Jumat, 28 Februari 2014

Optimism Grows as Mt. Gox Chapter Ends and Bitcoin Turns the Page


(@pete_rizzo_) | Published on February 28, 2014 at 23:31 GMT | Analysis, Exchanges, Mt. Gox, News
 
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The death bells tolled loudly for Mt. Gox this week as the threads of its elaborate cloak of cover-ups, lies and poor business practices came undone, first with the release of documents the revealed a struggling company desperately seeking new capital, then ultimately with its formal bankruptcy filing on 28th February.
The news reverberated beyond the industry, with mainstream media plunging headlong into the sensational story that was likened to some of the more infamous debacles in the history of the traditional financial system, such as Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns.
Still, increased pressure from the outside world galvanized an impressive display of support and resilience from the bitcoin community as it worked to set facts straight and fight against the most recent wave of negative PR.
Notably, major names in the industry like principal of Winklevoss Capital Management Tyler Winklevoss, noted VC investor Fred Wilson and early Internet entrepreneur Marc Andreessen, along with a host of others, went on the offensive for both bitcoin the technology and bitcoin the community.
The result was a growing sentiment that an integral chapter in the bitcoin story had been written, and that the coming year will still give way to the increased investment and higher levels of adoption that were expected at the end of 2013.

Tyler Winklevoss weighs in

Tyler Winklevoss spoke out about Mt. Gox via a blog post, noting that the bitcoin market wasn’t exactly suprised by the news. For example, he indicated that he personally stopped using Mt. Gox last summer, when it “started to look like a roach motel”.
But, Winklevoss didn’t just talk about bitcoin as an investment. He also embraced the idea that the sudden end to Mt. Gox was necessary for the ecosystem, citing it as evidence of the need for the US to work quickly to ensure the creation of regulated exchanges.
Said Winklevoss:
“The Mt. Gox ‘crisis’, as it’s been reported, has really been more of a speed bump on the road to mainstream maturity.”
Further, he revealed that he hasn’t sold any bitcoin despite the panic, saying “in fact, I have taken this as an opportunity to buy more” in a statement that could do much to encourage investment.

Fred Wilson reflects

In contrast to his sometimes brash public demeanor, Fred Wilson struck a more somber and reflective note in a blog post on 25th February, choosing to emphasize the sadness he felt at the passing of the first bitcoin company he transacted with.
Wilson continued, noting that bitcoin’s ability to withstand such a collapse was actually an advantage over the existing financial system.
Explained Wilson:
“The wonderful thing about a globally distributed financial network is that if one of the nodes goes down, it doesn’t take the system down.”
He also noted the increasing investment and suggested that “failures, crashes and other messes” are just par for the course with any new disruptive ecosystem.

Andreessen on the offensive

Noted early Internet investor Marc Andreessen was one more the more vocal voices from the bitcoin community, as he took to major news networks to defend bitcoin and its underlying technology.
Andreessen, too, suggested that bitcoin would emerge from the latest setback stronger than ever, now famously stating that Mt. Gox “had to die” as part of this transition. He’ll likely have more time to help move this narrative forward at coming major industry events.
For a full review of the Mt. Gox story, view our complete timeline of the exchange’s entire history below:
Image credit: Open book via Shutterstock

You Can’t Beat the Numbers, Signs of the Times, and Full Marx for Bitcoin


(@scotonomist) | Published on February 28, 2014 at 17:27 GMT | Analysis, News
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Welcome to the CoinDesk Weekly Review 28th February 2014 – a regular look at the hottest, most thought-provoking and most controversial events in the world of digital currency through the eyes of scepticism and wonder.
Your host … John Law.

Unthinking the thinkable

secret

As it was written, so it came to pass – Mt. Gox has finally imploded and the hunt is on for Mark Karpeles. What finance system can cope with the collapse of one of its major historical drivers and the loss of a substantial percentage of its worth?
Meanwhile, US Senator Joe Manchin has demanded that bitcoin be banned, because of terrorists and drug lords and most probably satanists drinking the blood of boll-weevils.
It’s worth wondering what would actually destroy bitcoin, and what a ban would actually look like. It turns out that both are remarkably hard.
A major flaw in the cryptographic structure of the Bitcoin protocol would do it, destroying the integrity of the block chain or creating billions of fake coins indistinguishable from those legitimately mined.
That’s roughly the same order of likelihood as the basic security crypto of the Internet being hosed – so worry about that instead of bitcoin, if you’re so minded.
Other than that – well, even if consumer confidence is utterly destroyed in bitcoin as an investment vehicle and the price collapses to five dollars or five cents, John Law will be first in the queue to buy a whole bunch.
Bitcoin is useful, and whether it costs a thousandth of a bitcoin or ten thousand to buy wine online cheaper than with a credit card, who cares? That intrinsic utility cannot be destroyed.
So what if it’s made illegal? Bitcoin is crypto, and crypto is maths, and maths is notoriously hard to ban.
In the 1990s, cryptographer Phil Zimmerman invented PGP, a crypto system so powerful the US government classified it as a munition and banned its unlicensed export – with maximum sanctions of a million dollars and ten years in jail for those who failed to comply.
Zimmerman had made it public and it took no time to make its way outside the US. For his pains, he was investigated for three years – but the absurdity of trying to control something that was simple enough to be printed on a T-shirt eventually got through, even to the government. PGP ideas are in bitcoin, by the way: it’s good to share.
The most a state can do is make it illegal to deal in bitcoin – but then you have to define ‘bitcoin’ in a way that doesn’t outlaw all encrypted token transfer systems, but does catch all cryptocurrencies. Good luck with that. (Of course, if you’re not too bothered with legal niceties such as defining what you’re banning, you can do what you like. But let’s pretend you’re in favour of the rule of law.)
John Law can’t help but imagine legislators arguing late into the night about how big the red flag should be that has to be walked in front of those new-fangled motor cars, while a thousand inventors are firing up the welding torches with evil grins on their faces.
And as for Mt. Gox – if the mainstream financial systems coped as well with massive fraud and illicit trading as bitcoin has with Karpeles’ billion-dollar misdemeanours, then a lot more people would still have jobs.
You can’t un-invent an idea, and that’s what it would take.

