Friday, July 31, 2015

Mt Gox CEO Mark Karpeles Arrested in Japan

Police arrested Mt Gox CEO Mark Karpeles today in Japan on allegations that he manipulated volume on the then-market leading bitcoin exchange platform prior to its 2014 collapse.

The formal action from the Tokyo Metropolitan Police follows escalating reports this week that Karpeles was facing criminal charges for fraud and embezzlement, and comes more than a year after Mt Gox first filed for bankruptcy protection in the US and Japan.

A report by The Wall Street Journal indicated Karpeles denied he was facing imminent arrest as early as Friday, calling accusations "false" and suggesting that he would deny formal charges.

The news source stated that Karpeles has not yet been charged with any crimes, meaning he could be detained for up to 23 days before a formal charge without the possibility of bail. Other media outlets are reporting that the arrest took place at 6am local time.

The exchange is currently undergoing a process of liquidation. Claims management is being conducted with the assistance of Payward Inc, the parent company of bitcoin exchange Kraken, which serves markets in Europe and Japan.

At the time of its insolvency, Mt Gox was alleged to have lost as much as 744,4000 BTC or $350m in customer funds.

Though part of this amount has been recovered, independent reports produced in conjunction with the policy investigation in Japan suggest the exchange had in fact lost much of its funds prior to its collapse.

Video footage of the arrest can be found via Japan-based news source NHK.

CrimeJapanMark KarpelesMt Gox

Overstock Sells $5 Million Cryptobond to New York Trading Firm

US retail giant Overstock has sold a $5m "cryptobond" to FNY Managed Accounts, a New York-based trading firm.

The sale is part of a proof of concept showcasing how financial instruments can be digitized and traded on cryptographic distributed ledgers such as the bitcoin blockchain.

The project was first announced in April and later detailed further in June. At the time, the company announced that CEO Patrick Byrne had purchased a $500,000 cryptobond. Overstock has said it could sell as much as $25m in cryptobonds as part of the project.

The cryptobond sold to FNY will pay 7% interest over a five-year period. As an added security precaution, Overstock will issue a $5m loan to the firm with a 3% annual interest, an arrangement the company said would "transfer the economic risk associated with the failure of the technology". Both agreements come with their own put and call terms.

As part of the deal, the release suggested that FNY's HYDRATrade, its proprietary market access software, would integrate with Overstock's tØ.com cryptosecurities trading platform.

Overstock indicated that the reciprocal loan was unlikely to be extended to any future users of tØ.com. However, it specified the types of customers with which it will seek to do business going forward, writing:

"The offering of the digital cryptodebt is being made exclusively to qualified institutional buyers that meet the definition of 'accredited investor'."

Accredited investors were defined as those who are compliance with Rule 506(c) of Regulation D under the Securities Act of 1933. Under the terms of the rule, Overstock said it may sell its securities to an unlimited number of accredited investors and up to 35 other purchasers.

Overstock also hinted at the complex regulatory process it expected to encounter when first launching its attempt to build a decentralized stock exchange last year, suggesting the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has not approved the offering.

Overstock intends to hold a launch party to celebrate the issuance at NASDAQ's New York headquarters this Tuesday.

Image via Shutterstock

Overstock

Bitcoin in the Headlines: Rolling With the Punches

Bitcoin in the Headlines is a weekly analysis of bitcoin media coverage and its impact.

bitcoin in the headlines

With celebrities playing an increasingly important role in modern culture, it is easy to see why their endorsement might add credibility to a new technology.

From serial entrepreneur and billionaire Richard Branson through to revelations that Hollywood A-lister Lucy Liu was in favour of distributed ledger technology, both digital currency and the blockchain have had their fair share of glitzy supporters.

This kind of attention though, as evidenced earlier this week, has not always been positive for bitcoin, with the media scrutinising its reputation yet again.

Elsewhere, one of the ecosystem's most ambitious projects, Ethereum, received little mainstream coverage despite it being 18 months and $18m in the making.

Bitcoin in the ring

Mike Tyson, the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world, surprised his 4.9 million Twitter followers with his decision to lend his image to a bitcoin ATM.

Under other circumstances, this would probably have just been seen as yet another celebrity endorsement – but clearly bitcoin calls for special treatment.

To say that the digital currency needs a reputation makeover is probably an understatement, but is Tyson, the man who notoriously wasted away a $400m fortune the right person to do it?

It was not long before the mainstream media reacted to the announcement and subsequently begun to question its veracity. Interestingly, however, it was not Tyson's involvement that raised eye-brows among journalists, but the company behind the bitcoin ATM.

Duncan Riley, a SilliconANGLE reporter beat others to the punch as he shed some light on the new partnership:

"Former heavyweight world boxing title holder Mike Tyson may be bitting off more than a rival's ear in August with the news over the weekend that he is apparently getting into the bitcoin ATM ring. But an investigation by SiliconANGLE has revealed that Tyson may have been scammed."

The first issue, Riley noted, was with the domain's registration (miketysonbitcoin.com), thought to belong to Peter Klamka. According to the reporter, Klampa is listed as being the CEO of Bitcoin Brands, Inc, which encompasses two different business: Bitcoin for Miles, a site to buy airline frequent flyer miles; and the Bitcoin Vending Network, whose business offering is unclear.

Interestingly, Riley also found BitMD, another service offered by Bitcoin Brands Inc, which claims to provide bitcoin payment services for the medical marijuana industry.

"Doesn't sound too bad in theory, and if it was providing those services it would be, but there's only one serious problem: We can't find any solid evidence, outside of the company's own press releases, that they are."

The best guess, Riley speculated, was that Mike Tyson had "been suckered into a deal by a fast talker who has promised him millions if he gets involved and lends his name to the enterprise, despite the company behind the enterprise having a market cap that is probably about half the value of one bottle of the champagne Tyson prefers to drink".

Venture Beat echoed SilliconANGLE's findings, noting: "Mike Tyson is either getting into the bitcoin game or is getting scammed out of a bunch of money."

Despite the ongoing debate, Klampa spoke to Bitcoin News and refuted the scam allegations. Under the condition they were not shared, he supplied images of the Mike Tyson branded ATMs, which he said were ready to launch at any time.

Additionally, he told Bitcoin News that Tyson had an "even split" of equity due to the way the license was structured.

A tainted brand

Kudos goes to BTC China's Bobby Lee, who discussed bitcoin with Bloomberg's Rishaad Salamat this week.

"We are discussing bitcoin as a brand, but I mean, it's a tainted brand, it doesn't have a leadership. It's been associated with this Mt Gox bankruptcy, it's been associated with volatility, money laundering etc. How do you get respectability for it and legitimacy?" probed Salamat.

Samalat continued: "You're hoping for stability, aren't you? Because with stability comes respectability and legitimacy and that's what you are really trying to get, isn't it Bobby?"

Then the inevitable happened. Samalat drew on the connection between bitcoin and the dark web, noting how Silk Road enabled users to buy drugs with bitcoin, adding that bitcoin's image had been "tarnished."

Lee tried to abate the criticism during the interview, representative of some of the misconceptions surrounding the digital currency – but to little avail.

Writing for the Huffington Post, Céline Hervieux-Payette, the former Leader of the Opposition in the Canadian Senate, wrote a piece titled "Approach Bitcoin with Caution."

She wrote:

"There remain major security issues regarding bitcoin and digital currency which must be resolved before it can be considered safe. Despite all the fanfare I think there is some need for sober second thought."

She continued: "Criminals like bitcoin due to its unregulated and anonymous nature."

If Lee had a chance to reply he would have probably repeated what he told Salamat. The reality, Lee said, is that it is hard to control what people use bitcoin for, just like it is hard to control what people use cash or the Internet for.

Pizza surprise

bitcoin pizza

This week's most entertaining story was handed to the media by Daniel Sobey-Harker, a British man who spent over £350 worth of bitcoin on pizzas for strangers in the US during a drunken spree.

Although the crypto community has long celebrated the connection between bitcoin and pizza, it seems that the digital currency and the Italian culinary delight are destined to go hand in hand.

Or least that is what the mainstream media would have you believe.

The Mirror covered Harker's purchase in its "Weird News" section, perhaps unaware that this was not the first time bitcoin had been used to buy pizza online.

In his article, Alexander Lerche, said:

"Daniel Sobey-Harker generously put a post on social media site Reddit offering to buy a pizza for someone in the US, but the 27-year-old got into a bit of hot water when he was struggling with payment options. He eventually purchased two digital bitcoins, completely unaware that they were worth £350."

Although the focus of the articles was indeed Harker and his pizza purchases, the coverage also served to portray one of bitcoin's most valid use-cases: international payments.

"After trying to buy pizza for someone in the States - he became frustrated by an inability to pay for said takeaway, resorting to the controversial online currency of bitcoin."

Whether its with the help of celebrities, industry players or pizza, it seems bitcoin's credibility is still being questioned from all sides.

Punching image, pizza image; via Shutterstock.

Bitcoin in the HeadlinesBitcoin Pizza DayBobby LeeScams

Deutsche Bank Letter Touts 'Expertise' in Blockchain Tech

Deutsche Bank is exploring the use of the blockchain for a variety of potential applications, according to a recent letter from the German megabank.

