Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Inside New Jersey's Proposed Digital Currency Jobs Creation Act

A bill recently submitted to the New Jersey State Legislature proposes tax incentives that would target bitcoin miners as well as other digital currency businesses in the state.

The purpose of the Digital Currency Jobs Creation Act, according to its authors, “is to promote innovation in the burgeoning digital currency industry, to protect consumers of digital currency services and to create jobs in the State of New Jersey”.

Among the specific incentives included in the draft is a proposed tax break on energy and utility bills for digital currency miners.

The bill reads:

“Receipts from retail sales of energy and utility service to a digital currency servicer or a company registered under 'The Digital Currency Job Creation Act' for use or consumption directly and primarily in the creation of digital currency, including mining, shall be exempt from the tax imposed under the 'Sales and Use Tax Act.'"

The text establishes that digital currency companies would become eligible for funding under existing law created to fuel job creation in New Jersey.

Notably, the bill also includes a passage that, if approved, would empower the state to accept tax payments in bitcoin through a previously approved electronic payments system.

In line with its stated purpose of fostering digital currency innovation, the bill would stop state municipalities “from prohibiting, abridging, levying a tax upon or otherwise restricting the creation, retention, transmission or any other use of the digital currency within the state, except as otherwise provided for in the bill”.

The New Jersey Commissioner of Banking and Insurance would oversee the state's digital currency sector should the measure be approved.

Job growth boosters

The bill would allow qualifying digital currency companies the ability to receive tax breaks provided they meet certain job creation thresholds.

The tax breaks would stem from the Grow New Jersey Assistance Act, a job-boosting measure signed into law in 2012 by Governor Chris Christie and later adjusted last year.

“For a digital currency servicer to be eligible for that program, the minimum number of new or retained full-time jobs would be a minimum of 10 new or 25 retained full-time jobs, which is less than is required for certain other types of business,” the bill reads.

Digital currency companies would be able to receive additional tax breaks should they exceed these figures.

“Digital currency servicers and registrants would be eligible for, in addition to the base amount of the tax credit, an additional $5,000 for each new or retained full-time job each year,” the bill adds.

Rules for custodians

The bill echoes other state-based proposals for bitcoin regulation in its approach toward digital currency custodians, outlining the requirements related to cybersecurity, consumer risk disclosure and recordkeeping.

Among the stipulations included in the bill is a requirement that officers, major stockholders and employees that actually handle funds need to submit fingerprints to state regulators.

The bill would also empower the Commissioner of Banking and Insurance to seek injunction against companies that violate the stipulations, giving the state regulator the ability to levy as much as $5,000 per violation.

The full draft text of the Digital Currency Jobs Creation Act can be found below:

NJ Digital Currency Jobs Creation Act

Image via Shutterstock

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Tuesday, May 26, 2015

New Jersey Settles Case Against Controversial Student Bitcoin Project

Official 'Life on Bitcoin' Documentary Trailer Released

Nearly two years after initial filming began, the official trailer for the documentary Life on Bitcoin has been released.

Starring Beccy and Austin Craig, the long-awaited film follows the newlyweds as they embark on a 100-day quest to pay for all their needs with bitcoin. The Craigs became a media sensation in 2013 for their exploits, garnering headlines and eventually raising $70,000 on Kickstarter to promote the film.

The preview opens with a montage of scenes from the couple's travels interspersed with news clips of anchors analyzing the technology. Elsewhere, Fusion senior editor Kashmir Hill makes an appearance to build suspense for the narrative.

Hill states:

"When I first heard that Austin and Beccy were going to live on bitcoin for three months, I was pretty worried for them."

Also included are interviews with bitcoin luminaries such as Jeffrey Tucker that aim to perhaps exaggerate the government's supposedly hostile stance toward digital currencies, and scenes that showcase the couple persuading merchants to accept bitcoin.

The Craigs indicated that they hope to travel in support of film screenings to be held this summer.

For more on the trials and tribulations of the Life on Bitcoin journey, revisit our 2013 interview.

Images via Life on Bitcoin

Life on BitcoinLifestyle

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Accenture: UK Government Should Regulate Bitcoin Wallets

The UK government should apply the same regulation and identification requirements to bitcoin wallets as it does to bank accounts, Accenture has advised.

Documents obtained by Bitcoin News through a Freedom of Information request show the multinational management consulting company's response to the Treasury’s call for information on digital currencies.

Dated December 2014, the company takes a very positive stance on cryptocurrencies, such as bitcoin, highlighting their potential.

Accenture states:

“Digital currencies are at an early stage of development and usage, but they are here to stay and the technology has the potential to reinvent many aspects of financial services.”

However, the document also recognises the risks associated with these currencies, including price volatility, lack of consumer protection and the potential loss of funds, for example by forgetting a private key, or through a fraudster gaining access.

Suggested regulation

Accenture believes bitcoin’s biggest problem currently is its association with, and use in, money laundering. It claims the identification requirements applied to bank accounts should also be applied to bitcoin wallets.

“In the same way that governments require identifiable bank accounts (through named accounts and know-your-customer checks), a requirement for named, identifiable digital currency wallets would be a core component of a safe, legitimate digital currency economy,” the document reads.

It goes on to suggest a centralised authority may need to be established to “supervise and monitor the use of digital currency wallets”.

Accenture stresses repeatedly in the document that regulation should be limited to digital currency wallets, rather than applied to digital currencies more broadly.

Any regulation that is created, needs to be “reasonable and proportionate”, with clear guidance on the rules and responsibilities for the participants of digital currency wallet schemes.

The submission goes on to say:

“Heavy regulation (or application of historical frameworks) could stifle innovation – to avoid this, an agile regulatory regime should be set up to be flexible and develop specifically for digital currencies as the digital currency economy grows.”

Limited actions

In the 16-page document, Accenture suggests the government take limited actions, which could include:

  • Regulating so that digital currency wallets can be identified uniquely and recognised eg through KYC checks
  • Recognising and authorising organisations (Authorised Digital Currency Wallet Institutions – eg banks) that can provide identity checks and verification services to enable identifiable digital currency wallets
  • Providing a framework of clear rules and responsibilities for the participants of the digital currency wallet market on how to place controls on the digital currency wallets to help prevent financial crimes (AML and sanctions).

The document claims that the above measures would “catalyse the development of the safe, legitimate digital currency economy”.

The black economy

The submission notes that, under the proposal, bitcoin users would still be able to open and operate anonymous digital currency wallets, but these would fall outside of the “legitimate economy” and reside in the “black economy”.

Because the blockchain acts as a ledger, recording all bitcoin transactions, even those that occur in the black economy will be noted.

“Not only will this help with law enforcement and forensic analysis of anonymous transactions, it will be difficult (if not impossible) for digital currency used in the digital currency black economy to be laundered undetected back into the legitimate digital currency economy,” Accenture said.

Authorised Institutions

Accenture proposes the creation of an Authorised Digital Currency Wallet Institutions list, similar to the list of Authorised Payment Institutions.

These institutions would be authorised and regulated by a central authority, such as the FCA and they would be required to:

  • Issue digital currency wallets and identify the digital currency wallet owner through KYC checks
  • Maintain a compliance status of each digital currency wallet
  • Monitor digital currency wallet usage to check payments are between other identifiable digital currency wallets
  • Monitor transactions for adherence to sanctions lists
  • Be able to freeze digital currency wallets where they are being used for suspicious activity.

Encouraging bank participation

Accenture believes that, without Government intervention, UK banks are not likely to provide digital currency businesses with support, which will further hamper payments innovation and drive cryptocurrency companies abroad.

The document claims banks are “very supportive” of fintech startups, but are just reluctant to be exposed to fines from UK and international regulators for AML and sanctions breaches. It adds:

“The potential upside from taking on startups as customers with possible AML exposures pales into insignificance compared to the fines they risk.”

Experimenting with blockchain tech

In an interview with Bitcoin News, an Accenture spokesperson explained why the company had decided to participate in the government’s call for information.

She said cryptocurrencies are important for the firm’s financial services clients, so Accenture has developed points of view on this area. The spokesperson added:

“We are currently experimenting with blockchain technologies in our Technology Labs to test use cases relevant to our clients’ interests. The consultation was an opportunity to share our thought leadership with the government and contribute to the debate.”

Last week, Bitcoin News revealed Citi’s response to the call for information, which suggested the UK government should create its own digital currency.

View the full submission by Accenture here:

Accenture - HMT Consultation on Digital Currencies

Accenture image via Flickr.

AccentureRegulationUK

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Sunday, May 24, 2015

Book Review: Digital Gold is an Invaluable Page-Turner

Title: Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the inside story of the misfits and millionaires trying to reinvent money

Author: Nathaniel Popper

Publication date: 19th May 2015

Summary: Remember the headlines that first mentioned bitcoin, Mt. Gox, the Silk Road and Bitcoin Jesus? Those were fleeting peaks on the events unfolding behind closed doors in the development of bitcoin. Digital Gold is your backstage pass to those events. It’s a compelling and extensive narrative that gives a reader a personal look at the heroes and villains of bitcoin’s brief history.