Scans, not scandals

scan
Unwinding the mess left at the end of the Cold War is taking some time, and it’s not always pretty.
Far from being ‘the end of history’, as Francis Fukuyama unwisely suggested, it’s generating plenty of its own. This year’s flashpoint is the Ukraine, which is combining economic collapse with a spot of East v West shenanigans.
As usual, this is making life difficult for people who don’t have an enormous military to deploy but would nevertheless quite like to sort things out. Money is short and that makes everything hard – hey, bitcoin! As a result, some clever thinking has seen protesters holding up signs with QR-codes on for bitcoin wallets, soliciting international donations via social networks.
This is a neat idea; one kid with a smartphone can reach more people in an hour than Bono could in a month and at no cost – and the message contains the method of payment. It’s not as if it’s easy to do much with bitcoin out there, but there are options.
But be careful because it’s so easy to generate and propagate such pictures, it’s also easy to tamper with them. You don’t even need Photoshop – MS Paint is powerful enough for a miscreant to take one such picture and paste in their own QR-code.
Push that out through a fake Twitter account, and you have a clever but abhorrent equivalent of the fake Oxfam collectors that were going door-to-door “for the Somerset floods”, only far harder to catch.
There’s no evidence of this happening, but it will – it’s too easy and safe for the perpetrators. To guard against it, John Law suggests, spend some time tracking down the original of any picture soliciting donations you’re tempted to support.
Bonus points for pictures of known provenance – a newspaper or mainstream media website where the photo is credited to one of their own photographers, or one from a known agency. Extra bonus points if there’s video footage, or different shots from different sources.
Despite the potential for hijacks John Law would like to see more QR-codes on banners during protests. They don’t have to be for donations, they can go to web pages or videos or, well, anything digital.
Perhaps pictures of kittens. Because if it’s kittens versus balaclava’d thugs with machine guns, global support can go only one way.

Strike while the irony’s hot

CGI
John Law knows he bashes on about it, but we haven’t started to see what bitcoin technology can do over and above online shopping or haircuts for hipsters.
Take the sad story of Rhythm & Hues – a top-notch computer graphics company in California. It’s been around for twenty five years, and recently saw its work win an Oscar for Life of Pi.
Yet the Oscar came eleven days after the company had gone bankrupt. Life of Pi, which is around 70% computer generated, has made something like half a billion dollars.
Rhythm and Hues went down because just about all VFX (video effects, in industry parlance) companies go bankrupt. A combination of international tax subsidies, Hollywood accounting and fixed-price contracts with open-ended work requirements makes it almost inevitable, destroying lives in the process.
If you want to know the details and have half an hour to spare – and especially if you love film – then this sad but compelling documentary will repay your attention.
At heart, though, the problem is a massive imbalance of power between the money men and the creative workers, creating exploitation of the sort that unions evolved to remedy. But it’s next to impossible to unionise creative types, who love their work too much, and especially when the work can go elsewhere in a microsecond.
If Hollywood had to pay animators per hour, as almost everyone else gets paid in films, you can be sure the demands for extra work would end. VFX companies would prosper. Hollywood doesn’t want this – which, for an industry based on stories of redemption and the little guy winning against the odds, is ironic enough for any screenwriter.
So how can bitcoin help? Well, there’s one aspect of VFX that is constant across the industry and over which Hollywood has no control – the software tools that are used to make the images. Complex, expensive and pretty standard, you have to use them to be competitive. This software, like most software, isn’t sold – it’s licensed to companies, who have to obey the licensing conditions.
So what if one of those conditions was that its users had to belong to a workers’ collective and abide by its rules? In exchange, each user would get anonymous, non-transferable voting rights for that collective, so would get to set and agree those self-same rules.
All users could – in fact, would have to – use that power to agree what they want. It might look like the worst sort of coercion, a guild system with forced membership, but it also looks awfully like real democracy.
Bitcoin – or rather, the bitcoin technology for distributing and accounting for anonymous but unfakeable tokens – would create that voting system.
With the proof-of-work side of things too, it would automatically audit the amount of work done on projects: a very hard to corrupt system that would put a ton of power back in the hands of the workers. They wouldn’t have to down tools – the tools would go down in sympathy, by themselves.
There are plenty of problems with this. John Law can’t see the software makers being very comfortable with it – although a well-run industry with an equitable work-reward structure would be in their interests as much as it is everyone else’s.
But it is worth thinking such ideas. A very great deal of the advantages of technology are automatically co-opted by big business, to the detriment of individual workers. Be nice to redress the balance: digital Marxism without the dictators is quite the utopian fantasy.
They could even make a film about it.