The bank was one of a number of respondents to a call for evidence by the European Securities and Markets Authority, which is currently establishing how it will regulate digital currencies. The EU securities watchdog issued a request for feedback in April. The bank declined to comment when reached.

According to the letter, attributed to global head of regulatory policy Daniel Trinder, Deutsche Bank sees the blockchain as “an area where we have particular interest and expertise”, adding that it is not currently engaged in digital currency trading or issuance. The bank also pointed to a roadmap it unveiled earlier this year in which it outlined plans to explore new financial technologies.

Deutsche Bank cited the following areas of potential blockchain application in its letter:

  • Fiat currency payment and settlement
  • Securities issuance and transfer – creation of unique identifiers, transaction tracking and asset segregation
  • Securities clearing and settlement – through delivery of more efficient post trade processing
  • Securities Asset Servicing – through automation of dividend/interest payments and corporate actions processing
  • Enforcing derivatives contract and improving derivatives clearing through smart contracts
  • Asset registries – without the need for a central administrative authority
  • Know your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering registries and surveillance
  • Creating transparency – and facilitating differentiated customer and regulatory reporting

The bank added:

“In addition to these specific applications, the introduction of distributed ledger technology has the potential to allow for more fundamental changes to pre and post trade work flows within banks with additional efficiency benefits flowing from that.”

Deutsche Bank noted that, in its opinion, the exploration of the technology remains in its early stage, particularly at institutional level.

“Which of these potential applications will turn out to be scalable and sustainable remains to be seen,” it wrote.

On regulation

Deutsche Bank recommended in the letter that regulators seek a balance between compliance and innovation, joining a chorus of organizations, institutions and individuals who have long called for financial tech experimentation to be supported rather than stifled by governments.

Specifically, the bank asked for regulators to “adapt rules to keep pace with innovation and avoid creating barriers to market entry through regulation”.

The bank wrote:

“It is important that in seeking to mitigate potential risks arising from new applications of the blockchain / distributed ledger technology, there is a proportionate approach taken and that an appropriate balance is struck between managing emerging risks and providing predictability for investment and space for continued innovation.”

Deutsche Bank also applauded the work of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the European Banking Authority and the UK Treasury in investigating digital currencies. The bank also voiced support for a proposal by the Financial Action Task Force to oversee exchange activity in Europe.

Blockchain work growing

Deutsche Bank noted in its letter that the blockchain "has the potential to create new industry opportunities and disrupt existing technologies and processes".

Beyond finance, it sees the use of the blockchain growing on the institutional level, citing the work of government bodies in the area of the blockchain.

Most notably, Deutsche Bank wrote that “Estonia, which reports the lowest rate of credit card fraud in the Euro zone, secures much of its banking infrastructure with a blockchain.”

A request for comment submitted to the country’s central bank was not returned by press time.

The bank also cited work by the Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Honduran government as other examples.

The full letter from Deutsche Bank can be found below:

Deutsche Bank Letter

H/t Financial News

Image credit: Tupungato / Shutterstock.com

Deutsche Bank

Microsoft's Bing Launches Bitcoin Rewards Sweepstakes

A new partnership between Bing Rewards and Tango Card will let users of the search engine redeem reward points for the ability to win $500 in bitcoin.

Bing Rewards awards credits to search engine users that can be redeemed for gift cards and other products, including entries into various consumer-oriented contests. The latest contest was made possible by Tango Card's recent partnership with bitcoin processing service SnapCard.

According to SnapCard co-founder Ioannis Giannaros, the drawing – for roughly 1.7 BTC at the time of writing – will run through the end of August.

Winners will be notified at the end of September.

bing, snapcard

Giannaros credits the Bing Rewards team as being "progressive" about the addition of bitcoin rewards, explaining:

"There’s an exciting roadmap and we’re thrilled to be seeing this more 'adopting' approach to bitcoin. As a company of their size, they’re moving quick and really embracing it."

The move suggests a broadening relationship between Microsoft, which owns Bing, and the digital currency. Microsoft added bitcoin as a payment option for digital content in December.

Bing usage accounted for 20% of US search traffic as of June, according to comScore. NetMarketshare reports that the search engine accounted for 9.83% of global traffic as of the same month.

Representatives for Tango Card and Bing Rewards were not immediately available for comment.

Bing image via Shutterstock

BingRewardsSnapCardTango Card

Drone Delivers Bitcoin-Purchased Cannabis in California

A company in the San Francisco area is delivering bitcoin-purchased medicinal cannabis to customers via drone.

Trees, which claims to sell the "highest quality" medicinal cannabis to people holding a medical recommendation, accepts payments in bitcoin alongside traditional payment methods such as cash, online bank transfer and credit cards.

The service requires users to provide their driving and medical license when ordering. To get medical approval, consumers must have a short evaluation with a doctor, either online or at a clinic.

Users must give the medical reason for their use of cannabis, declare any pre-existing health conditions, confirm whether they've used cannabis before and state their preferred method of ingestion.

Customers can then choose from six different cannabis boxes, ranging in price from $59 to $149, all of which come with a certificate of authenticity.

Currently, Trees only delivers to the San Francisco Bay area.

Although its delivery method is nothing short of creative, Trees is not the first company to accept bitcoin payments for legal marijuana.

In April last year, the first marijuana vending machine in the US, was unveiled in the sate of Colorado.

State regulation

California was the first state to set a medical marijuana program, enacted by Proposition 215 in 1996 and Senate Bill 420 seven years later.

The Proposition, otherwise known as the Compassionate Use Act, approved by a majority vote, enabled cancer, AIDS and patients suffering from other chronic diseases to grow or obtain marijuana following recommendation by a licensed physician.

Aside from California and Colorado, medicinal cannabis is also legal in 21 other US states.

Marijuana image via Shutterstock.

CaliforniaDrugsSan Francisco

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

US Presidential Candidate Rick Perry Reveals Bitcoin Stance

US presidential candidate Rick Perry has stated he supports "regulatory breathing room" for digital currencies such as bitcoin.

The comments came during a new interview with New York Observer that found Perry elaborating on issues that could form the core of his fiscal policy.

In the interview, Perry roundly denounced perceived issues in the financial system, stating:

“Wall Street should not be left off the hook for their bad behavior … instead of them being punished, it was the average American who paid the tremendous price. The fact of the matter is, to be quite frank: we got screwed."

With the remarks, Perry joins fellow Republican presidential hopeful Rand Paul in his support for the technology. Paul announced in April that he would accept bitcoin for campaign donations.

The 65-year-old Republican candidate previously served three terms as governor of Texas, a state that has long been less restrictive in its approach to digital currency regulation. Perry announced his candidacy in June following a failed bid for the Republican nomination in 2012.

For example, in April 2014, the Texas Department of Banking was one of the first state-level regulatory bodies to issue guidelines to the industry.

Former Texas congressman Steve Stockman was also a staunch advocate for the industry, first lobbying in 2014 to stop proposals such as New York's BitLicense. Prior to the end of his term, Stockman submitted a bill that called for a moratorium on digital currency regulation that would have restricted such laws nationwide for five years.

Image credit: Christopher Halloran / Shutterstock.com

PoliticsRegulation

Ripple Labs Taps US Treasury Official for Advisory Board

Michael BarrRipple Labs has added Michael Barr, a former US Treasury Department official, to its board of advisors.

Barr previously served as Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions under President Barack Obama and as a special Treasury advisor to former President Bill Clinton. Barr also worked in the State Department and the US Supreme Court. He is currently teaching at the University of Michigan Law School.

Barr said in a statement:

“Our global payments system is badly outdated. I think innovation in payments can help make the financial system safer, reduce cost and improve access and efficiency for consumers and businesses alike.”

With the move, Barr becomes the latest former Obama administration official to join the startup's board of advisors.

Former director of the National Economic Council Gene Sperling was named to the board in January, and in March the company added former State Department official Anja Manuel.

Ripple Labs is the developer of a distributed payments network geared toward financial institutions.

The company is one of a growing number of startups pitching more permissioned blockchain alternatives to banks and financial services providers worldwide.

Image credit: Wikimedia

Blockchain TechnologyRipple Labs

Survey: Consumers Say Bitcoin More Inconvenient Than Checks

A new survey has found that consumers believe bitcoin to be more inconvenient than traditional payment methods such as credit cards and checks.

Conducted by prepaid and gift card product provider Blackhawk Network in April, the poll canvassed 1,000 US consumers, questioning them about their sentiment toward both traditional and emerging payment methods.

In total, 18% of respondents reported using alternative payment methods such as Apple Pay, Samsung Pay and bitcoin within the last year. Sixty-eight percent of these consumers indicated they used the products more than they did in 2014.

However, Blackhawk found that the consumer attitude toward bitcoin is still largely negative, revealing that 38% ranked bitcoin as the most inconvenient of surveyed payment methods including cash, credit cards, PayPal and checks.

Blackhawk

Checks were ranked as the second most inconvenient payment method by consumers, with 35% reporting they viewed the payment method with dissatisfaction.

Cash, by comparison, was viewed as the most popular payment method, with 93% of consumers reporting a satisfaction with paper currency.