Digital Gold presents the most extensive history of bitcoin thus far, making it an invaluable page-turner for bitcoin aficionados and newbies alike. It follows the ineptitude of Mt. Gox CEO Mark Karpeles (and his cat), the rise and demise of the Dread Pirate Roberts and bitcoin evangelists Roger Ver and Charlie Shrem. Digital Gold is a must read for anyone interested in understanding what many consider to be the greatest invention since the Internet.

digital gold cover

An accessible account

In April 2013, New York Times tech and finance reporter Nathaniel Popper described the Winkelvoss twins as “the first prominent figures in the largely anonymous bitcoin world”. This was the first time the finance and technology New York Times reporter covered bitcoin, but would not be the last.

The bitcoin world is less anonymous today, but until Digital Gold, we’ve lacked an accessible account that traces today’s growing bitcoin industry back to the early days. Digital Gold is the perfect resource for the reader interested in the work that preceded bitcoin and the extent of its uses today.

Bitcoin is constantly editorialized; while some write its obituary (again and again), others envision its revolutionary future. Nathaniel Popper approaches the scene as a curious observer who condenses the passionate voices of bitcoin visionaries and nemeses into a detailed narrative.

He first began covering it when the Winklevoss twins started purchasing large quantities of bitcoin in 2013. Since then, he has maintained a remarkably objective tone in his reporting. His continued reporting on bitcoin through the past few years has helped bring bitcoin’s saga into mainstream media and equipped him with the experience to write this book, the first of its kind.

The beginning of the adventure

The adventure begins in old chat rooms, where cypherpunks pioneered public/private key cryptography, and picks up steam from there. It explores the first bitcoin transactions, the first bitcoin giveaways and the early stage discoveries, giving an intimate account of bitcoin’s protagonists that lets the reader watch over their shoulders.

Following the characters from news headlines makes for a nervous first hand ride as we watch the rise of the Silk Road and Mt. Gox, with all the early problems that each faced.

A great strength of the book is not just the extensiveness of the research, but the way in which it is fit together. It both maintains the intimacy of exploring bitcoin’s past with the main characters and weaves the different threads in and out of each other as the bitcoin community grows in size. One of these cases comes from bitcoin’s use in an Argentine black-market currency exchange (a teaser is available here).

Seeking to curb inflation, the Argentine government put in place currency exchange controls to stem the flow of dollars out of the country. They placed no such restrictions on bitcoin and so “bitcoin ... was on display in Buenos Aires, at the first conference hosted by Bitcoin Argentina”.

With conventional banking services, event organizer Diego [Gutierrez Zaldivar] would receive 595 pesos for a $100 ticket after a 20 day wait. However, using Argentine startup BitPagos, each $100 ticket yielded around 920 pesos. No longer a thing of speculative uses, bitcoin is now used by freelancers and businesses working with foreigners.

These currency controls are response to a larger problem in Argentina; chronic inflation which regularly destroys family savings. This life experience is what stirs Argentine entrepreneur Wences Casares to action and what draws Popper into leaning heavily on his perspective.

A candidate for most interesting man in the world by Popper’s account, Casares acts as the first high profile bitcoin evangelist. He introduces it to many notable players to bitcoin, each of which will lead the reader to say ‘ah-ha’ out loud. Casares also argues for the widespread adoption of bitcoin as a digital asset (a perfected version of gold), making for a rather uncoincidental title of the book.

He serves largely as the protagonist of Popper’s work and his involvement goes well beyond organizing the first Argentine Bitcoin Meetup and running what was for a time the best funded bitcoin startup.

Around the world

Popper uses Argentina to describe real uses in a unique political economy but also jumps around the world to Japan, China, and Tahoe to describe the many other niches of bitcoin’s development. In doing so, Popper never fails to include a bit of bemused comedy.

He follows the rise and fall of the comically inept Mt. Gox CEO Mark Karpeles (“He was two years into running the world’s largest bitcoin exchange, but had still not attended a single bitcoin event abroad – a fact that he blamed on the sickness of his cat, Tisane, who needed daily shots that Mark believed only he could administer”) and the rise (and fall) of Silk Road (the customer review of anonymous merchants fed a “feedback loop [that] created a remarkably engaged online community in which pot and heroin highs were discussed with the same level of analytical detail that Consumer Reports brought to its toaster reviews”).

Popper briefly describes the spending habits of the new bitcoin elite, illuminating the seedy underbelly that turned many away from bitcoin. Not whitewashing the behavior of the some early adopters, Popper covers the rise and fall of BitInstant and Charlie Shrem (“bitcoin’s first felon”) as well.

Popper uses this opportunity to show a transformation in much of the bitcoin community away from the early crypto anarchists who supported bitcoin for philosophical reasons, towards a growing desire from governments, individuals, and those looking to build bitcoin businesses for sensible regulation. Much to the relief of the reader, Popper never brings up tulips. While they were mentioned in his first article on bitcoin, Popper has avoided the temptation that traps so many. Bitcoin, he alludes, is here to stay.

Eager anticipation

Unraveling the story you already partially know, each page of Digital Gold is read with eager anticipation. It builds from unfamiliar territory before bitcoin was in the news and with each chapter it slowly tilts the focus from the past to the future. This pivot comes late in the book as Popper hurriedly tries to tie up loose ends while maintaining the objectivity that makes the rest of the book so excellent. It leaves the reader wanting more, sparking a curiosity about the many things that have happened since mid 2014.

This abruptness is notable when Popper introduces M-Pesa (a mobile money) only fleetingly. Many bitcoiners excitedly prophesy that bitcoin will help bank the unbanked and will supplant remittance services like Western Union. Popper mentions these cases and their supporting voices, but sheds no light on the use of bitcoin in the developing world.

If many in the community are so convinced this is bitcoin’s killer application, why doesn’t Popper explore it further? A compelling alternative would be to introduce these ideas (among others) in an epilogue that looked towards the future of bitcoin and explained these use cases a bit more.

While Popper undoubtedly wished to discover mysterious bitcoin forefather, Satoshi Nakamoto, Digital Gold makes clear that it doesn’t matter much who Satoshi really is. He/she/they might own a significant number of coins, but just as bitcoin mining and transaction confirmation is decentralized, so is the work and effort which has brought it along this far.

Nakamoto set the ball in motion but Popper shows that the fate of bitcoin is now in the hands of investors and ideologues who continue to work on bitcoin and the infrastructure around it.

Bitcoin is no longer driven by Silk Road purchases, unregistered gambling sites, and the passionate crypto anarchists who made it viable in the the early years. Today, bitcoin is slowly gaining respect with industry leaders and, reading between the lines, Digital Gold coyly hints what may be around the next corner.

Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the inside story of the misfits and millionaires trying to reinvent money is available on Amazon.

Book image via Shutterstock.

Book ReviewsNathaniel Popper

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Will the New UK Government Create a Bitcoin Hub?

UK parliament

Josh Blatchford is CMO of London-based bitcoin startup BTC.sx. 

Last week in the United Kingdom, the Conservative Party was re-elected into power. This article explores what their plans to regulate bitcoin might look like and whether they are capable of creating a bitcoin hub in the UK.

The last government unveiled its stance on bitcoin back in April. Along with a call for information, it stated: "The government intends to apply anti-money laundering regulation to digital currency exchanges in the UK, to support innovation and prevent criminal use. The government will formally consult on the proposed regulatory approach early in the next parliament."

Entrepreneurs need not run for the hills – or silicon valleys. Although 'regulation' is not always the most friendly of words, the government does appear to have a light-touch approach thus far.

Furthermore, the Bank of England (BoE) has taken a cautiously optimistic viewpoint on digital currencies. In February, its One Bank Research Agenda came to the following conclusion:

"While existing private digital currencies have economic flaws which make them volatile, the distributed ledger technology that their payment systems rely on may have considerable promise"

The BoE also outlined the potential to create its own government-issued currency based on bitcoin technology.

The BoE is supposed to support the economic policies of whatever party gains power. However, the BoE and the Conservative Party share the same optimism for bitcoin.

Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne welcomed the BoE's report, tweeting:

All in all, the government has set high expectations that incoming regulation should be favourable.

Predicting bitcoin regulation

With the new Parliament formed this week, we can expect a formal consultation, originally promised by the government, sometime this summer. Until then, we are left to guess what bitcoin regulation will look like.

Given the past comments the government has made and the responses given in the call for information, we can confidently expect the following:

  • Regulation will initially apply to exchanges, which trade fiat and digital currencies.
  • Know-your-customer requirements will be necessary to make bitcoin less anonymous.
  • Existing anti-money laundering frameworks are likely to be used.
  • Law enforcement will have the ability to confiscate bitcoin used for criminal purposes.
  • A regulatory 'sandbox' will be formed by HM Treasury for FinTech startups to experiment with.
  • The government aims to develop 'pioneering voluntary standards for consumer protection'.

Supporting bitcoin innovation

A major promise from the government is the creation of standards for consumer protection. To date, consumers buying products and services have forgone their rights usually covered by the Consumer Rights Act.