BTC-e Cuts Withdrawal Fees in Customer Satisfaction Bid


(@pete_rizzo_) | Published on February 28, 2014 at 18:01 GMT | BTC-e, Exchanges, News, Prices
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BTC-e, the notoriously private bitcoin exchange rumoured to be based out of Bulgaria, has revealed that it has reduced fees across three of its third-party withdrawal services.
The news was revealed via a string of Twitter posts beginning on 27th February and continuing into 28th February that called for USD and EUR withdrawal fees to be reduced to as low as 1%.
The move brings withdrawal fees closer to the site’s USD deposit fees, which were slashed to 0% on OKPAY and Perfect Money earlier in February. BTC-e imposes an additional standard fee of 0.2 to 0.5% fee on every transaction.

BTC-e’s new pricing model notably coincided with the news that Mt. Gox, once one of the company’s leading competitors, will likely not re-enter the market.
Representatives from the exchange confirmed the price cuts to CoinDesk, claiming the moves were made to “make clients happy”.

Pricing changes

BTC-e reduced fees for withdrawing USD funds via money transfer service Payeer and OKPAY to 1%. EUR withdrawals via OKPAY were brought down to 1%, as of press time.

Notably, BTC-e indicated that it has been experimenting with different price points. For example, one day prior to dropping USD commissions for withdrawing funds via OKPAY to 1%, it announced the same fees would be dropped to 2%.

Service errors

BTC-e has also been beset by technical delays since 11th February when a ‘massive and concerted attack’ was launched against most major bitcoin exchanges.
The company has confirmed DDoS attacks as recently as 27th February, which were also disclosed via Twitter.

BTC-e has not yet revealed the extent of the company’s technical problems, though users have taken to reddit in recent days to discuss service errors.

About BTC-e

The notoriously secretive exchange is gaining notoriety in the wake of Mt. Gox as one of the market leaders in the bitcoin exchange industry, but the company’s latest bid at acquiring customers may not be successful.
Media articles are already beginning to question the legality of the exchange and its practices, and major investors in the industry have issued warnings to new users.

Kamis, 27 Februari 2014

Singapore Firm Tembusu Launches Customizable Bitcoin ATM


| Published on February 27, 2014 at 21:40 GMT | Asia, Bitcoin ATM, News, Regulation, Technology
 
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There is a new player in the world of bitcoin ATMs, Singapore-based Tembusu Terminals. The company has just installed Singapore’s first permanent bitcoin ATM at a bar in the Boat Quay district.
Tembusu says it is talking to other merchants who would like to install the company’s ATMs, too.
Earlier this month, Bitcoiniac announced it would install Robocoin ATMs in London and Singapore by mid-March. It appears that Tembusu has beaten the Vancouver-based outfit to the punch.

Flexible design

The Tembusu ATM was designed and built in Singapore. It features several security and anti-theft measures, including biometric security features like thumbprint scanning and elaborate know-your-customer (KYC) features.
It can scan user ID cards and it also has integrated anti-money laundering (AML) features, that can be fine-tuned to meet legal requirements in different jurisdictions.
“It has been an exciting, and some would even say trying, past few weeks for bitcoin users worldwide,” said Andras Kristof, Chief Technical Officer, Tembusu Terminals.
“Through this entire rollercoaster ride, I can’t help but think back to the main guiding principle behind designing the Tembusu: flexibility is key.”
Tembusu says its ATM differs from competing solutions, thanks to its customisability and an intuitive full-touch screen interface.
The ATM can be outfitted with a “myriad of options”, the company says, and the fact that its anti-money laundering features can be adapted to meet different requirements might also be attractive to buyers.
Incidentally, the device can also be used to dispense fiat cash.

Regulation likely

There are a few more down-to-earth reasons for the Tembusu ATM’s flexibility. Since it has plenty of KYC and AML features, it can be customized to meet regulatory requirements in different markets.
Earlier this year, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said that it does not regulate bitcoins, and it has been advising the public to be cautious with virtual currencies.
Last week, Singapore’s Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said bitcoin does not fall under the regulatory purview of either his ministry or the MAS.
The Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) issued an advisory on bitcoin taxation earlier this year.

Uncertain future

The regulatory climate is not currently very positive and it is relatively vague, so the ability to customize the Tembusu ATM simply had to be built in.
When it comes to bitcoin ATMs, it is vital to have future-proof hardware
The same is true of Robocoin ATMs, which also feature plenty of superfluous features that may be required by regulators in different jurisdictions or at different times.
When it comes to bitcoin ATMs, it is vital to have future-proof hardware – not for fear of going obsolete, but due to regulatory issues that may arise in the future.
Interestingly, the company says it is willing to deploy Tembusu ATMs with no down payment. Tembusu says the same flexibility extends to pricing and financing options.
CoinDesk was not given pricing details, however – the company encourages those who are interested in a quote to get in touch directly.
Boat Quay district image via Shutterstock