Evolving consumer sentiment

The survey joins an increasing body of research that suggests more consumers are now willing to at least try bitcoin and other digital currencies for use in commerce.

For example, a recent Goldman Sachs report found that 22% of US millennials have used bitcoin and intend to use the payment method again. Still, research also suggested many consumers remain unconvinced in the technology's utility for payments.

More than half of its 752 respondents suggested they have never used bitcoin and that they had no plans to do so in the future.

Survey image via Shutterstock

Apple PayCredit CardsResearch

US Government Funds $3 Million Cryptocurrency Research Initiative

Three American universities are set to conduct wide-ranging research on cryptocurrencies using roughly $3m in grant funding from the National Science Foundation, a US government agency that supports and funds scientific research.

Cornell, the University of Maryland and the University of California Berkeley will focus on developing new cryptocurrency systems that, according to principal investigator Elaine Shi, will address “pain points” attributed to bitcoin and other existing networks.

The Initiative for Cryptocurrency and Contracts (IC3) will also involve Cornell researcher Emin Gun Sirer; Dawn Song from UC Berkeley; and Jonathan Katz, David van Horn and Michael Hicks from the University of Maryland. The funding itself will be used to support the researchers involved with the project.

According to Shi, the growing ecosystem of startups focusing on digital currency research and rising interest among a broad range of parties necessitates “a rigorous science for cryptocurrencies”.

She told Bitcoin News:

“We believe that our research can help establish cryptocurrency as a prominent research area, and make a big impact in shaping the future of financial transactions and e-commerce.”

According to National Science Foundation acting deputy division director Nina Amla, funding for the initiative comes from the Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace program, an initiative devoted to funding research into cyber security and digital privacy. That program saw $75m in grants awarded last year, a figure that the agency hopes to meet or exceed this year.

Focus on smart contracts

The initiative will devote resources to developing new systems that enable expanded transaction scalability, privacy and user functionality. Smart contracts will be a major focus of the initiative, building on prior work by University of Maryland researchers.

One such project is Hawk, a blockchain system that enables private smart contracts to be written but not disclosed to the public. Developed jointly by Cornell and the University of Maryland, Hawk was unveiled in early June and will see further refinement and development as the IC3 project commences, according to Shi.

The work builds off previous efforts conducted at the University of Maryland last fall, during which time faculty and students formed a smart contracts laboratory to explore potential issues and opportunities. A research paper on that initiative can be found here.

One of the major findings, according to Shi, was that “it is extremely easy to make mistakes programming smart contracts”. This, she explained, raises the risk that funds can be irretrievably lost or diverted by “a selfish counterparty” as a result of such an error.

“This is where we can greatly benefit from formal program analysis techniques,” she said.

Latest investment in cryptocurrency research

The IC3 initiative isn’t the first time the NSF has invested in a program devoted to conducting research into cryptocurrency.

The agency, which received more than $7b in funding from Congress for Fiscal Year 2015, has funded other efforts aimed at exploring cryptocurrencies, including one initiative at Princeton University and another at the University of California-Irvine.

The NSF’s Amla echoed Shi by saying the proposal offers a way to address a number of cross-disciplinary subjects, related to not only cryptocurrency in particular but also cybersecurity, digital privacy and financial innovation more broadly.

“There’s a lot of really good technical issues here that they have identified and have proposed to study,” she said.

Beyond cryptocurrency

Shi hopes the initiative will lead to “closer collaborations” between companies in the industry and academic researchers working on cryptocurrency issues or related projects.

She explained:

“We have been faced with many challenges in trying to bring formal rigor to cryptocurrency design. Personally, I am particularly excited about cross-disciplinary research challenges, and I believe that cryptocurrency can serve as a central playground for synergizing disparate research communities.”

Ultimately, the goal is to seek potentially new ways of developing and implementing cryptocurrency technology.

“I believe that our research will help solve some of the fundamental challenges and most difficult problems in cryptocurrency design, and make a big impact,” Shi concluded.

Image credit via Shutterstock

ResearchUS

Russian Watchdog Threatens News Site Over Bitcoin Article

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

American Banker Conference: Lines Drawn in Blockchain Debate

Lawsky: New Consulting Firm Can't Advise on BitLicense

Microsoft Event Explores Use of Blockchain Tech for Social Good

The ways in which blockchain technology can be used to support social good were discussed at an event hosted by Microsoft’s Civic Innovation team in New York last night.

Taking place at the LMHQ venue in Lower Manhattan, the event was kicked off by John Paul Farmer, director of technology and civic innovation at Microsoft.

Farmer, who previously served as the senior advisor for innovation in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, explained the purpose of the session was to explore the kind of impact blockchain technology can have when used in new and creative ways.

He added:

“Our team is in New York, we’ve been here about a year now. We’re here to work on the really hard problems – social problems – and to figure out what role technology can play in trying to address them.”

Farmer, who also previously played professional baseball in the Los Angeles Dodgers and Atlanta Braves minor leagues, went on to state digital currencies have the potential to solve many problems both within and beyond the financial sector.

Identifying use cases

Speakers at the event included Brian Forde, director of the Digital Currency Initiative at MIT Media Lab and Chelsea Barabas, senior advisor for social impact at the MIT Media Lab.

Forde, who worked at the White House with Farmer, delivered a ‘bitcoin 101’ presentation while Barabas went into more detail about the work the Digital Currency Initiative is currently undertaking.

She explained one possible use for blockchain technology is as a “canonical media notary”. Those who have photos or videos of crimes, for example the death of Walter Scott at the hands of a South Carolina police officer, could upload their evidence to a decentralised ledger. This evidence could not be tampered with after being uploaded and would help in the face of conflicting eyewitness statements.

Welfare

Another example Barabas presented was using the blockchain to distribute welfare payments.

She explained the way the US currently distributes welfare looks very much the same as it did 100 years ago, emphasising it takes a lot of time and costs a lot of money.

“Could we use the blockchain as the foundation for a digital payments infrastructure that would be much more efficient [and] cost less money also for the recipient?” Barabas asked.

She envisions people being able to receive their welfare payments in a “secure and highly verifiable way” via their mobile phones.

Another benefit of this system, Barabas claimed, would be the increased transparency, enabling people to see where exactly the government is spending its money and how it is handling the process.

On the subject of governments, she revealed: “We have governments coming to us saying ‘hey, we’re really interested in being proactive about understanding this technology and using it to improve our ability to serve the public’.”

LMHQ Microsoft blockchain discussion From L-R: Anne Kim, Peter Kirby, Ryan Shea, Chelsea Barabas and Brian Forde

Voting and ID

Other use cases for blockchain technology were explained by Peter Kirby, CEO of Factom; Anne Kim, senior business operations lead at IDEO; and Ryan Shea, co-founder and CEO of OneName.

Kirby explained Factom is examining the use of blockchain technology as a central land title database as well as in voting systems.

Kim, however, emphasised IDEO is being careful to not “wedge the technology into a space” that doesn’t necessarily need it.

One focus of her company has been to explore how the blockchain can facilitate frictionless transactions, which make it easier to give to charitable causes.

She also believes the technology can be used in “democratising decision-making”, with citizens being able to have a say in the projects government funds are channeled to.

Shea explained onename.io hopes to use blockchain technology to provide official ID for those who do not posess government-issued ID.

This has the potential to reduce identity theft as well as enable people to do things they weren’t able to do previously, such as open a bank account, receive government benefits and vote in elections.

A tribute

Farmer rounded off the event with a tribute to 29-year-old Faigy Mayer, founder and CEO of app-development startup Appton.

“A lot of you may know her or have known her, she passed away last week and she needed help but didn’t get it. I want to encourage everyone in this room to give help and if you … ever need help, please ask.”

Farmer encouraged the attendees to continue thinking about the topics raised during the event and to come up with their own game-changing ideas.

“Please leave this room tonight thinking how might you come up with new, creative and innovative ways to use these technologies or other technologies to help people, because that’s what it’s all about,” he concluded.

The full recording of the event can be viewed below:

Event image via Livestream.

Blockchain TechnologyMicrosoftMIT

New Service Finds Optimum Bitcoin Transaction Fee

A new service, CoinTape, is offering bitcoin users an answer to the common question: what is the optimum transaction fee?

Using network data from the past three hours, the service lets users compare the current waiting times associated with various fee tiers, calculated in satoshis per byte.

It claims to predict delays with 90% confidence.

The default fee used by many bitcoin wallets is 10 satoshis (0.0000001) per byte. However, according to CoinTape, paying 20 satoshis (0.0000002 BTC) per byte will get you the fastest and cheapest transaction on the network.

delays miner

For the average-sized bitcoin transaction, 645 bytes, this equates to a fee of 129 bits (0.000129 BTC) (note that this is calculated on a transaction's size, not its dollar value).

The most popular fee ratio CoinTape lists, 41–50 satoshis per byte, used in more than 30,000 transactions today alone, is double this.

Network competition

As the number of bitcoin transactions rise, competition for space in each block is heating up. Miners prioritise transactions with the highest fees, working down the list until the block reaches its limit, 750,000 bytes.

Transactions that don't make the cut remain in the miner's 'memory pool', a kind of bitcoin limbo. They may be included in future blocks depending on their priority or fee.