A set of similar standards for bitcoin would be the first of its kind. Admittedly, this is unlikely to make a significant difference in consumer adoption of bitcoin. But it may encourage existing bitcoin users to choose to do business with UK-based startups over others abroad. This would give Tech City another competitive advantage over Silicon Valley.

This is a view shared by Marco Santori, global policy counsel at Blockchain and a leading expert on bitcoin law:

"Blockchain has great hope for the UK as a digital currency-friendly jurisdiction. We see the UK authorities learning from mistakes and successes from across the pond. In particular, the clarity and research evident in the Treasury's recent publication on digital currencies demonstrates its true desire to get the details right, and to learn along with the industry in the process."

The regulatory sandbox should also be positive for bitcoin startups in the UK. The biggest regulatory concern among most bitcoin startups is that banks can wield greater influence in shaping specific policies. However, the sandbox will play an important role in ensuring these policies are not too draconian.

It will only be the FinTech startups interacting with customers in bitcoin that can truly test these policies. Ultimately, if implemented well, a sandbox should filter out impractical policies for startups.

The last and most important opportunity for the UK FinTech industry can be for the government to 'one-up' US regulators. New York's Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) and its superintendent Benjamin Lawsky have proposed a 'BitLicense'.

ben lawsky, NYDFS Benjamin Lawsky introduced the NYDFS BitLicence proposal. Source: Follow the Coin

This BitLicense has been heavily criticised for being prohibitive. For example, the following information is required for every bitcoin transaction: "The identity and physical addresses of the parties involved, the amount or value of the transaction, including in what denomination purchased, sold, or transferred, the method of payment, the date(s) on which the transaction was initiated and completed, and a description of the transaction."

Adam Draper, CEO of Boost VC, heavily criticised the proposals, stating: "The rules don’t include a significantly flexible on-ramp for small startups to build and innovate their products, killing potentially disruptive technology before it can even start."

Adam also estimated that the cost of compliance for a startup is $2m.

The final draft of the BitLicense is set to be published later this month. If the UK government truly wishes to "create a world-leading environment", it would make sense for it to monitor the reception the BitLicense receives. They might even go as far as deliberately under-cutting the NYDFS' requirements to attract more bitcoin startups to the UK.

Tom Robinson, Elliptic COO, has a slightly different perspective. He believes the cost of doing business is not the only regulatory issue to consider:

"I believe that there is a real intent from the government to foster innovation in digital currency and blockchain technologies, but the critical question for our industry is what exactly does a world-leading environment looks like? Light touch regulation might make it easier and cheaper to run a digital currency business, but without the rubber stamp of full regulatory oversight it could remain challenging to gain the trust of banking partners and consumers."

Overall, while the government's proposals to date sound good, they do leave many unaddressed issues.

The unaddressed issues

Bank accounts are a nightmare for bitcoin users and startups in the UK. There are plenty of stories about personal accounts being closed down and business accounts being rejected for being associated with bitcoin. The main reason for this, banks often say, is 'reputational risk'. Whether they have a reputation worth protecting is another debate. However, in their defence, at least part of the problem is a lack of regulation. Banks simply will not touch bitcoin for the time being.

A bitcoin entrepreneur, who did not wish to be identified, describes the issue as critical:

"Banks in the UK are unwilling to bank any company trading bitcoins but more importantly if you have the word 'bitcoin' in your business plan you are effectively written off without any consideration. This has been a huge issue for bitcoin entrepreneurs in the UK and is stifling growth and investment in this market."

These were all issues highlighted in the call for information. Despite this, the government has not made any response on this topic. There needs to be a push from the government to prevent banks applying a blanket ban on bitcoin. Instead, they must a have a system of verifying whether any fraud has occurred or will occur. It does not matter how favourable regulation is if banks make it impossible for bitcoin to gain traction.

Despite its best efforts, the UK government's plans may be hindered by US regulation. UK banks, which conduct business internationally, must also comply, as much as possible, with international regulation. In particular, UK banks do not want to risk losing US banking licenses. As of right now, the bitcoin industry is still so small it is not worth the risk of losing their licenses to get involved.

All of this means UK banks might look towards the BitLicense requirements, instead of the UK regulation, to craft anti-money laundering procedures. Naturally, if they are compliant with stringent NYDFS regulations, they are very likely to comply with UK regulation. The BitLicense may also gain a first mover advantage – by being first, it may become the standard.

The government said it hopes to give law enforcement the ability to confiscate bitcoin. This is an unclear statement. One of the key differences between the bitcoin network and traditional payment networks is that, if you own the private keys to your wallet, no one has the ability to take bitcoin away from you.

For now it can be assumed that prosecuted criminals will be incentivised to give-up their bitcoin, as was the case with Charlie Shrem. This confiscation plan does raise concerns that the government might neglect the differences between bitcoin and traditional money.

Great potential

Following the re-election of the Conservative Party, the UK is in a great position to potentially become a global bitcoin hub. This stems from a strong FinTech industry and promising regulation proposals from the government. However, bitcoin enthusiasts should not celebrate too early. The regulatory challenges of integrating bitcoin with traditional finance, in a global sense, may be a major pitfall.

Parliament image via Shutterstock.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of, and should not be attributed to, Bitcoin News.

RegulationUK

Friday, May 22, 2015

Bitcoin in the Headlines: Nathaniel Popper Strikes Media Gold

Conversation about bitcoin and the blockchain was seemingly everywhere this week, though a closer look at the bylines reveals this was mostly the work of one journalist – New York Times reporter Nathaniel Popper.

Bitcoin News, Fast Company, Forbes, TechCrunch and Vice were just some of the publications this week that either ran interviews with Popper or exclusive excerpts of his new book, Digital Gold, the product of six months of research on the technology.

Popper's excerpts generated headlines and social media buzz for their revelations regarding industry activity, with portions devoted to reexamining some of the community's most mainstream stories and subjects.

However, the New York Times wasn't the only media outlet focusing on bitcoin this week, with Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal devoting their share of articles to the emerging technology.

Nathaniel Popper's bitcoin tour

digital gold cover

Leading the charge was perhaps Popper's most provocative story, his account of his personal search for Satoshi Nakamoto, the still-anonymous author of the bitcoin white paper and its assumed creator. The trial, as we explored last week, led him to cryptographer Nick Szabo.

The report was widely covered into last weekend, though most articles aimed for clicks in ways that suggested the author had broken new ground on the Nakamoto mystery. More sensational headlines included "Did the New York Times Find Satoshi?" and "The New York Times Thinks It's Identified Mysterious Bitcoin Creator Satoshi Nakamoto", though these were only a few of many.

Just as interesting, however, were new revelations provided in detailed narratives on the untimely demise of bitcoin exchange Mt Gox that added new perspective to the situation surrounding its February 2014 insolvency.

New information was also provided on 21 Inc, the startup that until last week's Bitcoin News report was bitcoin's best-kept secret. In his account, Popper explained how 21's mining operations effectively allowed Silicon Valley's elite "to invest without needing to come out as public supporters of bitcoin". Popper shed further light on the company's funding rounds, indicating it has paid back most of its original investors.

Additional reports illustrated Wells Fargo's early interest in bitcoin as well as the early days of BitInstant, one of the first major venture backed companies in the bitcoin space.

Bloomberg's deep dive

Screen Shot 2015-05-22 at 5.25.50 PM

Boasting contributions from bitcoin industry luminaries such as Digital Currency Group founder Barry Silbert and Coin Center director Jerry Brito was a Bloomberg special report on bitcoin, a deep dive into topics such as global regulation, anti-money laundering (AML) compliance and the viability of bitcoin's mining sector.

BitGo CEO Mike Belshe, Boston University professor Mark T Williams and Wedbush Securities managing director Gil Luria were among the industry participants featured in Q&A segments of the report.

Among the most interesting observations, though, were the report's attempts to tie bitcoin to the rise of mobile banking. Cited therein were figures that suggest 23% of merchant acquirers and independent sales organisations surveyed have plans to "start accepting bitcoin within the next two years", a development Bloomberg suggested would spur wider merchant adoption.

The conclusion notably clashes with findings from Bitcoin News's Q1 State of Bitcoin report, which found that merchant adoption growth is on the decline.

Elsewhere, Bloomberg tried to connect bitcoin swaps trading with its price volatility and took aim at itBit's assertion that its New York banking charter would allow it to serve customers in all 50 US states, claims it continues to evoke in the media.

Paul Hastings LLP partner Chris Daniel told the report:

“While itBit may have engaged in this exercise already, it will require a state-by-state approach to determine whether other states agree that a trust company is the right regulated structure to engage in commercial cryptocurrency exchange activity in their state."

Sponsored by SolidX and Xapo and featuring ads from Blockchain, Nadex and the Bitcoin Investment Trust, the report was just as much a showcase of the range of bitcoin companies seeking to reach Bloomberg's influential audience.

WSJ's bitcoin pizza party

WSJ, Paul Vigna

This week also brought signs that bitcoin continues to hold a place in the larger pop culture consciousness in the US.