Coinbase Talks 1 Million Wallet Milestone, Mt. Gox and What’s Next


(@pete_rizzo_) | Published on February 27, 2014 at 22:42 GMT | Coinbase, Companies, News, Wallets
 
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San Francisco-based bitcoin wallet provider Coinbase has revealed that it officially passed 1 million wallet downloads on 27th February, a major milestone in the lifecycle of the less than two-year-old company.
Founded in June 2012, Coinbase is the second most downloaded consumer bitcoin wallet behind rival Blockchain, which passed its 1 million wallet mark in January.
But, that doesn’t make Coinbase’s numbers any less impressive. At the beginning of 2013, Coinbase had facilitated just 13,000 wallet downloads, meaning it saw more than 7,000% growth over the course of 2013. Further, the company’s internal estimates suggest it’s now adding five new users a minute.
Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsam told CoinDesk that growth is coming so quickly in both its consumer and merchant services that he’s barely had the time to reflect since learning of the news:
“Honestly, there’s been so much going on so quickly, you want to make sure you’re iterating on the product as much as possible.”
But during the interview, Ehrsam did stop to reflect on his company’s last year and his own personal journey in the bitcoin space.
Throughout the talk, Ehrsam showed that he’s eager to put past challenges behind so that he can focus on what lies ahead.

Improving the product

Ehrsam addressed the challenge that comes with operating in a space with seemingly endless opportunities, but said he’s always grounded himself with the knowledge that Coinbase is, at its core, about making bitcoin easy to use.
Said Ehrsam:
“You can think about going out doing things like deterministic hierarchical wallets or building other unique things on top of the block chain or doing a full blown industrial exchange.
There’s a lot of opportunity out there, but I want to propel this into the mainstream.”
The personal goal for Ehrsam is for one of those 1 million wallet users to be his mom or a friend from school, the kind of users that will require bitcoin to become more approachable for mainstream commerce.
Right now, Ehrsam estimates Coinbase is 70 to 80% of the way there, but that obstacles remain.

The impact of Mt. Gox

Of course, one vital part of convincing more consumers to enroll will be providing education, a matter that is particularly noteworthy given the media storm surrounding bitcoin as the result of troubled Japan-based exchange Mt. Gox.
For his part, Ehrsam chooses to see the good that has come out of the development, noting that he’s been impressed by the resilience of the bitcoin space.
Still, Ehrsam acknowledges this likely won’t be the last bad news that surfaces as part of a broader transition, one where bitcoin businesses must now play by the rules of regulators. Ehrsam even went so far as to suggest that Coinbase could have ended up falling victim to the same fate as Mt. Gox, had it not made key early decisions.
He traces Coinbase’s success back to its decision to embrace regulatory compliance, one he noted at the NYDFS hearings came with considerable cost:
“When we saw [the FinCEN decision] come out, there was definitely a decision that needed to be made. We could take a risky or defiant route and say ‘Hey maybe we don’t fall under money services business [MSB] standards,’ or meet it head on.’”

2014 and beyond

Despite recent challenges, Ehrsam is still optimistic about his company’s user growth and the growth of the ecosystem in 2014.
This year, he suggested that bitcoin will become more liquid around the world and enter the remittance market. It’s possible that he even shared a hint with a rather bold prediction:
“I think 2014 is going to be the year where you see 10 $1 billion retailers, probably almost exclusively online ones, start accepting bitcoin,” he said.

Rabu, 26 Februari 2014

US Senator Calls for Bitcoin Ban in Letter to Top Federal Regulators


(@pete_rizzo_) | Published on February 26, 2014 at 21:01 GMT | Regulation, US & Canada
 
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U.S. Senator Joe Manchin, a democrat from West Virginia, has formally sent a letter to federal regulators calling for an outright ban on bitcoin and suggesting that the failure of immediate action could negatively impact US consumers.
Manchin most recently made headlines for allegedly saying that he would vote to repeal the US Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), a hallmark law of the Obama administration aimed at expanding public and private insurance coverage, though he later backtracked on the statements.
The letter, which was sent to Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen, among other top regulators, called the digital currency “unregulated and unstable”, and cited increasing warnings from central banks around the globe.
Said Manchin:
“I am most concerned that as bitcoin is inevitably banned in other countries, Americans will be left holding the bag on a valueless currency.”
Notably, this is not the first time the senator has spoken out about bitcoin, having written a lengthy letter on the now-defunct online black marketplace Silk Road last June.

Black market connections

Manchin began the letter by providing a background on bitcoin, before addressing his laundry list of concerns about its use.
The senator suggested that bitcoin’s features make it inherently attractive to criminals, who have used the currency to “steal millions from bitcoins users”, and to buy drugs and weapons illegally. Further, he critiqued the irreversible nature of bitcoin transactions as the primary contributor to such issues.
“Bitcoin’s ability to finalize transactions quickly, makes it very difficult, if not impossible, to reverse fraudulent transactions,” the Senator said.

Consumer protection issues

The senator also suggested that bitcoin’s price volatility adds to its dangers, and he cited recent developments at troubled Japan-based exchange Mt. Gox as an example. Manchin painted a picture of bitcoin as an elaborate scheme in which only early buyers, investors and miners benefit. Said Manchin:
“There is no doubt average American consumers stand to lose by transacting in bitcoin.”
In summation, Manchin again returned to the issue of bitcoin’s deflationary nature, comparing its 98% deflation to the 1.3% inflation shown in the Consumer Pricing Index. Manchin used this data to suggest spending bitcoin now would cost users wealth in the future.
“This flaw makes Bitcoin’s value to the U.S. economy suspect, if not outright detrimental,” said Manchin.