Currently, you can opt out of the fee altogether. However, there has been debate as to whether this should be raised, with a recent pull request to make a 10,000 satoshi minimum to reduce spam on the network.

CoinTape indicates that avoiding a fee is more likely to result in delays to your payment. It could take up to six blocks, or around one hour (blocks are created roughly every 10 minutes).

Bitcoin ProtocolCoinTapeTransaction FeesWallets

5 Things Bitcoin Owners Must Do When Estate Planning

Jeff Vandrew is a licensed attorney, a Certified Public Accountant and a Certified Financial Planner. Based in New Jersey, he restricts his practice to two areas: estate planning and tax planning. Here he explains the steps bitcoin holders should take when planning their estates.

bitcoin holder

When it comes to estate planning, very little has been mentioned about bitcoin. While bitcoin is subject to wills and revocable living trusts like any other asset, there are some special considerations.

Most seasoned holders of bitcoin are aware of IRS Notice 2014-21. For those unaware, the notice holds that for US tax purposes, bitcoin is to be treated as property rather than currency. The notice is wrongheaded, foolish and probably was issued with intent to slow down bitcoin adoption. Nonetheless, we’re stuck with it until bitcoin adoption increases to the point where the IRS recognizes it as a currency.

Much ink has been spilled about the more obvious consequences of bitcoin’s classification as property, namely:

  1. Whenever bitcoin is spent on goods or services, the spender must recognize taxable income or loss on the difference between tax basis (usually the price at which he acquired the bitcoin) and the fair market value of the bitcoin at the time spent.
  2. Bitcoin miners must recognize ordinary income equal to the fair market value of the bitcoin mined at the time of mining.
  3. If your employer pays you in bitcoin, such payments must be reported on your W2 and are subject to tax withholding in US dollars.

Beyond these more obvious consequences, however, there are some hidden estate planning traps when it comes to the death or incapacity of a bitcoin account holder. To avoid these problems, here are five steps you need to take now in your estate plan.

1. Get your step-up in your estate plan, and watch your step-down

Because bitcoin is property, when a bitcoin holder dies, the beneficiaries of his will or living trust receive his bitcoin with tax basis at the fair market value on the date of death. For example, assume I inherit 100 BTC from my mother, and on her date of death 1 BTC is worth $250. If 1 BTC is worth $260 at the time I later spend 1 BTC in that scenario, I have a taxable gain of $10 on my bitcoin use. The fact that my mother only paid $150 for that bitcoin when she acquired it isn’t relevant for tax purposes once she has passed.

This is a double-edged sword. For highly appreciated bitcoin, this may be a boon. For bitcoin that has depreciated since purchase, this could be a disaster. For example, in the hypothetical above, if my mother had paid $1,000 for 1 BTC, upon spending I would still have a taxable gain of $10, because the only relevant factor is the fair market value on my mother’s date of death.

If you’re older and have appreciated bitcoin, it makes sense to hold onto it as long as you can so that your heirs can take advantage of the step-up. The step up may be able to eliminate all taxation of the gains on your investment.

On the other hand, if you’re older and have depreciated bitcoin, it may make sense to spend it as quickly as possible and preserve your cash. Upon spending, you’ll recognize taxable losses (which may possibly result in a reduced overall tax bill) and you’ll avoid your tax basis being stepped down at death.

2. Make sure your executor or trustee is aware that your bitcoin exists

If you tend to be private, your loved ones may never even know that you have bitcoin. Due to the anonymous nature of bitcoin, if they aren’t aware of it, your bitcoin will die with you. To avoid this result, set up some method of informing your loved ones that you’re a bitcoin holder. If you’re uncomfortable telling them now, check out a service like Deathswitch which will automatically inform them when you’re gone.

3. Make sure your executor or trustee can get your private key

Bitcoin isn’t like a bank account where your loved ones can simply contact the institution once your will has been probated. Without your private key (or in the case of a hosted walled like Coinbase or Circle, your username/password), your executor will be totally powerless to distribute your bitcoin under the terms of your will.

Since most of us don’t like passing our private keys or login info around, consider using the Deathswitch option. You can always encrypt your bitcoin key or Coinbase/Circle login before uploading to Deathswitch. [Just make sure your recipient is given the decryption key for the message ahead of time!]

4. Make sure power of attorney allows your agent to access your bitcoin

Many of us have a power of attorney document in place. This allows someone to handle our legal and financial affairs if we’re alive, but incapacitated. This person may need to handle your bitcoin. To make sure this happens, make sure that your power of attorney document explicitly allows your agent to access either your bitcoin specifically, or your digital assets broadly. And like your executor, your agent under your power of attorney is going to need access to your private key or login info.

5. Beware of the Prudent Investor Act

Most states have enacted some version of the Prudent Investor Act, which requires that executors and trustees diversify investments. If someone is to die holding a large amount of bitcoin, there is a argument that under the Act the bitcoin wuld be considered an “investment” rather than cash, and a volatile one at that. Such a classification may mean that an executor or trustee may be required under the Act to sell bitcoin and diversify into traditional securities. This may not be what the deceased party intended.

The good news is that the Prudent Investor Act generally allows itself to be explicitly overridden. Should you desire your executor or trustee to have the power to hold your bitcoin long-term, consider a specific provision in your will or trust absolving him from any liability for failure to diversify bitcoin.

Don’t procrastinate!

Like everything else involving estate planning, we never know when something when incapacity will come. By then, it’s too late to plan. If you’re a bitcoin holder, that means there is no excuse to procrastinate on these five points.

Originally posted on vandrew.com. Republished here with permission.

Sunday, July 26, 2015

The Blockchain is a New Model of Governance

network

As the Greece debt crisis unfolds and capital controls are forced down the throats of their people, bitcoin has moved back into the mainstream spotlight. With long lines in front of ATM machines reminiscent of the Cyprus bail-in, once again bitcoin appears to offer a safe haven.

While many people focus on bitcoin’s price fluctuations and potential increase in adoption, currency is just the first application of this game-changing technology. The core of the blockchain provides an alternative governance model to the current oligarchic control shown in the harsh austerity forced against the will of the Greek people.

In the six years of its existence, public awareness of this technology has grown by leaps and bounds. Now, most who are aware of this groundbreaking innovation know the blockchain is a ledger. Yet, this ledger is not simply for accounting monetary transactions.

At its core, it is a platform that allows people to come to agreement on virtually anything without intermediaries. It provides a foundation to make social contracts based on the principle of consensus. Foremost, it enables a larger function of accounting; performing checks and balance on the self interests and the corruptible tendencies that exist in society.

In his white paper published in 2008, anonymous creator of this technology Satoshi Nakamoto noted it was invented as a solution to the inherent weaknesses of the trust-based model. Roger Ver, aka 'Bitcoin Jesus', an angel investor in bitcoin startups, recently remarked on the Greek financial crisis, pointing out the fallible nature of the existing forms of governance that create one-way contracts:

Bitcoin self-regulates through algorithm, eliminating counter-party risk and the need for traditional legal and regulatory tools that have shown to be ineffective in events such as HSBC money laundering and the giant banking industry’s currency printing and market rigging. The core of this invention is distributed trust and is enabled through a mechanism called proof of work.

Proof of work

In his presentation Consensus Algorithms, Blockchain Technology and Bitcoin, security expert and author Andreas Antonopoulos described how proof of work is composed of specific cryptographic hash functions and sets of game theoretical equilibrium systems that dynamically adjust and create economics of scale.

Proof of work plays a vital role in securing the system. Adam Back, inventor of Hashcash, which contributed to the fundamentals of bitcoin, noted how it “constructs a computational irrevocability from proof-of-work and consensus”.

This means no one can undo the work one has done. No one can fake the work or go around it. Miners at the heart of the bitcoin ecosystem have to perform hash operations by using precious resources and if they play by the rules they receive value, and if not, they lose value. In other words, all are held directly accountable by being required to spend their resources and show the presentation of their work.

This makes the blockchain bulletproof and resistant to manipulation. It also guards against the hyperinflation created as a result of government intervention through measures such as quantitative easing. When looked at as a larger governance model, this accounts for potential selfish attempts that try to benefit from the good will of people.

Genius of economic incentive

What gives the impulse for this self-organizing system and, most of all, where does this force of accountability come from? There is no central planner in bitcoin. In a sense, Satoshi’s anonymity embodies the technology’s essence. There are effectively no fingerprints on this technology. At the center of this mathematical invention is a vital economic incentive that spontaneously organizes miners to make the ledger decentralized and immutable.

This incentive structure manifested in its built-in digital scarcity is an underlying current behind the bitcoin network. This was built with a realistic and honest assessment of man’s self-interests.

History is filled with evidence of what happens when we fail to account for our selfish tendencies within. Dark memories of atomic bombs, slavery, Holocaust and genocide remind us of the cruel and violent parts inherent in humanity and the mass destruction we are capable of committing.

The blockchain creates incentive for participants to work honestly, where rules are applied to all equally.

When self-interests are not acknowledged, they quickly escape consciousness. Lower aspects of our humanity that are denied can then easily gain the upper hand. They become a kind of insatiable hunger that drives people to the pursuit of power, creating fraudulent systems where anti-social forces attack networks, take over economies and undermine the sovereignty and will of the people.