Several notable news outlets (including Bitcoin News) issued tributes to bitcoin's homegrown holiday, Bitcoin Pizza Day. Held on 22nd May, the celebration commemorates the first purchase of a physical good with bitcoin by developer Laszlo Hanyecz.

Somewhat surprisingly, The Wall Street Journal was the most vocal on the subject, running two separate (albeit somewhat overlapping) reports on Bitcoin Pizza Day both in its BitBeat column and in a separate video.

Still, WSJ reporter Paul Vigna used the lighthearted event as a way to express the larger narratives around bitcoin.

In the video, this was highlighted through explanations of how the event helped prove the digital currency could be used in finance, while in print he noted that influential representatives from Wall Street are now taking bitcoin seriously, silly holidays and all.

Vigna wrote:

"The growing opinion on Wall Street — and this is just what we’re gleaning from the people we talk to — is that this technology is not simply an online scam, even if it’s not exactly the epoch-shaking disruptive force its most fervent adherents want it to be. Its future will somewhere between those two extremes."

Nathaniel Popper is scheduled to appear at Consensus 2015, Bitcoin News's flagship conference to be held 10th September.

Newspaper image via Shutterstock

Bitcoin in the Headlines

Bitcoin Regulation Remains on Agenda for California Agency

The California Department of Business Oversight (DBO) released conflicting statements today regarding how bitcoin regulation will move forward in the most populous US state.

In statements to Bloomberg, the DBO stated that it had elected not to exercise its authority to regulate bitcoin and digital currencies, instead passing this determination to the state legislature.

DBO spokesperson Tom Dresslar explained his department's decision in conversation with Bloomberg, first stating that he believed that the legislature would be best suited to draft a regulatory regime in the best interest of consumers and businesses.

However, such statements were recanted within hours.

Dresslar told Bitcoin News:

"We haven't made a decision. We're still in the process of how or if at all to regulate virtual currency business under our current statutory scheme. "

Dresslar offered no additional comment on the day's events.

The update is the first since the DBO's December announcement that a meeting would be held to address the topic.

As of January, the meeting had been delayed, prompting uncertainty as to when or if the bank and money transmitter regulator would come to a formal decision.

California image via Shutterstock

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How the Crypto Community is Celebrating Bitcoin Pizza Day

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Bitcoin-Based Investment Fund Added to IG

The first fund to offer bitcoin investment as part of a bespoke portfolio has launched on global derivatives trading platform IG, the UK's largest forex provider.

Launched in late 2014, funding platform Invest Your Way (IYW) will enable traders to invest in bitcoin via contract for differences (CFDs), a form of futures contract where trades are settled in cash as opposed to physical goods.

In this case, the CFD will mimic bitcoin – the underlying asset – providing returns based on the digital currency's price.

IYW CEO Michael Newell told Bitcoin News:

"We actively work with clients to expand this range and the most highly requested product since launch has been bitcoin. Many people are aware of what they are, yet few know how to access them [bitcoin]. Fewer still would have any idea how to build bitcoin into a diversified portfolio."

He continued: "In response to this demand we have worked to bring a solution to market that allows for exposure to bitcoin as part of a balanced and managed portfolio. "

Risk management

According to Newell, client funds are stored in a fully segregated UK bank account and IG, the broker, sources bitcoin from a variety of providers to offset risk.

"IG manages its risk appropriately with bitcoin as they do with every other asset class, and runs its platform with its own set of due diligence and risk criteria," said the CEO.

He continued:

"Bitcoin is still a relatively new product and the value of them can be quite volatile. To ensure that this risk is managed appropriately, InvestYourWay will only include Bitcoin as one holding within a diversified fund, thereby reducing exposure and managing risk. "

IYW will only offer the bitcoin option to those clients who are able to demonstrate sufficient investment experience.

A spokesperson for IG confirmed the partnership, stating that it provided the underlying infrastructure which enabled it to format the investment product and "securely hold their client money in segregated accounts in line with FCA regulatory requirements".

Disclaimer: This article should not be viewed as an endorsement of any of the services mentioned. Please do your own research before considering investing any funds via these services.

Market display image via Shutterstock.

Investment

Bitfinex Warns Customers to Halt Deposits After Suspected Hack

Popular bitcoin exchange Bitfinex today urged customers to halt deposits while it investigates a suspected hack.

In a statement released this morning, the Hong Kong-based company said the keys to its hot wallet "might have been compromised". However, the majority of customers' funds would not be affected, it said.

"Although we keep over 99.5% of users' BTC deposits in secure multisig wallets, the small remaining amount in coins in our hot wallet are theoretically vulnerable to attack [...] Although this incident is unfortunate, its scale is small and will be fully absorbed by the company."

This year saw both Coinapult and Bitstamp lose funds in hot wallet thefts, with an estimated total loss of $5.4m at the time of reporting.

Currently the fourth most popular bitcoin exchange, Bitfinex's 24-hour volume stands at 13,536.71 BTC ($3.19m) A 0.5% loss on these trades works out at roughly $15,943.

Bitfinex, which recently partnered with AlphaPoint to overhaul its back-end, said it was working to create a new hot wallet for the deposits it stores online.

The exchange is expected to release further updates in the coming hours.

BitfinexChinaExchangesHack

Payment Processor Unveils Bitcoin Startup at Plug and Play Expo

IMG_6630

Plug and Play Tech Center celebrated its inaugural batch of FinTech startups, including a new bitcoin exchange from payment processor Netopia, at an event in the heart of Silicon Valley yesterday.

"The big doomsday we're seeing now is death by a thousand cuts," said Plug and Play FinTech director Scott Robinson as he opened the afternoon session of the FinTech & Retail Expo at its Sunnyvale location.

His introduction made clear his belief that the financial industry is, due to unavoidable factors, on a collision course with technological innovation. This includes, most importantly, the millennial generation's desire for alternative financial products.

The director went on to forecast a future in which a new generation of startups will chip away at traditional financial revenue streams slowly, but surely.

Robinson stated that he sees Silicon Valley taking the lead on this transition:

"You can teach engineers finance, but you can't teach the finance industry technology."

The role bitcoin and blockchain technologies will play in this larger narrative featured in five of the day's 24 presentations.

Perhaps most notable of these was the surprise announcement by Romanian payment processor Netopia mobilPay that it intends to launch a sister bitcoin exchange, BTKO.in.

Netopia is well established as an online payment processor, serving more than 6,000 retailers and processing more than 800,000 transactions in Q1 2014.

Elsewhere, authentication, security, analytics, the cloud and big data were technologies up for discussion. Bluink Ltd took the top prize in the FinTech category for Injector, an app that uses bluetooth and speech to replace passwords.

While no bitcoin-first startups prevailed, Retail category winner Pinn nodded to the digital currency's future in the mainstream retail experience.

"You can either link your bank account using your online banking credentials or you can use your bitcoin wallet," CEO Will Summerlin told Bitcoin News, adding that he expects bitcoin usage to rise in the coming years.

Elsewhere, startups seeking to build the bitcoin and blockchain ecosystem held their own onstage with compelling ideas that illustrated why they were selected from over 800 applicants.

BTKO.in

BTKO.in

"We are not a startup. We are the biggest payment gateway in Romania."

With these bold words, Netopia mobilPay CEO Antonio Eram introduced BTKO.io, a Romania-based bitcoin exchange platform that was the only startup to present not listed on the official schedule.

Speaking to Bitcoin News, Eram clarified that BTKO.in is a spin-off from Netopia that will be supported by its sister company through shared development and management resources – a relationship not always clear in the presentation.

"We keep it separately since we have investors interested exclusively in this project," Eram explained.

Though unexpected, the announcement follows Netopia's decision to integrate bitcoin payments in December. Netopia previously entered into a partnership with defunct bitcoin exchange BTCXchange, which went offline in late 2014 following security issues.

BTKO.in is not yet online, but Eram told Bitcoin News he has big plans for the project, adding:

"We want to build an entire bitcoin ecosystem in eastern Europe."

37coins

37coins, plug and play

The first bitcoin startup of the day was beta-only SMS bitcoin wallet provider 37coins.

COO Jonathan Zobro explained how the startup aims to use low-cost cell phone technology to make mobile money international and carrier-independent for consumers in the developing world.

"Onboarding is as simple as knowing your friend's phone number," he explained.

Zobro went on to state that he sees 37coins as a company focused on onboarding the 2.5 billion underbanked consumers worldwide.

Speaking to Bitcoin News, Zobro said the startup will now focus on adding multisig and HD wallet security to its platform.

"We have to make the best security compromises ... we've made the conscious decision to split up the keys and make the most secure version that we can," he added.

Gazebo

gazebo, pavilion

Formerly known as Pavilion when it launched at the fall 2014 DEMO conference, blockchain startup Gazebo is now setting its sights on the global trade finance market.

"Exports and importers have been moving away from debt and paper. Bank revenues in trade finance have been declining for the first time in a while," founder and CEO Jamie Young said, rifling through facts and figures on inadequacies in this market.