Regulatory impact

Manchin is not the only lawmaker weighing in on bitcoin in the wake of issues at Mt. Gox. The Texas State Securities Board and the Alabama Securities Commission have each published consumer warnings in the recent days.
However, this letter, addressed directly to new Federal Reserve Chairwoman Yellen, is unique as it will likely add fuel to speculation that the US central bank head will issue a comment or statement on digital currencies soon.
For detailed records of Manchin’s voting history, click here.

How BlockScore is Making Bitcoin Regulatory Compliance Absurdly Simple

(@danielcawrey) | Published on February 27, 2014 at 01:06 GMT | Analysis, Bitcoin ATM, Companies, Regulation
 
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While bitcoin is going through some growing pains right now, that shouldn’t deter entrepreneurs from starting a digital currency business. As we detailed recently, many VCs are on the lookout for business partners in the burgeoning space.
One notable hurdle, though, is that regulators are looking closely at what should be done about decentralized money. This means that for even the most intrepid entrepreneurs, fear and uncertainty surrounds planning for the many possible scenarios of legislation that could take shape.
Palo Alto, California-based BlockScore, however, aims to take some of the regulatory issues already at hand and automate them. BlockScore offers an identity verification API that startups can easily implement into a product or service.
Alain Meier, co-founders of Blockscore, explained his company’s value:
“We just make it absurdly easy to implement identity verification for anybody.”

Learning from experience

Meier learned firsthand how difficult it is to implement identity verification into a bitcoin-based business. Prior to BlockScore, he was working on a potential bitcoin remittance business.
When it came to verifying identities for anti-money laundering compliance while working on his project, it presented a challenge. He quickly discovered that solutions on the market were “a blast from the past. It seemed like it was all made in the 90s”.
Said Meier:
“Most of these (verification) sites, there’s no API docs, there’s no pricing information. Just getting pricing is incredibly difficult.”
Because of this experience, BlockScore has built identity verification that aspires to make starting simply, while also plugging in with technologies that startups are currently using.
“We have a very nice standard JSON and RESTful API that people have gotten used to over the past couple of years.”
Many of the incumbent identity verification systems on the market today use antiquated frameworks such as XML or SOAP APIs. Meier described these as “clunky”.
“We make a bunch client libraries for the types of languages startups are using. Ruby, Python, noJS. We onboard people usually within the same day,” Meier said.
Blockscore offers pricing right on its website. Its co-founder says competitors make obtaining this information very difficult.
Blockscore offers pricing right on its website. Its co-founder says competitors make obtaining this information very difficult.

BlockScore’s ID System

Many users will find the company’s identity verification similar to, but more simplistic than, other offerings.
The verification system is a two-part product. There is identity verification, then a knowledge-based authentication.
Said Meier:
“Identity verification just makes sure that the information is correct. The knowledge-based authentication asks you questions that are much more difficult to ascertain if you just used someone’s stolen information.”
The questions could include what car someone owned during a particular year or in a previous zip code. This is data that is much harder for an identity thief to readily answer during the verification process.
Meier says that bitcoin ATM operators are one of many BlockScore BTC customers.
With so many bitcoin ATMs popping up, it’s easy to wonder how these operators are handling compliance. Meier says the feedback has been very good from BTC ATM operators who have been using BlockScore for compliance.
“We’ve heard some very, very good feedback. Essentially, when they implement our stuff, people just don’t need to worry about half of the compliance they had to worry about before.
People have been very receptive to that.”

AML Reporting

BlockScore is also working on a system that helps any money transmission business easily complete AML reports. This includes suspicious activity reports (SARs) and currency transaction reports (CTRS), both part of AML requirements.
Businesses file those by going to the government’s website and filling out PDF forms. The SARs, for example, can have nearly 100 form fields. BlockScore streamlines this cumbersome process, Meier said:
“Because we’re doing identity verification, and we have information about the businesses who sign up with us, we can fill out all but 20 of those 98 fields.”
Subjective information, such as why a transaction is suspicious, is part of the 20 fields that still have to be completed.
“It’s an insane reduction in the amount of form fields that they have to fill out, and makes it easier to submit them.”
Meier says that one of his customers is testing BlockScore’s new reporting system. That company has been able to reduce the time it takes to submit SARs from over 20 minutes down to 5 minutes.
Money transmitters submit well over a million suspicious activity reports per year (2012 is the most recent available figures). Source: FinCEN
Money transmitters submit well over a million suspicious activity reports per year (2012 is the most recent available figures). Source: FinCEN

Not Just Bitcoin Anymore

BlockScore started purely as a company that served businesses operating in the bitcoin space. But, other startups took notice of the company, and now its APIs are being used across different industries. Said Meier:
“We actually started off targeting just bitcoin companies like exchanges, wallets miners, stuff like that. Then, we actually had people finding us on Google.”
The first customer outside of bitcoin was a ridesharing application. That company came to BlockScore asking if it offered service for non-bitcoin companies. Meier said it was logical to help anybody who needed the company’s services.
“We changed the branding, and now we are generalized for anyone who needs identity verification. But we do love to help bitcoin companies in particular.”
The media’s portrayal of bitcoin hasn’t always been favorable. Although the company is now profitable, that hasn’t always been helpful for BlockScore’s growth. Meier says the company’s roots are in bitcoin, so it will always be servicing cryptocurrency customers.
“To be honest, being involved in bitcoin has sort of been a detriment. But we still love bitcoin, so we’ll never give that up.”
Check out BlockScore’s easy registration and transparent pricing on its website.