Through accounting for selfish motives and greed and using rewards to encourage good behavior in a transparent open network, the blockchain creates incentive for participants to work honestly, where rules are applied to all equally.

This way, the system can more effectively mitigate the risk of humanity’s destructive potential.

Distributed accountability

The bitcoin network fosters a true consent of the governed through voluntary participation and enables self-regulation taken up by each choosing to abide by the rule of consensus.

What emerges in this innovation is a new form of social accountability. Unlike traditional representative models of governance, where systems of checks and balance are exercised through third parties, under bitcoin’s consensus model, accountability is distributed directly and exercised by all in the network.

This removes single points of failure and provides far better security than existing systems. With the blockchain's transparency, those who prefer profit without work will have no place to run and no place to hide.

There are already creative initiatives to strengthen political accountability through the use of this technology. London mayoral candidate George Galloway is calling for the city to adopt blockchain-based accounting in order to provide full transparency for the public of the city’s financial activities.

Along with the host of the RT’s financial report Max Keiser, Galloway created The Mayor's Chain Project that would put the city’s annual budget on a blockchain to foster collective auditing by citizens.

Enshrined in the bitcoin protocol is a blueprint for decentralized forms of governance. This is a real invention and can’t be uninvented. As the global crisis of legitimacy deepens, austerity will continue, with insolvent banks bailing themselves out and hedge funds getting away with cooking the books.

Bitcoin might not be able to save Greece in this moment, but its core technology offers tools for those who want to innovate a truly viable alternative to the centralized institutions of mandated trust and move into a society based on networks of distributed democracy.

Network 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.

Blockchain

Friday, July 24, 2015

ItBit to Host Private Blockchain Summit for Wall Street Elites

IBM to Sponsor Blockchain Hackathon in India

Gallup Poll Finds Few Consumers Trust Digital Wallets

Bitcoin in the Headlines: Blockchain Drumbeat Grows Louder

Winklevoss Brothers File Trust Application for Gemini Exchange

DigitalBTC Buys $10.1 Million in Bitcoin in Q2 2015

ShoCard's Quest to Secure Identity on the Blockchain

It's perhaps best explained by a car crash.

As veteran entrepreneur Armin Ebrahimi tells it in interview, his car was hit by a truck two nights ago. The driver had no insurance, and he had little reason to trust him because of the poor quality of his government-issued driver's license.

"The picture didn't really match him. It was difficult to know it's him, the picture was a little more clean cut. It's got a PO box address on it, so I took the information I could," Ebrahimi explained.

Ebrahimi isn't just any driver. He's also the CEO of ShoCard, a blockchain technology startup that's seeking to harness the power of bitcoin's distributed ledger to solve pain points with authentication such as those in this process. Whether it's a true story or a convenient anecdote is unclear. Either way, the story cuts to the core of how ShoCard and blockchain technology can intercede and solve problems inherent in such an incident.

ShoCard, Ebrahimi asserts, aims to function as a mobile ID that can be verified in real time using a combination of cryptography and the immutability of bitcoin's ledger. Perhaps most importantly, the company asserts identifying information could be verifiable without requiring users to give up control of their data.

Investors are already convinced the company has found a powerful use case for the technology. ShoCard recently raised $1.5m in funding from investors including AME Cloud Ventures and Digital Currency Group.

In interview, Ebrahimi provided a deeper dive into the underlying tech of the product he hopes will transform identity on the web, mobile and real world.

Ebrahimi told Bitcoin News:

"We create a private and public key pair that allows you to access the blockchain and create separate key pairs for each of the fields that you're going to be storing [on your ShoCard]. So you have a master private key and private keys for individual data fields."

While top of mind given his recent experience, Ebrahimi sees ShoCard as effective beyond insurance incidents, impacting how people verify themselves to e-commerce providers, banks or any third party with whom they must prove their identity to.

ShoCard in practice

shocard

Though still in the pre-launch phase, ShoCard's digital ID provides details such as the full name, address, signature, date of birth and physical details of each user. While it looks like a mobile driver's license and contains the same information, the difference, according to Ebrahimi, is each field on the ShoCard is protected with cryptography.

"We create signatures for each field. We create a hash that encrypts the data that's on there, then we create a digital signature of it, then put it on the blockchain," he explains.

ShoCard doesn't put the user's data on the blockchain, rather just its own cryptographic proof that the data is correct.

"All you can do is validate that later," he added. "I would give you my public key and name and say here's my entry on the blockchain with a signature. You can use that data to go in and validate it, but I have to provide you my name to validate it."

If both parties in the car crash were using the ShoCard system, Ebrahimi said, the app could be made to produce a QR code that when scanned could allow the users to pass the blockchain record of their identities to each other securely.

"My ShoCard would go in, pull the data out of it to verify that it is on the blockchain. Let's say [the truck driver] was certified by the DMV and his bank. I could look at those [certifications] and say that these are ones that I can trust."

Additionally, users could have control over what they share. In the instance of a car crash, a user might need to take another party's name and address before submitting it to a third party like an insurance provider.

"I don't have to see everything else," he continued. "I don't need to ask for his weight and eye color."

A similar exchange, he said, could also take place without QR codes using a Wi-Fi transfer protocol such as Apple's AirDrop. Either way, digital data is validated securely using bitcoin's secure digital ledger.

Beating Facebook

Still, Ebrahimi believes ShoCard will perhaps be most immediately useful online, where online authentication is increasingly handled by Internet giants such as Google and Facebook.

Part of the current problem, Ebrahimi argues, is that these companies earn revenue from reselling data, and further, they have the ability to update their policies often, and in ways that might not always be friendly to users.

ShoCard, Ebrahimi believes, could compete against these systems if it could achieve a similar scale because the blockchain would help return control to users.

"Until the blockchain there was no way to build the best infrastructure, keep it as secure as you can and make sure no one can compromise what's inside. There are so many public cases where credit card data is breached, we see that happen publicly over and over."

A former CEO of Buysight and Advertising.com, Ebrahimi was also a platform engineer at Yahoo until 2008. There, he managed Yahoo's user ID and login strategy, insight which he says allowed him to see the benefits of bitcoin.

"I was very fascinated with bitcoin and the infrastructure beneath it," he said. "What I found is it provides a dramatically different approach to solving the problem and that the solution could be uniquely different than what was possible."

He argued the blockchain provides compelling benefits even when compared to two-factor authentication, which he said has recently proven susceptible to hacking and interference.

"Two factor is a great step forward in terms of providing security, but we're looking at two years from now, how does that landscape change and how do we do we focus on identity."

Question of scale

The most pressing challenge for ShoCard isn't technology, Ebrahimi acknowledges, it's a question of scale. As the car crash analogy illustrates, ShoCard can only be as useful as the number of people and third-party institutions using it.

Identifying this "chicken-and-egg problem", Ebrahimi said, was a key factor in ShoCard choosing to adopt a business-to-business (B2B) marketing strategy.

"The way we see this gaining traction is not us having end users download the product," he said. "That's much more challenging because the use cases will be limited. What we're looking at is working with enterprises and having them be the ones who roll this out to their user base."

Ebrahimi suggested ShoCard is already talking to banks interested in the technology, but declined to name potential partners. Presentations for the company suggest ShoCard believes its solution could be a compelling alternative to services like Verified by Visa, which while allowing major financial institutions to leverage access to user data, require them to store it in centralized databases.

More immediately, Ebrahimi sees the service as potentially appealing to bitcoin companies that currently rely on two-factor authentication services or other tools.

"Identity has become significantly more important for bitcoin companies as they start expanding beyond early adopters," he said.

Until those partnerships are secure, however, the ShoCard product, will be kept under wraps. "That's how we can get a larger user base and those users will have a use case," Ebrahimi said.

Element of trust

Still, the irony is that, while the blockchain is effectively a trustless system, ShoCard's partners still have to trust the system, something that has been difficult for institutions given the negative publicity surrounding bitcoin as a currency.

Ebrahimi aims to overcome this with a two-pronged strategy. First, convince enterprise businesses that using the blockchain is more secure and efficient; second, use trusted brands as distribution partners to consumers.

The first case, Ebrahimi suggested, will be easier given that enterprise companies are already trusting authentication providers with their data. If ShoCard was a traditional authentication company, he said, it would have its own database, meaning partners would have to trust that information therein is properly maintained and that it's not improperly modified or changed.

"The people we have to convince, most of them are interested in blockchain," he said. "A bank would have a hard time trusting another database, but you don't need to trust us in storing or maintaining the integrity of the data, making sure it doesn't get hacked into. I can independently validate the data and insist on its accuracy with an open database."

It's still too early, he said, for consumers to comprehend the blockchain. But, Ebrahimi believes consumers don't need to necessarily understand it as long as they can use the technology conveniently.

He concluded:

"One of the things we've done is hidden away a lot of that complexity from the users. You understand looking at your ID, because it's pushed out by a trusted enterprise."

Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

AuthenticationBlockchain TechnologyIdentityShoCard

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Meet the Kenyan Startup Trying to Change Bill Gates' Mind on Bitcoin

Last month, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation awarded bitcoin startup Bitsoko $100,000 to help troubleshoot Africa's now-ubiquitous mobile money systems.