Gazebo is seeking to use the blockchain's open ledger system to create products for treasury and trade solutions (TTS) and global transaction services (GTS) specialists who need to transport and manage supply chains of physical goods

Using the blockchain and escrow services, Gazebo aims to manage the movement of fiat dollars on behalf of clients, validating shipments and releasing funds to the relevant parties.

The demonstration represented an evolution of the product from its November iteration, which focused on offering escrow services to larger e-commerce companies such as eBay, Amazon and Alibaba.

BitWage

BitWage

Yet another startup focused on how bitcoin and the blockchain could permeate international money transfer was payroll startup BitWage.

Launched in late 2014, BitWage offers employees the ability to be paid in bitcoin without the need for employers to integrate the service.

Often billed as a solution for diehard bitcoin users, BitWage CEO Jonathan Chester's presentation demonstrated that he's willing to think big about how the startup could solve real problems for those outside the current community.

"Uber is paying contractors in 58 countries worldwide. They build banking relationships in all those countries and deal with those regulations. The cost is high and the time to market is slow," he said.

Employees and contractors, Chester continued, have to deal with high foreign exchange costs and large transfer times, creating more pain and friction in this system.

Still, Chester was able to go beyond identifying problems, showcasing that BitWage has a specific blueprint for how its solution can fit into this larger puzzle.

The next stage for BitWage, his presentation inferred, will be seeking out large multinational companies that could cut costs by offering the technology.

ChangeTip

 

ChangeTip

One of the more tenured startups in the program, having raised $3.5m in venture capital, ChangeTip CEO Nick Sullivan gave an entertaining if uninspired overview of how the company enables micropayments, what he called the "first real interesting use case for bitcoin".

"We call it a 'love button' for the Internet," he said. "There's a fairly established 'like' economy. We call this a love button because this is for content that you love."

The CEO went on to showcase how ChangeTip users can use its platform to send small amounts of money over popular social networks and content platforms.

"What if you could have donated 10 cents by favoriting or liking posts for the Ice Bucket Challenge?" he asked.

He also charted a course for how micropayments could evolve beyond their current niche audience to become more widespread, even if it was perhaps unclear to the audience the role ChangeTip could play in this transition.

Images via Pete Rizzo for Bitcoin News

37CoinsBitwageChangeTipNetopiaPlug and Play

BitcoinTalk Server Compromised During Social Engineering Attack

Popular digital currency forum BitcoinTalk has been taken offline following a social engineering attack that resulted in a server compromise.

The attack is said to have targeted the site's ISP, a company called NFOrce that is based in the Netherlands. During a social engineering attack, an attacker tries to manipulate the target with the goal of convincing them to divulge passwords or other sensitive information.

The compromise was announced via the official BitcoinTalk Twitter account. Operator Theymos later took to the bitcoin subreddit to offer a more detailed explanation, writing:

"The forum's ISP NFOrce managed to get tricked into giving an attacker access to the server. I think that the attacker had access for only about 12 minutes before I noticed it and had the server disconnected, so he probably wasn't able to get a complete dump of the database."

Theymos said that BitcoinTalk could remain offline for as many as 60 hours following the incident, and cautioned users to "act as though your password hashes, PMs, emails, etc. were compromised".

Future updates about the situation will be posted to the Twitter account, according to Theymos, and a full report will be published once the forum is back online.

NFOrce and Theymos did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Image via Shutterstock

Bitcoin Talk

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Consensus 2015: Digital Gold and Wences Casares in the Spotlight

Two Consensus 2015 speakers, Nathaniel Popper and Wences Casares, are in the spotlight this week, mainly because of Popper's new book. We're also announcing the addition of Hernán Botbol, a co-founder of the hugely popular Argentinian social network, Taringa!

Digital Gold, the book that takes a long, unflinching look at the individuals behind the rise of bitcoin, hit the shelves this week.

We published an extract from Digital Gold detailing the inner workings of Charlie Shrem's BitInstant, which was a high-flying bitcoin startup with funding from the Winklevoss twins – until it all came crashing down.

Shrem was nabbed by federal agents in a New York airport on money laundering and other charges; he is now serving a two-year sentence in a federal prison.

Digital Gold's author, Nathaniel Popper, normally covers Wall Street for the New York Times. He's fresh off launching his book at the New York Public Library with a panel discussion with Union Square Ventures' Fred Wilson, the Times' Andrew Ross Sorkin and bitcoin core developer Gavin Andresen.

'Patient zero' for bitcoin

Another protagonist in Popper's book is Wences Casares, the founder of bitcoin storage and wallet firm Xapo.

The book reveals Casares' pivotal role in getting a swathe of Silicon Valley and Wall Street's elite hooked on the cryptocurrency. Reid Hoffman, the LinkedIn founder and investor in Blockstream, has called Casares "patient zero" for bitcoin in the Valley.

Digital Gold contains accounts of Casares demonstrating how bitcoin works at high-powered gatherings organised by the investment bank Allen and Co.

At one such retreat in Tucson, Arizona, Popper tells us that Casares sent $250,000 in bitcoin to Business Insider founder Henry Blodget after setting the publisher up with a brand new bitcoin wallet of his own. The coins eventually found their way back to Casares, after being passed around the high net-worth crowd who marvelled at the speed of the transfers.

Casares isn't content to stop at introducing bitcoin to the rich and powerful. Part of Casares' plan to take bitcoin mainstream is a partnership with Taringa!, a social network that Wired has described as "the Reddit of Argentina" – a useful way of thinking about a service that boasts 75 million monthly unique users.

Bitcoin for content micropayments

Taringa! users currently assemble all sorts of content to be shared on the network, from home recipes to Lionel Messi listicles. The network sells ads against this content.

The Xapo tie-up will let Taringa! split the ad revenue with its users, paying the funds out in bitcoin. The network's co-founder, Hernán Botbol, says bitcoin payments are important because more than half of Latin America's online users don't have a bank account or credit card, making it difficult to send payments to users for their share of ad revenue.

The micropayments programme is currently invite-only, with plans to expand it to more Taringa users. But Botbol and Casares will have a unique data-set around bitcoin micropayments for content by September, when they will discuss their findings at Bitcoin News's inaugural conference – Consensus 2015.

Consensus 2015Hernan BotbolNathaniel PopperTaringaWences Casares

North Carolina Representatives Pass Bitcoin Bill By Wide Margin

House Bill 289

A bill calling for specific regulation of digital currencies such as bitcoin has been approved by the North Carolina House of Representatives and has moved to the state Senate for further deliberation.

House Bill 289 seeks to enact a new Money Transmitters Act (MTA), which would specifically address the transmission of virtual currencies such as bitcoin.

It was submitted by Republican Representative Stephen M. Ross, who outside of his capacity as a state representative serves as a vice president and investment officer at Wells Fargo. He filed the bill on behalf of the North Carolina's Commissioner of Banks (NCOOB).

Rep. Ross was unavaialble for comment. When asked about the bill, a spokesperson for NCCOB told Bitcoin News:

"Like existing law, the bill requires bitcoin transmitters to obtain a license from our office. The Bill, however, clarifies that only virtual currency transmission involving a personal, family or household purpose (as opposed to business-oriented transmission) is subject to the Money Transmitters Act. It also defines virtual currency consistently with federal financial regulation."

The existing MTA, enacted in 2001, already regulates non-bank companies that engage in the business of transmitting funds on behalf of others in a bid to prevent money laundering and the financing of terrorist activities.

According to a summary redacted by North Carolina's General Assembly (NCGA), House Bill 289 would replace the current statutory article with a new one, incorporating much of the existing law and shed additional clarity on specific features requested by the NCOOB.

"These [virtual currency] payment systems are currently subject to the act, but industry has requested clarification of the law to take into account the changes that have occurred since the law was written," the summary states.

It goes on to explain:

"It would exclude certain business-to-business money transmission activity. It would revise the cost structure by replacing the examination fee and the annual renewal fee with an annual assessment based on North Carolina transmission volume. It would convert the annual license into a perpetual license."

One vote against

The Bill was approved by the House of Representatives on 12th May, with 117 votes in favour and one against.

Representative Mark Brody was the sole legislator to vote against the Bill. Speaking to Bitcoin News, Brody outlined why he thought that regulating alternative currencies such as bitcoin would not be a good idea.

Brody said that he had been badly affected by the 2008 market crash, which in turn, made him understand the fragile nature of the economy. In interview, he attributed that weakness to existing federal policies.

He explained:

"The federal government is a political animal and it will hurt the currency for political reasons [...] and I oppose the regulation of alternative currencies because [...] they may be the only stability that we have, that is why I voted against the regulation of these alternative currencies."

Brody went on to suggest that he might seek to have that language removed at a later juncture, either through an amended bill or by way of an entirely separate bill.

Growing legislative interest

The bill's passage through the North Carolina House of Representatives comes amid growing activity among state legislators in the US in regards to digital currency.

State agencies are also looking at the issue closely, most notably in the case of the New York State Department of Financial Services' BitLicense proposal, which is expected to be released in its final form sometime in the next week.