Selasa, 25 Februari 2014

Bitcoin Price Resilient as Antonopoulos, Andreessen Weigh in on Mt. Gox Debacle

(@danielcawrey) | Published on February 25, 2014 at 22:16 GMT | Blockchain, Coinbase, Exchanges, Mt. Gox, News, Wallets
 
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Andreas Antonopoulos, a bitcoin thought leader and current chief security officer at hosted wallet Blockchain.info has released a statement regarding the ongoing issues at once-leading bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox.
The announcement comes less than a day after Mt. Gox halted transactions, and amid growing reports that the once high-profile company may soon close for good.
Wrote Antonopoulos in his official response:
“I fear the worst. Everything I see makes me believe that Gox will never recover and that the funds are most likely lost.
I am devastated by the impact this will have on customers of Gox and I am angry at the irresponsible behavior of Mt. Gox and especially [CEO] Mark Karpeles that will damage the lives of many people.”
The remarks echo the increasing frustration of bitcoin supporters, who have been highly critical of Karpeles and his handling of problems at the exchange for much of the last month, and are notable as Antonopoulos, despite his critical stance to the company, had moved to ease concerns in recent weeks.

Gox’s incompetence

Antonopoulos offered a blow-by-blow account of the issues that have affect Mt. Gox in the past two weeks on his personal blog. He points out the transaction malleability issue Mt. Gox was supposedly experiencing has been a known issue since 2011:
“I publicly excoriated Gox’s incompetent and clownish management and disputed their claim that their problems were due to a ‘bug in bitcoin’.”
During this time, many exchanges were attacked via DDoS, according to Antonopoulos. The goal, he says, was to uncover other bitcoin exchanges that might be vulnerable:
“In response, some exchanges temporarily suspended withdrawals to investigate their implementations and confirm they were robust.”
Gox did develop a fix for the problem on its platform, and Antonopoulos later expressed optimism that the Japan-based exchange might be able to resume normal operations:
“As we started seeing Gox transactions posted on the public blockchain ledger, as reported on reddit and other sites, it appeared to me as if Gox might recover from their latest mess.”

The outage

The statement from Antonopoulos makes clear that he did not know in advance Mt. Gox was headed for massive failure:
“Yesterday afternoon at approximately 3pm PST, Monday February 24th, I heard unconfirmed reports that Gox was in crisis mode and their funds were mostly, if not entirely, gone. This was the first hint I had of any solvency issues.”
It appears that the writing was on the wall for Mt. Gox for some time. But Antonopoulos stated he did not believe that there was any intent of fraud by Mt. Gox CEO, Mark Karpeles.
“I stated that while I had serious misgivings about the competence of Mt.Gox executives and especially Karpeles, I had not seen any indication of bad faith or fraud in the past two years.”

Coinbase Security

As the head of Blockchain.info’s security, Antonopoulos volunteered to examine the measures put in place at Coinbase, and recounted his experience visiting the San Francisco-based hosted wallet the same night of Mt. Gox’s shutdown.
“While Coinbase publicly states that up to 97% of customer funds are in cold storage, at the time of my visit, their internal reporting tool showed that the cold storage system contained 98.8% of customer funds.”
Working into the night, Antonopoulos found that Coinbase had solid processes in place to secure bitcoin for its customers.
“Based on what I observed during my visit and my experience in security, it appears that the Coinbase system contains the expected funds and their cold storage system and process appear to be operating according to security best practices.”
Comparison to MF Global, not the end
While companies like Coinbase have procedures in place to protect bitcoin wallets, the ultimate fate of Mt. Gox is still murky.
Marc Andreessen’s venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz has invested heavily in bitcoin startups. On CNBC this morning he liked the current situation to that of another financial fraud:

Despite a serious systematic failure of a major bitcoin exchange, the price of BTC has been surprisingly resilient.
Source: Bitcoin Charts
Source: Bitcoin Charts
When asked for comment, the Bitcoin Foundation offered the following statement:
“This is certainly not the end of Bitcoin. Perhaps the end of one chapter, but certainly not the end. As our industry matures, we are seeing a second wave of capable, responsible entrepreneurs and investors who are building reliable services for this ecosystem.”
CoinDesk is monitoring this developing story, and will post updates as they become known.
Gold coins via Shutterstock

Senin, 24 Februari 2014

Bitcoin Prices Down As Mt. Gox Concerns Escalate


(@pete_rizzo_) | Published on February 25, 2014 at 06:15 GMT | Exchanges, Mt. Gox, News, Prices
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Uncertainty about the future of major bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox is growing in light of its recent decision to take down its website amid escalating, as-yet-unconfirmed rumors that it has been the victim of widespread theft and could be nearing a lengthy or even permanent shutdown of its services.
Mt. Gox, through intermediary sources, told CoinDesk that it has no comment on the news at this time.
Now, the market is reacting to the lack of information about the developments.
At press time, prices at major bitcoin exchanges have recorded steep declines in just the last few hours, fueled by consumer uncertainty about the impact of a worst-case scenario at the once-leading bitcoin exchange.