The news, which followed a long application process beginning last September, came as a surprise to the team of six, not least because Bill Gates has been publicly skeptical about the future of the payment technology in the developing world.

"They [the foundation] had not worked with any other bitcoin startups to our knowledge, so we were really not too sure if they would want to come on and us be their first," Daniel Bloch, Bitsoko's head of business development, told Bitcoin News.

Through its Grand Challenges Explorations grant, now in its eighth year, the Gates Foundation has funded thousands of outside-the-box ideas seeking to tackle 'unsolved problems' in global health.

This year, for the first time, it's branching out into nine initiatives around mobile money – a technology that, in little under a decade, has already seen rapid adoption among the world's underbanked. While the $100,000 isn't a seal of approval per se, it does indicate the foundation is willing to give bitcoin a try, Bloch said.

"I know that the Gates Foundation has had some events and internal debates around bitcoin, so I think because of that timing they've said 'Lets give them a grant for 18 months and see, does it work? Is it increasing the ability for merchants to accept mobile money payments, or is Bill right?'"

With the money, Bitsoko is running a year-long research study on whether its three-pronged service – a consumer wallet, a merchant processor and an API – can spur mobile money adoption in the east and west of the continent.

Currently in beta with a select number of users, it will launch officially on 25th September this year.

PayPal for mobile money

Despite the mobile money boom, and the success of projects such as Kenya's MPesa, there is one problem that persists: interoperability.

In 2013, 52 of the world's countries had more than one mobile money source – a term used to describe each telecom's 'brand' of cash. In Ghana, for example, where Bitsoko is running half of its trial, there are five main telecoms.

This variety of payment methods creates friction on both sides of the till. Due to the fees and set up costs involved, Bloch said, local merchants will typically accept only one type of mobile cash. However, consumers will still need to convert their funds from, say, AirTel to MTN, to accommodate for this when they shop, and face high fees when doing so.

Enter Bitsoko, a way to accept many currencies and cash out in just one, which Bloch described as a kind of PayPal for mobile money.

Users top-up their online wallet, they pay in the money of their choice, and – via the blockchain – the merchant receives payment in the form of currency they prefer, allowing them to leapfrog the hassle and fees involved in changing between currencies.

"As mobile money grows, we see Bitsoko as a solution that can really help merchants lower their costs to either be equivalent or lower than existing systems and not have additional fees by having to accept more than one and go back and forth."

While there are plans to support non-smartphone models in the future – Bitsoko is "exploring opportunities" with SMS wallets, Bloch said – currently the target market is the young, vibrant tech community in Nairobi, aka the Silicon Savannah.

For this reason, and for the purposes of the grant, Bitsoko will be focusing solely on bitcoin top-ups for now, though it will allow users to top-up via cash, bank transfer or mobile money in the future.

bitsoko-app The Bitsoko mobile app

Phase two

But what does any of this have to do with health? Well, if the project can produce hard evidence that it has been successful in its mission to save merchants time and money with bitcoin, the team's plan for phase two of the grant (which can be up to $1m) will be an expansion into industry-specific payment processing for institutions such as hospitals and pharmaceutical companies.

The hard evidence it needs comes in the form of customer acquisition, retention and cost savings for the 40 merchants – 20 in Kenya's capital, Nairobi, and the other 20 in Accra, Ghana – taking part in the trial. All data will be tracked via Bitsoko's merchant analytics and customer loyalty platforms.

"We want to offer merchants data on their store they didn't know," Bloch said. Bitsoko is hoping that, by using this information, companies will be able to adapt their stores to suit the needs of their customers and their business, for example optimising a menu or providing better loyalty cards.

Currently, this comes for free. However, the company is weighing the merits of a monthly payment model, versus a 0.1% transaction fee once the trial is over. If merchants choose to stick with the platform, and pay, this could improve Bitsoko's chances of receiving more funds from the foundation.

About Bitsoko

Bloch first met Bitsoko's two other founders, brothers Allan and Gibson Juma, through the Crypto College Network (CCN) which he started in January 2014 as a way to meet other students into bitcoin.

The Jumas, though not students, were working out of Kenyatta University’s incubator at the time. After discovering CCN online, they got in touch with Bloch, who helped them plan Nairobi's first bitcoin meetup last September. Bloch decided to join Bitsoko full time after his graduation.

home

The team has since expanded, bringing on Africa's only bitcoin core developer, Tawanda Kembo; Emmanuel Noah, who heads up business development in Ghana and Jessica Colaco, Bitsoko's head of research.

Bitsoko's home in the tech hub of Nairobi means the team have witnessed the scene's "amazing energy" and daily events for investors, NGOs and international corporations.

For this reason, Bloch is confident the region will see more companies like Bitsoko and remittance platform BitPesa, which raised £1.1m from US-centric investors back in February, springing up.

However, there is still some way to go: "The main part holding back investors ... I think the scene will increase as education and collaboration increases."

Bitsoko hopes to play a part in this, starting with a series of educational events. Its first workshop this month, which took place in the city’s iHub centre, saw over 60 developers attend. This, Bloch said, speaks to the level of interest from those looking for a way in to the industry.

Additionally, the startup has also been pleasantly surprised about the enthusiasm for the currency itself. "We've noticed that a lot of people want bitcoin currently, and in Kenya and in Ghana there is a population that does want bitcoin and who is going to, we think, enjoy the volatility aspect," Bloch said.

This speaks to the fact the population has had to adjust to radical changes in payments since the rise of systems like MPesa, but not just this:

"You have others like those we work with in Zimbabwe who in their lifetime have seen their currency collapse to valueless and so ... people see the fragility of fiat money and the need to innovate and have stronger systems."

Featured image: JStone / Shutterstock.com

AfricaBill GatesBitsoko

Fed Official Outlines Bitcoin Risks for Community Banks

federal reserve, community bankThe Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco (FRBSF) has penned an informal advisory note to community banks highlighting the potential challenges of working with bitcoin industry firms and consumers.

Written by FRBSF director Wallace Young and published in Community Banking Connections, the note suggested blockchain-based digital currencies are "likely here to stay". As such, Young argued that community bank professionals should make themselves aware of the potential risks.

According to the FRBSF, these include the compliance risk, reputational risk, credit risk and operational risk of servicing both businesses that provide digital currency services and consumers who want to use such assets as collateral for other financial services.

The last scenario was perhaps the most novel of those listed, with the FRBSF advising caution, but suggesting that community banks should make case-by-case judgements.

Young wrote:

"Caution is appropriate. Bankers should carefully weigh the pros and cons of extending any loan secured by bitcoins or other virtual currencies (in whole or in part), or where the source of loan repayment is in some way dependent on the virtual currency."

The FRBSF went on to suggest that given the sometimes extreme fluctuations in the value of digital currencies against the US dollar, banks should strategize ways to supervise any holdings used as collateral.

"In the event of a loan default, the bank would need to take control of the virtual currency. This will require access to the borrower’s virtual wallet and private key. All of this suggests that the loan agreement needs to be carefully crafted and that additional steps need to be taken to ensure the bank has a perfected lien on the virtual currency," Young continued.

Defined as banks with a maximize asset size of $1bn by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), community banks account for 95% of US banking operations. Community banks serve as the main financial services provider for rural communities in the US, serving one in five counties.

Community Banking Connections is a publication providing perspectives of the Federal Reserve staff providing supervisory guidance on challenges and concerns for these institutions.

Reputational risk

The FRBSF suggested that on the business side, community banks that provide services to digital currency firms should be aware of past incidents where such businesses have been the subject of legal scrutiny.

Named specifically was the 2014 insolvency of Japan-based bitcoin exchange Mt Gox, which is estimated to have lost hundreds of millions of dollars in consumer funds.

"Since then, multiple lawsuits have been filed against Mt Gox, with several also naming Mt Gox’s bank as a defendant," the note continued. "Although the bank never held the bitcoins, it did handle Mt. Gox’s transactional banking needs. At least one of the lawsuits claims that the bank should have known about the fraud and that the bank profited from the fraud."

As such, the note suggested that community banks weigh the risks of such customers, as well as the potential legal and financial concerns. As for the compliance risks, the FRBSF stated that digital currency firms may present risks similar to traditional money transmitters.

Here, the FRBSF addressed the perceived anonymity of digital currencies, suggesting that higher levels of due diligence and monitoring may be necessary for such firms.

"The less-than-transparent nature of the transactions may make it more difficult for a financial institution to truly know and understand the activities of its customer and whether the customer’s activities are legal," the note read.

Operational risk

Also discussed was how a community bank should respond to situations where it finds itself the owner of digital currency as a result of the need to collect on debt.

"The most likely scenario in which this could occur is when a bank makes a business loan secured by the borrower’s business assets, which at default include virtual currency. At the moment, such a scenario is unlikely, but its plausibility increases as virtual currency becomes more mainstream," the article read.

Given the risk of volatility, the FRBSF recommends institutions liquidate these funds "in an orderly fashion", suggesting internal controls would be needed to mitigate loss.

"Management should establish dual control and access processes, as well as think about how this asset will be valued and accounted for on its financial statements," it continued.

Further consideration, the report suggested, would need to be given to how the digital currency is held and how it could be kept secure prior to sale.