When asked about the timing of the bill submission, a spokesperson for the NCCOB told Bitcoin News that the effort began following FinCEN's 2014 guidance for money service businesses.

The spokesperson explained:

"In 2014, we began receiving applications for virtual currency licensure under the Money Transmitters Act. At that time, we realised that while virtual currency transmission was subject to the existing MTA, that version of the law left many issues unresolved."

The spokesperson went on to say that the agency initially began to approach digital currency oversight through rule-making, but ultimately opted to pursue a legislative route.

"Throughout 2014, we held multiple stakeholder meetings, both before and after the bill was drafted," the spokesperson added. "After incorporating as much stakeholder input as possible, we felt that the bill was ready for introduction in 2015."

Community debate

As one might imagine, a legislative effort that is perceived to impose additional burdens on companies working in the digital currency sector drew criticism from some quarters of the bitcoin community.

The bill has been labelled an "Anti-Bitcoin Act" by BitcoinRegs.org, a self-supporting group of North Carolina-based bitcoin advocates, which said in a statement:

"House Bill 289 is wrong for the economy of the state of North Carolina, and if passed in other states, would harm the bitcoin ecosystem at large."

Other startups in the bitcoin space have voiced support for the measure. San-Francisco based Coinbase weighed in to debate via a blog post, which acknowledged:

 "As a nascent technology, regulation surrounding bitcoin has been a difficult issue for some regulators and policymakers. Despite these difficulties, North Carolina is a state that is promoting innovation and regulatory efficiency into its regulatory framework via the next generation of its Money Transmitters Act (MTA)."

Stan Higgins contributed reporting.

Regulation

Bitcoin Firm Coinapult Opens to US Market

Bitcoin payment processor and storage provider Coinapult is now seeking customers in the US market following a services integration with Crypto Capital.

The bitcoin firm did previously offer its bitcoin wallet service to US customers but said that the country's users were blocked from its website in July last year as the company was not a licensed money transmitter.

By opening an account with Crypto Capital, a licensed money transmitter in Panama, Coinapult will now allow its users to deposit, withdraw and transfer fiat currency.

A Coinapult spokesperson told Bitcoin News:

"Coinapult is not a licensed money transmitter business, and as such, we did not offer our services to the US market. Now that Crypto Capital will act as a money transmitter on Coinapult's behalf, we are excited to reopen services to the US."

"From both a legal and financial perspective, any fiat movement between Coinapult and our customers will be handled through Crypto Capital functioning as a licensed money transmitter on behalf of Coinapult," the spokesperson continued.

According to Crypto Capital's website, customers are provided a "segregated fiat account" to US users. Clients that offer software products to bitcoin users, the company states, are then able to move fiat currency in and out of these accounts.

Crypto Capital will perform know your customer (KYC) checks on behalf of Coinapult.

Hot wallet attack

Coinapult's most well-known product is a service called LOCKS, which allows users to peg the price of bitcoin to gold, silver, British pounds, US dollars and euros.

The company's wallet service was hacked in March this year, resulting in a loss of 150 BTC (approximately $42,900).

The Panama-based startup restored its services the following month. The spokesperson said that the company was hoping to introduce client-side multisig functionality by the end of July.

US Map image via Shutterstock.

CoinapultPanama

Seagate: Ripple Investment Shows We're Serious About Blockchain Tech

Dave Morton, SeagateA desire to become an "active participant" in the blockchain technology space is what drove $13bn data storage company Seagate to invest in Ripple Labs, according to its senior vice president Dave Morton.

A leading maker of hard drives for desktop PC and laptops as well as servers and data centers, about half of Seagate's current value, according to Forbes, is due to its successful transition to enterprise cloud products.

However, in an interview with Bitcoin News Morton revealed the logistics of moving and shipping these products are currently outdated when compared to the company's more modern product offerings.

He said:

"Our supply chain is very broad. There's over 286 components that go into each of our drives, we pull over 51 elements out of Mother Earth and obviously we manufacture in a lot of foreign locations where there's a lot of exchange risk."

The difficulty of managing this development process is what makes the "Internet of Value" made possible by Ripple Labs appealing, he added.

Founded in 2012, distributed payment network provider Ripple Labs uses the Ripple protocol and its own native digital currency (XRP) as a way to move money internationally. The company recently came under fire for wrongdoings in its early days, paying a $700,000 fine for FinCEN violations.

Today, Morton doesn't believe that Ripple's technology is ready for Seagate to use, but he argued that due to this enormous potential, his company was eager to participate in its $28m Series A fundraising announced this week.

"To be able to move our operational cash globally in a free way that is transparent is very important to us," he said.

The round included a notable cross-section of Asian and US investors, including IDG Capital, China Rock Capital and AME Cloud Ventures. Seagate funded only one company, Reduxio, in 2014 and Ripple is its first investment in 2015.

Blockchain use cases

Seagate's business model would seem to lend itself to two popular use cases for blockchain technology: the ability to move payments and the ability to track the positioning of supply chains, as seen in California-based startup Skuchain.

Morton sees Ripple's platform as one that would let Seagate keep an eye on the development of both use cases, maintaining both are "very interesting".

"We have three million components a day in flight, so you can just imagine the power that this can possibly have down the road from a supply chain perspective, whether that be cash flow or economics," he said.

"We process over hundreds of thousands of invoices a quarter, you get into the process of how this improves the supply chain, it's pretty remarkable."

When asked why Seagate wouldn't yet seek to use the technology, Morton suggested that the murky legal status of blockchain technology around the globe was a deterrent.

"Obviously we would like to be a key user. We'll work with the proper authorities and companies and our own providers, our banks," he remarked.

Ripple and bitcoin

Morton also touched on why, in his opinion, the "agnostic" nature of Ripple has a competitive advantage over the bitcoin network.

"You can do commodities, dollars, yen, euros versus it being just bitcoin. We want to take more of a holistic approach," he said, adding that he remains a fan of bitcoin.

In this light, Morton said Seagate remains primarily interested in seeing whether blockchain technologies can help solve real problems for its business, whether that solution comes from a provider like Ripple Labs or an alternative.

"Reduction of friction, this is the immediate need within our space," he explained. "As we get more and more global, this is going to be something that folks are very interested in solving."

Morton concluded:

"We're serious about some of these use cases being thought about and resolved. We think there are some technology and business gains to be had."

Dave Morton image via LinkedIn

Blockchain TechnologyRipple LabsSeagateSkuchain

Elliptic Strikes Multisig Key Custodian Deal With Gem

UK-based digital assets service provider Elliptic has partnered with Gem to offer a custodian service for the private keys of multisig wallets.

Multisig wallets have at least three unique private keys. Through the new partnership, consumers will control one private key, while Gem and Elliptic will have custody over the two others.

Customers are not obliged to assign the third key to Elliptic. However, if the client loses their key, Gem and Elliptic will use their private keys to transfer the user's funds into a new Gem multisig account belonging to the customer.

Dr James Smith, CEO at Elliptic, said:

"By combining Gem's API platform with our insured and accredited key storage service, a new bar has been set for multi-sig wallet security and usability."

Gem may benefit from Elliptic's ISAE 3402 accreditation – an established global standard for financial reporting – that it obtained at the beginning of this year.

Key image via Shutterstock.

EllipticGem APIMultisig

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Internet Security Pioneer Unveils Project at Blockchain University

Blockchain University

A project led by a pioneering developer of the Internet's secure sockets layer (SSL) protocol was among the standouts at Blockchain University's second demo day.

Held in Mountain View, California, on Monday, 18th May, the event featured presentations from roughly 10 projects created at the pre-accelerator during a six-week period beginning in April. Launched in December 2014, Blockchain University is aimed at promoting interest and innovation around blockchain technology and distributed ledgers.

Blockchain University's second demo night successfully showcased how nuanced projects can now be quickly built on a broad range of blockchains and developed with the aid of APIs from bitcoin industry businesses.

Among the early speakers and sponsors perhaps none illustrated the recent increase in focus on blockchain technology better than BitPay developer Eric Martindale, whose company was among the first to bet big on the widespread use of the bitcoin blockchain as a facilitator of payments.

Martindale told the audience:

"One of the things that really struck me, is as I've grown, bitcoin is really the first app on the blockchain."

BitPay senior software engineer Gregg Zigler and Monkey Inferno product manager Elyse Lefebvre went on to present Carrot, a project that enables a bitcoin wallet to accept an email address and replace it with a bitcoin address, all without needing any action from the user.

The project uses the bitcoin blockchain to move funds and the namecoin blockchain to guarantee that wallet names are unique.

"What we wanted was an open protocol that minimizes trust in third parties and maximizes the use of the familiar," Zigler said.

Elsewhere, Collectible sought to use blockchains to both authenticate and create secondary markets for baseball trading cards, while Chainmail aimed to assist lawyers by making it easier to authenticate emails for later use in court cases.

While all these are examples of the types of projects created, none were among the most lauded by judges SKBI research fellow Tim Swanson and Coinalytics CEO Fabio Federici.

