Immediately prior to this, the value was $351.34.


Oct 27 - BPI Error A LakeBTC data caching issue caused its price ticker to show an erroneous, high, bid value.

"We thought it was the trades but the trade history looked fine. Product support reviewed all the logs and cache for that time period and found it was a rare data caching issue," said a spokesperson from LakeBTC.



Saturday, October 25, 2014

Bitcoin Book Seeks to Debunk Myth with Math


bit con


The latest book by financial crime journalist and fiction author Jeffrey Robinson is making its way around bitcoin missionaries, mercenaries and visionaries following its release last month.


BitCon: The Naked Truth About Bitcoin is a critical evaluation of the fantasy and fallacy of the dreamers and journalists that brought bitcoin to notoriety. Its reporting covers all manner of bitcoin debate – the currency, the commodity, the technology, the crime, the scandal, the business, the politics, the regulation, the economics – offering the bitcoin skeptics’ usual condemnations of the currency, but backed by numbers.



Thursday, October 23, 2014

Sidechains White Paper Imagines New Future for Digital Currency Development


Sidechains


A group of bitcoin core developers and cryptographic technology experts have released a new proposal that could reshape the digital currency ecosystem if implemented.


The sidechains concept has long been argued as a solution to what many see as a volatile and self-damaging sector of the cryptocurrency ecosystem. Described by some as the “altcoin killer”, sidechains allow for the creation of multi-block chain ecosystems in which assets can be exchanged and transferred.



Tuesday, October 21, 2014

New Bitcoin Exchange Says Australia is Ideal Location


A new bitcoin exchange launched yesterday in Sydney, Australia, with an aim to improving general consumer confidence in the digital currency market.


Called Independent Reserve, the exchange is promoting both itself and its Australian base as secure and well-regulated, saying the country's AAA credit rating and political stability made it the ideal place to locate.


It will aim first at the local and New Zealand markets before expanding overseas to the financial centers of Asia, though says it already has the ability to electronically verify customers in minutes from over 20 countries by working with identity specialists Global Data Company.



Monday, October 20, 2014

Chinese Exchange Yuanbao Now Lets Customers Mortgage Their Bitcoin


Chinese exchanges have discovered another model in their quest to add new platform services: fiat currency-based peer-to-peer (P2P) loans using bitcoins and other digital assets as collateral.


While most such services are aimed at large bitcoin holders who wish to make use of their holding’s value without actually selling, some exchanges allow mortgaging of other assets like litecoin, car registration and even telephone numbers.


Unlike bitcoin-related P2P lending platforms in other countries, such as BTCJam, these Chinese services do not actually lend digital currencies. Instead, users borrow and lend fiat currency only.



Sunday, October 19, 2014

Gems Bitcoin App Lets Users Earn Money From Social Messaging



Gems


A new social messaging app is aiming to disrupt the established social media business model through the power of crypto 2.0 technology. If big social media companies make money by monetizing data, the Gem project asks, shouldn’t users also profit from the service?


Launching today at Inside Bitcoins Tel Aviv, Gems is seeking to uncover whether consumers can be compelled to change the way they view their relationship with social media, and in the process, embrace cryptocurrency.


Though lofty in its ideals, lead developer Daniel Peled told Bitcoin News that users should find the Gems social messaging service familiar. Peled compared Gems to Whatsapp, with one addition, the user’s username is also an alias for their bitcoin address, an innovation that allows Gems users to send both bitcoin and gems, an in-app token that will effectively decentralize ownership of the network itself.


Unlike with Whatsapp, users are incentivized to grow the network, receiving gems for certain actions. Gems can then be exchanged for bitcoin and ultimately sold for fiat dollars, Peled explained, meaning users are essentially paid for spreading the network:



“Everything we do on Facebook or Whatsapp, [the companies are] making money out of it. They’re using our information, they’re selling it to advertisers and we don’t see anything out of it. We think that the users should be rewarded much more for using the application. So anything that we can do to incentive people, we do it with Gems.”



Gems is now available for both iPhone and Android users.


Empowered by Counterparty


On a technical level, Gems is built on top of the Counterparty protocol, the peer-to-peer decentralized exchange that allows for asset issuance and trading.


Upon registering, Peled said, users receive a passphrase to their Gems account, which is actually working with Counterwallet, the project’s web wallet. However, for users, all of this technical maneuvering happens behind the scenes, which Peled and his team hope will encourage more users into the bitcoin ecosystem.