Bank image via Shutterstock

BanksComplianceFederal ReserveRegulation

Survey: 47% of Finance Pros Say Firms Exploring Blockchain Tech

New data suggests that many financial professionals believe their industry is being reshaped by blockchain technology.

A survey conducted by market intelligence provider Greenwich Associates shows that a number of financial institutions are actively reviewing solutions using distributed ledgers.

Few respondents indicated that their institutions were actively deploying blockchains at this time. Seventeen percent of 92 survey-takers said that they are "currently using" some form of implementation. Yet more could begin utilizing the technology in the near future – of 87 respondents, 47% said that they were "reviewing" the option.

The survey, entitled “Bitcoin, the Blockchain and Their Impact on Institutional Capital Markets”, included feedback from 102 individuals with focuses on areas like exchange, consulting, financial tech and buy-side and sell-side investments. The interviews were conducted in May and June.

Of those, 84% were based in the Americas, with 11% and 5% based in Europe and Asia, respectively. Many questions included in the survey only garnered data from a portion of the field.

Easing settlement pain

When asked about the problems the technology could be used to alleviate, settlement risk and time were most cited.

Respondents also indicated that counterparty risk and custodial risk could also be reduced through the use of distributed ledgers.

Greenwich1

The data suggests that bitcoin and the blockchain are on the radar of many in financial circles. Ninety-one percent of respondents said they were aware of bitcoin, with 70% stating their familiarity with distributed ledger tech more broadly.

Little love for bitcoin

It appears that a number of respondents don't have much interest in bitcoin itself.

Fifty-six of those in the survey pool indicated more familiarity with specifics startups in the space, naming Digital Asset Holdings (27%), Ripple Labs (25%) and Coinbase (23%) over "bitcoin" (16%).

The report authors state that, for Wall Street, the underlying distributed ledger seems to hold the biggest draw rather than bitcoin the currency.

"It is not Bitcoin itself that has the potential for changing the institutional capital markets, however. The blockchain, the technology that allows bitcoin to exist and be transferred safely without an intermediary, presents a much bigger opportunity for financial services firms."

New York via Shutterstock

BanksBlockchain TechnologyResearchWall Street

Customer Data Leaked in Possible Bitcoin Vendor Breach

A UK bitcoin vendor may have suffered a security breach, temporarily exposing customer data to the public.

Visitors to the website for CoinCut, based in London, were able to access directories that included images of passports, credit and debit cards and personal IDs. The site was taken offline, and it is unclear how long the information was publicly available.

CoinCut representative Dax Chan said that the team is "treating this as malicious", adding that further investigation is taking place at this time.

He explained:

"We're trying to figure out how that particular directory was made visible to the world – and how the problem leaked out so promptly given that we're a moderately small bitcoin vendor in the grand scheme of things."

As credit and debit card information was publicly viewable, CoinCut customers should monitor card activity for suspicious transactions.

The leak of personal information could also potentially raise the risk of identity fraud for those affected.

Bitcoin News will continue monitoring this developing story.

Security lock image via Shutterstock

CoinCutcustomer data

Tunisia's Tech Ministry Seeks Blockchain Intern

Tunisia’s Ministry of Communication Technologies and Digital Economy is reportedly looking to explore both bitcoin and blockchain technology.

The news follows the publication of an internship advert on various social media channels believed to be controlled by the Ministry.

The role, open to engineering students, will require the successful candidate to carry out specific bitcoin and blockchain-related research. A loosely translation of the job description reads:

"To determine the advantages and disadvantages of using bitcoin, analyse bitcoin’s impact on the banking system and present the blockchain applications that are currently being developed to respond to various issues relating to privacy, information security, freedom and transparency."

The internship offer seemed to garner interest among various commentators on Facebook, who probed the Ministry for more details on the application process.

The news proves significant given the perceived lack of bitcoin-related news surfacing from the North African nation.

Bitcoin News reached out to the Ministry of Communication Technologies for comment but no reply had been received at the time of press.

FacebookJobsTunisia

Nasdaq CEO Hints at New Blockchain Projects

Nasdaq CEO Bob Greifeld has suggested that the US-based stock market plans to roll out additional blockchain projects "in the future".

The comments are the latest from the firm, which announced plans to trial blockchain technology as part of its Nasdaq Private Market service in May. Nasdaq revealed in June that it had established a formal relationship with blockchain services provider Chain.

Greifeld's most recent statement was made in a conference call in which he hinted at the stock exchanges's strategy toward the technology, according to Bloomberg.

Greifeld said:

“The application of blockchain technology within Nasdaq’s private market aims to modernize, streamline and really secure cumbersome administrative functions."

Further details about the project were revealed by Chain CEO Adam Ludwin, who said in an interview with Bitcoin News that the two companies had been working to test blockchain technology for more than a year.

"As blockchain technology continues to redefine not only how the exchange sector operates, but the global financial economy as a whole, Nasdaq aims to be at the center of this watershed development," Ludwin said at the time.

Hat tip to Bloomberg

Image credit: Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com

Blockchain TechnologyNasdaq

Analytics Service Aims to Be 'Gold Standard' of Bitcoin Data

A new service is launching its invite-only beta this week with the promise of delivering the "gold standard" for bitcoin data.

Challenger Deep is a platform aiming to make the bitcoin ecosystem easy to navigate for non-technical users, including investors, traders and consumers.

Entrepreneur and ad-tech veteran Pascal Gauthier, who is self-funding Challenger Deep with around $2m, said he saw a gap in the market for a one-stop service:

"You could find some data on the blockchain, on miners, on exchanges, but all separately. Nowhere could you find a comprehensive source for bitcoin data with a website to consult and an API to extract data should you need it."

"Whether your job is bitcoin, advertising [or] e-commerce, every market needs an independent source for data," he added.

The scalable platform offers both real-time and historic data on various aspects of bitcoin, including blockchain and market data. The data is sourced from the blockchain, alongside open and private APIs. "We are getting closer to a lot of bitcoin companies to extract more data from them," Gauthier added.

Challenger Chart

In the future, the seven-person team hopes to release more advanced features, including a bitcoin 'fear index' that will predict price direction and a way to compare features of different wallets and exchanges. A database of bitcoin companies is also in the works.

Following its beta, the first public version of Challenger Deep is due for release later this September. It will operate as a 'freemium' model, where basic access to its platform and APIs is free but users can opt to pay for add-on services or to avoid adverts.

The price tiers will be decided following the results of the beta, Gauthier said. Interested users can register for the beta starting today, with the first access codes being sent Tuesday next week.

Competition

Challenger Deep faces competition from a host of bitcoin data firms. Blockchain, the widely-cited source of bitcoin network data, is backed by $30.5m in VC funding.

Meanwhile, products such as Elliptic's 'Bitcoin Big Bang' and Chainalysis are looking to capture the compliance market with tailored blockchain tracking and labelling features.

Gauthier maintains his service will stand out as the only one "with an open access to all our data resources". Additionally, it will be built to scale.

"As the blockchain is getting bigger, as there will be more and more exchanges and companies with data needs. We will be able to support [them] all ... in an industry that is growing more complex by the day."

While the market for these kinds of services is still small, Challenger Deep is Gauthier's bet that it could grow and grow, and his startup with it.

"Cryptocurrency business will be revolutionary and will grow fast in the next few years. What seems to be a small niche market today is potentially enormous in the future. So yes, we believe that, in time, the market for bitcoin-specific data will be here," he concluded.

Charts image via Shutterstock

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6 Things You Missed from the State of Bitcoin

Last week, Bitcoin News released the latest in our series of quarterly State of Bitcoin reports.

Just like all our reports to date, the State of Bitcoin Q2 2015 was an all-encompassing look at the bitcoin ecosystem, clocking in at just shy of 100 slides of data.

It was the first positive quarter for bitcoin since this time last year, characterised by increased attention amidst the Greek crisis and interest from banks and governments in blockchain technology.

However, these weren't the only takeaways from Q2. Here, we've put together a few hidden gems from the report you might have missed.

1. Bitcoin is on track to outpace the Internet

race, start

Bitcoin, more than anything else, is often compared to the Internet back in the technology's early days. Both are rooted in fringe ideologies and, if you believe the hype, both have the ability to disrupt and empower via distributed networks of data.

The comparison is something that the State of Bitcoin has tracked since the series began. So, how is the currency fairing so far?

In investment terms, bitcoin startups are outperforming expectations – with $786m predicted to be invested in bitcoin by the end of this year (Slide 38), versus the $639 Internet companies netted in 1996.

This is taking into account BitFury's latest $20m deal, which took place in Q3, alongside inflation and other startup running costs. Last year, bitcoin exceeded investment in 1995 Internet startups by $112m.

2. Bitcoin is looking more like a currency

bitcoin man eyes

Over the course of the currency's short history, bitcoin has made a name for itself in the media as the speculators' drug of choice through its dramatic peaks and troughs. While great headline fodder, these wild swings have limited bitcoin's reliability as a day-to-day currency.

However, as volatility has eased off over the last few months, bitcoin's trademark spikes have been smoothing out. The report shows that Q2 saw the lowest peak-to-trough percentage (20%) in recent memory. At its highest, the price was $262.48 and its lowest, $218.27 (Slide 11). This is down from 84% the same time last year.