We review the top three projects as selected by event judges below:

Revoke SSL

Revoke SSL

The most polished project in the cohort, Revoke SSL succeeded by demonstrating its strong knowledge of a niche market (e-commerce checkout security) in need of a specific solution (the ability to signal quickly when HTTPS security has been compromised).

In particular, co-founder Matthew Schutte was able to illustrate how trust within this small but vital commerce system is in need of an overhaul.

For example, he explained how communications between browsers and websites can continue under the guise that a compromised certificate is valid, sometimes for weeks or months due to the difficulty of revoking certificates provided by third-party certificate authorities such as Trustwave and VeriSign.

RevokeSSL

The group also boasts unique experience tackling similar issues.

In addition to team members Jarod Holtz and Matthew Schutte, original SSL contributing developer Christopher Allen helped produce the product. Allen developed a reference implementation for SSL 3.0, the first successful version of the protocol and one on which newer updates have been based.

Though other presenters attacked small markets, Revoke SSL seemed the most serious about moving forward with the project following graduation, showcasing how it might evolve into a scalable and commercially viable business.

Potential clients contacted, they suggested, had expressed an interest in paying $150 for revocation services on a $500 certificates.

Squirrel

Squirrel

Squirrel aims to use blockchain technology and smart contracts to remove risk from global supply chains.

In a traditional supply chain, project leader Sujata Menon argued, manufacturers take on unnecessary risk to ensure they are covered if vendors never fulfill orders. As a result, manufacturers struggle to gain the financing they need to produce new orders, thereby creating an expensive cycle of risk management.

To attack this issue, Squirrel developed a system by which parties could enter into a purchasing agreement at a lower risk level. Funds, the team proposed, could be sent to escrow accounts by both manufacturers and vendors. Squirrel, in turn, could act as a source of additional capital and security so that projects can be produced.

"A contractor is building a tree house and getting wood from a vendor, and they need $100 to get the wood, but only have $50. Squirrel can do a credit check and agree to match," Menon explained. "Money stays in escrow for everyone to see."

Squirrel

From there, Squirrel uses the Thingchain blockchain developed by startup Skuchain as a means of tracking supply codes.

As the products are shipped, supply codes would be intermittently validated, with funds being released to parties when the initial supplies and finished goods pass through predetermined checkpoints.

"A small penetration of this market would be bringing quite a bit of returns," Menon concluded.

Blocknotary

Blocknotary

The issue of ownership and security was attacked again by the Blocknotary team, albeit in one of the more humorous presentations.

Created by Igor Barinov, David Bently, Roman Sorm and Lilian Chan, Blocknotary allows those using cell phone cameras to attach a form of copyright to their creations. What separated the Blocknotary team, however, was how they had integrated this process in the traditional user experience.

Built as an iPhone app, Blocknotary allows users to access its service as they would email or Twitter when looking to share a photo. Alongside familiar options such as 'Assign to Contact', 'Print' and 'Use as Wallpaper' in an iPhone display, would be a Blocknotary button.

Someone taking a selfie, the team joked, would then put a description into a field, select 'Submit' and a copy of the photo would be made on the blockchain.

"[The user is] going to submit this to the blockchain and what will be in the OP_RETURN is the embedded date and time," a presenter concluded.

Blocknotary

Images via Pete Rizzo for Bitcoin News

BitPayBlockchain TechnologyBlockchain University

Thai Police Seek Answers in Alleged Digital Currency Ponzi Scheme

Police in Thailand have raided 13 rooms in a Bangkok apartment complex in connection with an alleged Ponzi scheme called UFUN that may have promoted a fraudulent type of digital currency.

The raid, reported by local source The Star, follows a number of searches and arrests across the Asia-Pacific region as part of a crackdown on UFUN led by Thailand's assistant police chief Suwira Songmetta.

The group's controversial business model focuses on UToken, a so-called bitcoin rival that UFUN claimed was backed by a "gold reserve system" alongside several multibillion-dollar companies. However, it remains unclear whether the UToken actually existed given the circumstances.

Report: Lawsky to Consult on Digital Currencies After Leaving NYDFS

New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) superintendent Benjamin M Lawsky is stepping down next month and is said to be planning to establish a legal consulting firm.

While the news created a slew of headlines, some media outlets were able to uncover new details. For example, The New York Post indicated that Lawsky would seek to advise clients on matters involving bitcoin and digital currencies, citing anonymous sources.

According to a 20th May press release, the NYDFS announced that Lawsky will leave office in late June after serving as superintendent of New York’s top banking regulator for four years.

He said in a statement:

"I am deeply proud of the work our team has done building this new agency and helping strengthen oversight of the financial markets. We have assembled a great team at NYDFS and I have full confidence that the critical work of this agency will continue seamlessly moving forward.”

Lawsky garnered both support and criticism for his office’s development of the BitLicense, a still unreleased regulatory framework that would establish guidelines for the operation of bitcoin and digital currency businesses in New York.

Notably, a source told that publication that Lawsky has no intention of working with companies that the NYDFS regulates, a list which would likely include a number of US-based bitcoin startups serving New York.

When reached for comment, a spokesperson for the NYDFS said that the agency still anticipates releasing the final version of the BitLicense before the end of May.

The NYDFS did not immediately respond to questions related to Lawksy's proposed consulting activities.

Ben LawskyNYDFS

Citi: UK Government Should Create Own Digital Currency

Citi has told the UK government it should consider creating its own digital currency, a newly obtained document has revealed.

The document, a response to the Treasury’s call for information on digital currency, was obtained by Bitcoin News via a Freedom of Information request.

In the response, the global bank’s Treasury and Trade Services (TTS) Technology and Innovation Team states:

“The greatest benefits of digital currencies can be realised through the government issuing a digital form of legal tender. This currency would be less expensive, more efficient and provide greater transparency than current physical legal tender or electronic methods.”

Citi believes governments and banks should be at the centre of the “technological shift beyond paper and credit cards” into more digital forms of money.

“To be a key participant may mean that banks and governments need to work together to develop digital currencies that supercede the existing physical and electronic solutions,” Citi adds.

It goes on to say that the act of a government issuing a digital currency would address the AML, KYC and sanctions concerns faced by market-backed digital currencies such as bitcoin. This could create privacy concerns for citizens, but Citi claims these could be offset by the additional value provided by the new currency.

Adam Cleary, a director of the UK Digital Currency Association (UKDCA), said a digital form of legal tender could improve on the current currency arrangements in the UK. However, he said these concepts “simply represent a movement to improved database technology”.

“By contrast, decentralised digital currencies such as bitcoin are an open, distributed, permissionless platform for value transfer which has the potential to drive extensive innovation in financial services independent of established institutions,” they added.

Need for regulation

In the document, which was submitted on 3rd December 2014, Citi calls for the government to introduce regulation covering digital currency companies.

It states:

“The absence of clear regulatory guidelines creates uncertainty in this space, and prevents legitimate players from entering the space. Resolving this uncertainty will allow banks to make decisions on how to approach digital currencies.”

Citi asserts that bitcoin’s underlying blockchain technology can be used in ways that will increase transparency and efficiency, benefiting not only consumers and merchants, but governments and regulators too.

Pinpointing the ways in which the government could benefit, Citi said blockchain technology can provide:

  • Greater transparency at the transaction level by providing an immutable record of accounting, and ability to embed automated tax collection at the transaction level, enabling governments to decrease overhead and increase efficiency.
  • Possibly realise benefits from financial inclusion, increasing the efficiency of government disbursements and addressing fraud and overpayments.

The company believes that, given digital currency’s “inherent ability to easily cross borders and jurisdictional controls”, an international framework should be created to regulate it effectively.

“Extensive work has been done by HM Treasury in collaboration with the UKDCA to establish a strong regulatory framework in the UK and we believe this is a good model for any international regulatory approach,” the UKDCA's Cleary added.

Citi's reply to the Treasury also calls for regulation on a national level that is based on existing laws but promotes a “pro-innovation approach” that doesn’t create hurdles and obligations that could inhibit the growth of digital currency companies.

Citi’s response can be viewed in full below:

Citi Response to the HMT Call for Information on Digital Money by Bitcoin News

Citibank image via Flickr.

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Blockchain Firm Denies 'Conflict of Interest' for Advisor Yanis Varoufakis

Blockchain technology firm Tembusu Systems has hit back at claims Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis' role as its advisor represents a "conflict of interest" for the politician.

On Monday Greece's weekly paper Proto Thema produced emails from a company representative claiming Professor Varoufakis was still "affiliated to Tembusu in an advisory role" as recently as March 2015.

This role "raises legitimate questions about a conflict of interest in Varoufakis’ support of an extreme albeit innovative method for financial transactions," the paper said.

In a statement posted online, Tembusu said Varoufakis had helped the Singaporean firm build its key foundation strategy towards the end of 2014. As a result of that contribution the company continued to recognize him as an advisor, it said.

The finance minister has not played any active role for Tembusu since his decision to stand in Greece's elections. His last contribution was in December 2014, it said.

Since the Proto Thema article appeared, Varoufakis' name and photo have been removed from Tembusu's team page.