“You get a passphrase and a wallet built inside the social messenger, and because your name is also an alias to your phone number and to your bitcoin wallet, it makes it very easy to send Gems and bitcoins inside the application. It’s just like sending a text message to a friend,” Peled said. “You don’t need to know too much about the public address or private key, it makes everything very, very simple.”


Peled added that Gems does not save or keep user passwords on its servers. Privacy-conscious users also don’t have to provide a phone number, though Peled said that, as with Skype, this makes it easier for users to identify others on the Gems network with whom they may want to message.


Expanding bitcoin’s appeal


Peled indicated that the Counterparty protocol was critical to the Gems platform, as it enabled the development team to create assets without worrying about mining infrastructure, as this function is provided by the bitcoin network.


However, he disagrees that Gems is perhaps not giving back to bitcoin by not creating its own block chain, arguing that new Gems users will increase the size of the bitcoin network.


“At the end of the day, trying to bring new people onboard, for every new person I talk to, I need to open a bitocin wallet for him, explain the user experience, explain the private key and the public key and cold storage,” Peled said, noting the issues he hopes Gems will solve. “It’s very, very difficult and it takes one to two hours.”


Sending messages on the bitcoin block chain itself, rather than a cloud service, he said, would slow down Gems, making it less appealing to consumers.


“I haven’t seen a good social application built on top of bitcoin that works as smoothly as Whatsapp,” Peled explained. “So, the messaging side is just like any other messaging application, we use a server infrastructure, but the ownership and the reward model is built using block chain technology.”


Building value for Gems


Of course, there remains the question of why users would want to accumulate Gems given that they may fluctuate and even fall in value. However, Peled sees Gems as being more compelling than other altcoins on the market, as the strength of the platform’s userbase will add value to the asset.


“There are two things that will give real value to Gems, one is the users, 40% of the Gems are going to be distributed in a couple of years for inviting people in the network,” Peled said. “The second thing is we’re trying to build a social network that is more fair for the user.”


Notably, users can also earn Gems by choosing to view advertisements on the platform. Publishers, in turn, will need to use Gems in order to market to app users.


“Sending messages to your friends is free, but if you want to send unsolicited messages or if advertisers want to send messages to a specific target, then they would have to spend Gems,” Peled explained.


Users can elect to see advertising and be rewarded with Gems, or opt out of this part of the service. However, the difference with Gems, Peled said, is that unlike Facebook and other alternatives, his platform gives the ultimate choice to the user.


Long term, Gems will seek to encourage application development on its platform, allowing entrepreneurs to build in-app features that leverage the currency.


“I can think of a lot of things you can do when you have a social network that is monetized,” Peled added.


Pre-sale coming soon


Like many other crypto 2.0 projects, Gems is also seeking to promote its initiative through an initial pre-sale of its native currency in what it characterized as an attempt to build a community of dedicated users, though the process has proved to be a point of contention for other projects in the sector.


However, Peled said that Gems believes there are real advantages to appealing to the bitcoin community rather than relying on VC capital.


“Basically we’re building a small community. A lot of us are already trying to add people to the ecosystem so if we give them a tool to show they can download this app, that it’s a lot of fun, it’s basically a tool that people are looking for,” Peled said.


Images via Gems


Crypto 2.0




Saturday, October 18, 2014

Why Brazil’s Bitcoin Market is Struggling to Ignite


brazil map


For better or worse, the story of bitcoin in Brazil begins with Leandro César Marciano.


An IT consultant from Belo Horizonte, Marciano founded and later sold the country’s largest bitcoin exchange Mercado Bitcoin following an alleged security breach, and launched Bitcoin Rain, an investment scheme suspended by the government and later likened to the infamous US ponzi scheme, Bitcoin Savings & Trust. Informal estimates suggest the ventures resulted in the loss of 4,000 BTC in consumer funds.



Review: Bitcoin ‘Vault’ Trezor Lives Up to its Name


Although most bitcoin users rely on freely-available web and mobile wallets, recent security scares clearly illustrate the need for safer alternatives. Here, we take a closer look at one device designed to address the problem.


The Trezor hardware wallet is targeted at bitcoiners who wish to maintain a substantial stash of coins, but do not want to rely on third-party bitcoin storage services or impractical forms of cold storage.


Developed by Czech startup SatoshiLabs, the $119 device is essentially a USB dongle designed to add an extra authentication layer to all outbound bitcoin transactions.