The knock-on effect of Q2's comparative calm, as Slide 22 shows, was reflected in the amount of interest in price stories on Bitcoin News, as well as headlines from the mainstream media.

It also affected the quarter's trading volume, which is continuing to dip in absence of big daily price movements (Slide 12).

3. But it's still not a hit with consumers

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So, could this reduced volatility signal a move away from bitcoin as an investment vehicle and towards a day-to-day currency?

The figures aren't exactly encouraging. Although they make up its prime demographic, 51% of Millenials in a recent survey from Goldman Sachs said they had no plans to ever use the currency (Slide 25).

And while the number of bitcoin wallets continues to rise steadily, which we also witnessed in Q1, the number of merchants accepting the currency continued to slow in Q2 (Slide 57).

Some, shown here, have quietly dropped it as a payment option following poor sales.

4. China-based miners are now the majority

mining bitcoin in China

Chinese miners including BTC China, AntPool and F2Pool accounted for over 50% of the network's hashing power in June (Slide 75). GHash.io, which sparked a high-profile debate around the dangers of mining centralisation – namely, a 51% attack – back in mid-2014, has seen its slice diminish significantly.

As well as having a supply of cheap power and labour, miners in China have proven their ability to build large-scale operations in a short window of time – crucial in an industry that has become a hashrate arms race.

In the five weeks after the launch of BTC China's pool, the company said it had generated over $1.2m in bitcoin. Back then, it only had 5% of the network's hashing power. Today it has significantly more.

5. The US is still bitcoin's biggest fan

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Though Silicon Valley's share of bitcoin investment dipped below 50% this quarter (Slide 42) following Xapo's relocation to Switzerland, a decision the company said was prompted by privacy concerns, stars and stripes still dominate the $834m investment poured into bitcoin startups to date.

In Q2, the total funding in the US and Canada grew by 28%, with huge rounds from Circle and Ripple, with the region now accounting for 72% of all VC money to date (Slide 39).

There are now 23 countries with VC-backed startups, yet investment from the US ($569.1m) is almost triple the rest of the world put together. For example, the UK, in second place, has attracted $42.9m in bitcoin investment to date, just 7.5% of its ally. At the bottom of the table, the Philippines makes up just 0.02% of the US total (Slide 40).

In summary, if you want to raise, raise in the USA.

6. Big bucks come from thinking big

Circle Team

While it helps to raise in the land of the free, the Q2 report revealed another common thread in many of the best-capitalised bitcoin startups: their ambitions.

'Universal' startups (those performing multiple functions in the ecosystem) raised the most funding this quarter ($50.1m), led by Circle. They were closely followed by startups offering financial services ($45.7m).

It appears it helps to think big when raising capital (Slide 44). The category, which also includes companies such as 21 Inc and Coinbase, has surpassed wallets and mining companies to become the biggest source of VC investment – now totalling above $300m (Slide 45) – which is nearly 40% of all investment (Slide 46). The remainder are yet to exceed the $100m mark.

Let us know what you found the most interesting in this latest State of Bitcoin report in the comments below.

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Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Australian Securities Regulator Puts Brakes on Bitcoin IPO

Expedia Exec: Purchases With Bitcoin Are Down 40%

Connie Chung Expedia

Despite a decline of approximately 40% in bitcoin purchases, Connie Chung, senior payments product manager at Expedia, says the option to pay with the digital currency will remain as long as there is a demand for it.

In interview with Bitcoin News, Chung, who helped launch bitcoin payments for Expedia's US website last year, says the decision to accept payments in the cryptocurrency was also a response to demand, and that this is perhaps the most important factor in its selection of payment methods.

It was not, she added, about Expedia making a statement or taking a stance on digital currencies.

She told Bitcoin News:

"We accept bitcoin as a way of just allowing customers to pay with whatever method they want to pay. For us, bitcoin is on an even playing field with the other payment types we offer."

Consumer adoption

Chung noted other merchants had been more affected by what she called a recent decline in bitcoin payments –  with some reporting a decrease of up to 90% at various industry events.

For Chung, the general drop in payments can be correlated with bitcoin's declining price, a reasoning that appears in line with the current narrative about declining interest in bitcoin as an e-commerce tool among major merchants.

To put this into context, according to Bitcoin News's BPI, bitcoin's price stood slightly over the $600 mark at the time of Expedia's integration in June 2014. Since then, the digital currency has seen a somewhat dramatic – and widely reported – price drop, hovering mostly around $200 since the beginning of this year.
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Bitcoin News's recent State of Bitcoin report found that the number of new bitcoin-accepting merchants continued to increase in the second quarter of 2015 but that this growth was below levels seen in previous quarters.

According to the report, the fundamental challenge facing bitcoin as a medium of exchange of legal goods continues to be low consumer adoption and a lack of advantages over credit and debit cards.

However, more niche use cases – such as in international e-commerce – continue to remain of interest to merchants in the e-commerce space.

Industry nuances

Expedia's bitcoin payments offer – only available for hotel reservations – is restricted by the nuances of the company's role in the travel industry, said Chung.

"We accept bitcoin on hotels only where we are a merchant of record. So for some of the hotels that we sell we are the merchant, meaning that you, as a customer are the one paying on our site directly when you are trying to book," she continued.

In these cases, Chung noted, it was possible to offer the bitcoin payment option to consumers because the payment was made directly to Expedia. For 'pay-later' hotels – where guests are expected to settle their bill at the venue – that's a different story.

"Obviously at that point you are restricted to whatever the hotel can take. So if you try to pay with credit card we'll still take it as a deposit if you are a no-show, but in those cases we would not be able to offer bitcoin because the hotel is the one that's actually charging you."

Here she suggested that the lack of overall understanding regarding bitcoin was again an inhibiting factor. "If we give them a bitcoin payment, they don't know what to do with it, it's not a currency they understand."

In terms of airline ticket purchases, Chung explained that Expedia acts as an agency, passing on payment information to the majority of airliners. Similarly to 'pay-later' hotels, in these cases, Expedia can only accept the payment types accepted by the airline.

Is this a problem native to the payments industry? Chung doesn't think so. It is, she said, a problem in the way that the suppliers are set up in the payments sector.

Frictionless payments

Aside from noting the growing interest in mobile payments, Chung placed special emphasis on frictionless payment methods.

"We are going to get higher and higher uptake with whatever there is less friction in payments, people are going to move that way."

Citing car-ride sharing service Uber – which has no checkout – and PayPal's One Touch service – which eradicates the need for the user to login every time they wish to make a payment – as examples, Chung noted how consumers are looking for easier options.

Although Chung said the payments space is already moving in the direction of frictionless payments, she suggested that security concerns could potentially hamper this progress. "I think the payments space sometimes, you know, people are really afraid of security lapses."

As for how bitcoin as a technology could grow to become a larger part of Expedia's operations, Chung was less specific in her responses, saying:

"We are always actively looking at all different types of payment related implementations that we might have but [there's] nothing specifically in the works that I could report right now."

Image via Connie Chung 

Connie Chung is speaking at Consensus 2015 in New York. Join her at the TimesCenter on 10th September. A list of the event speakers can be found here.

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French Megabank Société Générale Seeks Bitcoin Expert

One of France's biggest banks is looking to hire a developer with a focus on bitcoin.

Société Générale (SocGen) posted a job listing on 2nd July for a "IT developer on bitcoin, blockchains and cryptocurrencies". SocGen is the third-largest French bank in terms of assets, reporting $1.3tn in assets in 2014.

The 12-month contract, according to the post, would entail research and development involving cryptocurrencies and the blockchain. Though no specifics were outlined, the post suggests that the bank is looking to develop in-house software, citing "prototype programming". SocGen did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The listed responsibilities of the position include:

"As a VIE, you will have the following roles and responsibilities: programming in C#/C++/Python/Other against bitcoin, altcoin, blockchain different altchain APIs; developing proof-of-concept in any language/protocols used in cryptocurrency protocols and blockchains 1.0-3.0; running statistics against blockchains and engineering ways to gather quantitative information on what’s really happening in the cryptocurrency world."

The position also calls for the organization of internal reports, staff presentations and training programs. The VIE will be tasked with "engaging with the FinTech community and gathering information on the crypto-currency sector in London and elsewhere."

Research push

Assuming the bank can find the cryptocurrency developer it seeks, SocGen would become the latest bank to begin devoting resources to bitcoin and blockchain research.

SocGen stated in the post how the position is part of an effort to evolve in the face of technology-driven changes in the financial sector.

"The type of position that is offered is at the forefront of SocGen’s attempt at anticipating sweeping changes in the banking sector caused by FinTech and adapt to it," it wrote.

The bank itself has been relatively quiet on the subject, though it made headlines in 2013 amid the financial crisis in Cyprus and a large-run up in the price of bitcoin after the island nation's banks received a bailout.

SocGen sent a note to investors after receiving numerous requests for information on the valuation of bitcoin. At the time, analyst Sebastien Galy suggested that the price of bitcoin – which had risen from roughly $13 at the start of 2013 to more than $130 by 1st April – was in the midst of an "aggressive" bubble.

Image credit: Kiev.Victor / Shutterstock.com

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