Lack of bitcoin understanding

Proto Thema (translated as 'Lead Story') is a populist tabloid-style Greek newspaper published weekly. It is reportedly the highest-selling weekly in the country, with circulation often topping 200,000 in the small Greek market.

In its statement, Tembusu took issue with some areas of the paper's reporting. Besides describing bitcoin as "obsolete and hazardous", the English version of Proto Thema's article describes Tembusu as "a controversial Singaporean company that launched the digital currency Bitcoins".

Tembusu clarified that it had not been contacted for the story:

"Proto Thema did not try to reach Tembusu Systems for comment at any time, which may explain many of the gaps in their reporting."

The firm also denied it could be termed a 'bitcoin company', saying its role is developing "blockchain technology for commercial applications, including payment systems, remittance and digital wallets".

"We do not deal with bitcoins or any existing cryptocurrency," the company added.

Varoufakis and bitcoin

Varoufakis was a well-known economist, author, speaker and media figure before becoming Greek finance minister in January. Once an economic advisor to former Greek prime minister Georges Papandreou, he now describes himself as a 'libertarian Marxist'.

He has long been interested in, if not a particularly keen supporter of, bitcoin and cryptocurrency more broadly.

His thoughts on bitcoin re-emerged in February this year, when a Guardian article pointed to blog posts from 2013 and 2014, in which Varoufakis first described his concerns with a currency not controlled by government.

The latter post described bitcoin technology as potentially beneficial in building electronic payment systems, but "too deflationary by nature to act as a widespread currency alternative" to the euro or dollar.

Last month he tweeted a clearly-labeled April Fools' joke in which he said Greece was prepared to ditch the euro and adopt bitcoin as its national currency if it could not secure a satisfactory deal in negotiations with the European Union over Greece's dire national debt.

Tembusu's refocus

Tembusu Systems, which began as a company producing bitcoin ATMs, has since diverted its focus away from bitcoin and has built a new digital financial framework called TRUST.

The TRUST network is a non-bitcoin, blockchain-based system designed for the transfer and management of various assets instantaneously and worldwide.

It relies on real-life identities to build reputations and can link to existing financial institutions, remittance networks, government services, and other services for businesses and individuals.

Varoufakis image via Shutterstock

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Bitcoin Lending Platform Bitbond Raises €600,000 in Funding

Peer-to-peer bitcoin lending company Bitbond has closed a €600,000 angel investment round, raising its total funding to €800,000.

The company, which launched in June 2013, received funds from its seed investor, Point Nine Capital and business angels, including Christian Vollmann, an early investor in ResearchGate.

Radoslav Albrecht, founder and CEO at BitBond, said:

"The additional resources will help us to continue realising our mission which is to make lending and borrowing globally accessible. We are happy to have such experienced investors supporting us on this exciting journey.”

According to a statement issued by the platform, Bitbond has processed 600 loans to date and it currently has 10,0000 users from over 120 different countries.

In August last year, the company secured €200,000 in seed funding.

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Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Overstock Invests in Broker-Dealer Ahead of Decentralised Stock Market Launch

A new Wired report suggests that US retail giant Overstock has completed a working demo of its decentralised stock market Medici and that the project may soon be presented to US regulators.

The report is one of the first to suggest the Medici project is moving forward past conceptual stages following its October launch. Updates on the project have since been scarce with two high-profile developers leaving in February and Overstock submitting an SEC filing related its proposed issuance of digital securities in April.

The latest Wired report further indicates that Overstock has purchased a 25% stake in Pro Securities LLC, a New Jersey-based brokerage firm on whose electronic system it says Medici has been built.

Charlie Shrem and the Ups and Downs of BitInstant

In his new book, Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money, Nathaniel Popper, examines the rise of cryptocurrency and the characters who have played their part bitcoin's story so far.

In this excerpt, the New York Times reporter looks at the trials and tribulations of bitcoin exchange BitInstant before its ultimate demise.

digital gold cover

In June of 2014, things appeared to be going well for Charlie Shrem.

He was shopping for new, larger real estate for his company, BitInstant, and eventually settled on a well-appointed suite in an office tower not far from the company’s original offices in Manhattan. He had also recently managed to move out of his parents’ basement in Brooklyn. He was motivated to do this, in no small part, because he was afraid to tell his parents about his girlfriend, Courtney, who was a waitress at his favorite bar, EVR. Courtney was some ten years his senior and, more important, not Jewish – something that did not fly in the Syrian Jewish community that Charlie came from. Charlie and Courtney took a room in a big communal apartment above EVR, where there were always alcohol bottles and bongs on offer. Charlie was often spotted at EVR with Courtney on his arm.

But within BitInstant, Charlie’s hard-partying ways seemed to many like an escape from the challenges he was facing with his company. The Winklevoss twins had been pushing Charlie to raise more money to pay for BitInstant’s expansion. And Charlie had no trouble getting meetings with investors, who were all impressed at the sheer number of dollars already running through BitInstant. But as Charlie’s team tried to get the investors the paperwork they needed, it quickly became clear how unequipped BitInstant was for the big time. When the BitInstant chief financial officer, who was just two years out of college, tried to put together the financial statements he realized that there were large holes in the company’s books, with unexplained expenses in all directions.

In late June, Charlie finally managed a long-planned relaunch of BitInstant, in partnership with a money-transmitting business that was regulated in most states. But when the site went live and BitInstant began doing more thorough checks of its customers, Charlie’s staffers realized that many of their customers had been doing business with them under fake identities. When the Manhattan district attorney sent a disconcerting request to Charlie asking him to come in for a meeting, it precipitated an emergency conference call with a team of lawyers on July 4.

Nathaniel Popper Nathaniel Popper, author of 'Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money'.

“The problem is that the site is a patchwork of bandages,” one of the lawyers told Charlie and his team. “When we go into that meeting, they’re going to go straight to the site and review it in detail. They can’t see a patchwork of quick fixes.”

The lawyers were unrelenting, and the answers from Charlie made them nervous: no, BitInstant’s compliance officer had no previous experience in compliance, and no, BitInstant had not filed any suspicious-activity reports with regulators despite having lots of transactions flagged as potentially fraudulent by partners. The call concluded with a long list of things that needed to be handled immediately.

“You are very exposed on all fronts,” the lawyer told Charlie and his team.

Charlie tried to show how serious he was about complying with all the rules, but the old problems were quickly joined by new ones. A couple of customers disputing transactions filed a lawsuit, for which they were seeking class-action status. When the Winklevoss twins read Charlie the riot act, he responded with total contrition.

“Things ARE changing dramatically to fix problems on all fronts and put us in a position for growth as quickly as possible,” he told them. “I’ve made a lot of mistakes, the ones that you guys called me out on as well as others that I’m seeing now and taking steps to fix.”

But there wouldn’t be time for that. Charlie was in the new BitInstant offices, which he had moved the company into less than two weeks earlier, when he got a letter from his lawyers telling him that because of the number of legal questions, they could not represent him in his upcoming meeting with the district attorney unless he shut down the site and resolved all the problems.

Charlie reached the Winklevoss twins while they were in the car on the way to their family beach house. They laid the blame entirely at his feet and demanded the return of the $500,000 loan they had made back in April when business was booming.

On Friday, July 12, at 9 p.m., Charlie took the BitInstant site down, for what he thought would be only a temporary hiatus.

From Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money by Nathaniel Popper. Copyright © 2015 by Nathaniel Popper. Reprinted courtesy of Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.

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New York Stock Exchange Launches Bitcoin Price Index

The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) has today announced the launch of a bitcoin price index (NYXBT).

NYXBT will represent the daily US dollar value of one bitcoin at 4pm (BST) and will be published on the NYSE Global Index Feed (GIF).

For a limited period it will also be viewable on the NYSE's website.

Thomas Farley, NYSE group president, said in a statement:

"Bitcoin values are quickly becoming a data point that our customers want to follow as they consider transacting, trading or investing with this emerging asset class."

He added: "As a global index leader and administrator of ICE LIBOR, ICE Futures US Dollar Index and many other notable benchmarks, we are pleased to bring transparency to this market."

The bitcoin price index will use data from transactions taking place on San Francisco-based bitcoin exchange Coinbase.

However, a statement released by the NYSE said that it would continue to review other  bitcoin exchanges to see whether they met the criteria required for inclusion in the index. "The NYSE Bitcoin suite of indices is anticipated to grow, with new indices introduced over time." 

Growing interest on Wall Street

The move comes after the Wall Street stock exchange invested in Coinbase's $75m Series C funding round, which closed in January this year.

Speaking to Bitcoin News following the announcement, Farley said: "With this investment, we are tapping into a new asset class by teaming up with a leading platform that is bringing transparency, security and confidence to an important growth market."

The NYSE is not the only firm on Wall Street investing in the digital currency.

Multinational banking giant Goldman Sachs recently participated in a $50m funding round raised by bitcoin financial services startup Circle.

Just last month, developers at the Bank of New York Mellon Corp were revealed to be experimenting with bitcoin's open-source code on the bank's new corporate recognition program.

New York Stock Exchange image via Songquan Deng / Shutterstock.com

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