Prices fall

After holding steady at roughly $550 throughout most of the day, the price of bitcoin on BTC-e declined sharply to a low of $480. From 9:00 pm to 12:00 pm EST, the exchange saw prices fall rapidly from $546.
The price of namecoin, novacoin, peercoin and primecoin also declined on the news.
Mt. Gox was likewise a hot discussion point on the exchange’s community chat room, with users debating the future of the exchange and what it will mean for bitcoin prices in the short and long term. Others debated the fate of coins still held in the exchange, though for now, we know only that Japanese regulators are unlikely to step in to mitigate any damage.
Screen Shot 2014-02-25 at 12.26.16 AM
Bitstamp followed a similar trajectory, declining from $505 at 9:00 pm to lows of $452 at 12:00 pm.
Further, data from Bitcoincharts suggests the price of bitcoin was $135 on Mt. Gox at the time it halted services.

Bitcoin businesses brace for worst

Prices were no doubt also affected by a joint announcement from bitcoin business leaders suggesting indirectly that Mt. Gox is no longer trustworthy. Comments on the official releases suggest, however, that wording changes have been made to original statements.
For example, user comments on the posts suggested the original postings contained the word “insolvent”, though current versions do not.
Together, Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp, BTC China, Blockchain and Circle discussed how they plan to ensure faith in the bitcoin ecosystem:
“In order to re-establish the trust squandered by the failings of Mt. Gox, responsible bitcoin exchanges are working together and are committed to the future of bitcoin and the security of all customer funds.”
Though the major businesses moved swiftly to distance themselves from Mt. Gox, such actions seem to have done little to stem the damage – at least as far as prices are concerned,.
Image credit: Bitcoin symbol via Shutterstock.

Mt. Gox Trading Halts As Bitcoin Businesses Move to Assure Investors


(@danielcawrey) | Published on February 25, 2014 at 04:14 GMT | Bitstamp, BTC China, Circle, Coinbase, Exchanges, Mt. Gox, News
 
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Hours after Japan-based bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox suddenly halted trading activity, the company’s website is now completely offline. Notably, the news follows other troubling signs that all is not right with the exchange, such as its sudden removal of its entire Twitter feed.
Bitcoincharts market section shows the last trade on Mt. Gox occurred at 01:59:06 UTC, which is 8:59 EST.
When users logged into the bitcoin exchange’s website they were experiencing the following error message when trying to buy or sell bitcoins:
tradedisablemtgox
Not long after the suspension in trading activity and subsequent outage, leaders within the digital currency space joined together in a bid to restore confidence in bitcoin and distance themselves from the embattled exchange.
The US-based hosted wallet Coinbase published the statement first, which later appeared on other websites connected with the messaging. The post, titled “Joint Statement Regarding MtGox“, reads:
“The purpose of this document is to summarize a joint statement to the Bitcoin community regarding Mt.Gox.
This tragic violation of the trust of users of Mt.Gox was the result of one company’s actions and does not reflect the resilience or value of bitcoin and the digital currency industry. There are hundreds of trustworthy and responsible companies involved in bitcoin.
We are confident, however, that strong Bitcoin companies, led by highly competent teams and backed by credible investors, will continue to thrive, and to fulfill the promise that bitcoin offers as the future of payment in the Internet age.
In order to re-establish the trust squandered by the failings of Mt. Gox, responsible bitcoin exchanges are working together and are committed to the future of bitcoin and the security of all customer funds. As part of the effort to re-assure customers, the following services will be coordinating efforts over the coming days to publicly reassure customers and the general public that all funds continue to be held in a safe and secure manner: Coinbase, Kraken, BitStamp, Circle, and BTC China.
We strongly believe in transparent, thoughtful, and comprehensive consumer protection measures. We pledge to lead the way.
Bitcoin operators, whether they be exchanges, wallet services or payment providers, play a critical custodial role over the bitcoin they hold as assets for their customers. Acting as a custodian should require a high-bar, including appropriate security safeguards that are independently audited and tested on a regular basis, adequate balance sheets and reserves as commercial entities, transparent and accountable customer disclosures, and clear policies to not use customer assets for proprietary trading or for margin loans in leveraged trading. It does not appear to any of us that MtGox followed any these essential requirements as a financial services provider.”
The statement also names the following bitcoin industry veterans as supporting this position.
Fred Ehrsam — Co-founder of Coinbase
Jesse Powell — CEO of Kraken
Nejc Kodrič — CEO of Bitstamp.net
Bobby Lee — CEO of BTC China
Nicolas Cary — CEO of Blockchain.info
Jeremy Allaire — CEO of Circle
The outage of Mt. Gox and the subsequent joint release of this statement follows unconfirmed reports about the future of Mt. Gox’s viability as a bitcoin exchnage.
CoinDesk is monitoring this developing story, and will post updates as they become known.

PayPal Likes Digital Currencies? Yawn

(@twobitidiot) | Published on February 25, 2014 at 13:40 GMT | Analysis, Merchants, News, Wallets
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It’s hard to not get frustrated when everyone starts jumping for joy after a televised interview in which eBay CEO John Donahue told Bloomberg that PayPal is building a digital wallet for multiple cryptocurrencies. Because, of course, it is. The e-payments giant would be silly not to.
Paypal, which is owned by eBay, is the pioneer in digital payments and they already accept over 25 foreign currencies – basically, all of the ones that matter, with the exception of the Chinese RMB.
New digital currencies like bitcoin will likely interact with PayPal’s systems in the same manner as existing fiat currencies – when they are big enough. That’s because, like Coinbase and BitPay, you would expect PayPal to lock-in fiat prices for merchants accepting bitcoin.
They would also be likely to batch transactions ‘off-block chain’ in order to cover transaction risks during the 10-minute confirmation window.

What they said

In the interview, Bloomberg’s Matt Miller told Donahue that he thinks digital payments like bitcoin will rule in the internet commerce of the future and have the potential to make PayPal defunct unless the company starts preparing now.
However, it is absurd to infer that PayPal is useless in the long-term, and neglects the fact that PayPal owns some serious e-commerce real-estate. This is like saying that Amazon, after utterly dominating the book industry, would never be able to move into electronics (or any other category that they have since dominated).
Miller speaks with an irritating certainty about bitcoin. It’s safe to call me a fanatic, but Miller is already in outer space on his way to the moon.
Finally, the idea of the “head start” PayPal would get for spinning off now makes some sense until you consider what he is really saying. This is, that PayPal should essentially spin-off to the highest bidder before it dies an inevitable death. Is Miller suggesting a perverse corporate pump and dump?
Donahue’s no fool. He coolly pointed out there’s nothing that’s holding PayPal back from integrating digital payments today as part of eBay, in fact:
“PayPal is pursuing digital payments and is the leading digital payments alternative in many different environments. So it’s not a matter of eBay holding PayPal back.”
What Donahue is really saying of course is: we will do with bitcoin what we want, when we want to, because we are really, really good at payments.
He doesn’t need to utter the word ‘bitcoin’, because that particular currency would be lower volume for PayPal today than the Russian ruble. Miller is like a dog with a bone though: “Until everyone starts using bitcoin, and then there will be no reason to use PayPal.”
Then Donahue responded with the bombshell:
“[That is just what] PayPal is doing in building a wallet that can hold multiple types of digital currency.”
So, we can assume that, as soon as cryptocurrencies are actually worth PayPal’s time and regulatory uncertainties over the commercial use of cryptocurrencies are removed, the company will integrate them into their system. And will very likely be a force from day one.
It’s really not a matter of if PayPal enters the bitcoin industry, but when and, more importantly, how.

Build or Buy?

E-commerce

PayPal has enormous resources at its disposal in terms of financial and human capital, but the company seems to have a much better option than building their own bitcoin products from the ground up – on the merchant side, at least.
If PayPal could acquire BitPay, it would be a great deal for both parties.
Not just because BitPay is the leading bitcoin payment processing company and that PayPal would gain all their expertise, while dotting the global map with locations that accept the virtual currency overnight.
Or because their joint DBA (‘doing business as’ title) is already flawless – what’s not to like about BitPayPal?
But because BitPay’s business model would compliment, not cannibalize, existing PayPal sales.
A lot of people have the misconception that bitcoin will crush PayPal’s margins. That’s not likely.
PayPal could drop their prices for bitcoin transactions overnight by a full percentage point and make the same gross margins, because the company wouldn’t be exposed to the same interchange or credit card fees.
In addition, PayPal could become an instant bitcoin market maker.

Contrasting cultures

BitPay is really two businesses: a SaaS (software as a service) company that offers merchant services and a ‘long’ hedge fund that benefits from jumps in the price of bitcoin.
Multiple sources have told me the company sits on over 40,000 bitcoins. That’s a lot of exposure to price swings, but it is also a valuable asset.
Ownership of BitPay would allow a company like PayPal to kill two birds with one stone via an acquisition: acquire the talent and IP and seamlessly acquire the necessary underlying currency.
Will this acquisition actually happen, though? Probably not. But the move would make a lot of sense for Paypal.
Ryan Galt is a blogger, entrepreneur and freelance opinion writer for CoinDesk. His opinions do not necessarily reflect those of CoinDesk. You may email him at 2bitidiot@gmail.com, or follow him on twitter @twobitidiot.
Disclaimer: CoinDesk founder Shakil Khan is an investor in BitPay.
E-commerce image via Shutterstock

Playboy Plus, a Playboy Brand Website, is Now Accepting Bitcoin

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Minggu, 23 Februari 2014

The Banking Industry’s Varied Views on Bitcoin

(@danielcawrey) | Published on February 23, 2014 at 09:42 GMT | Analysis, Coinbase, Companies, Investors, Regulation, US & Canada
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Decentralized, math-based currencies can provide a framework for autonomous banking. To the average person that may not mean much, but to some the concept is enthralling.
Controlling money outside of incumbent systems is particularly exciting to cyberpunks and crypto-libertarians, yet the banks will, at some point, be working closely with bitcoin. A future where cryptocurrencies are a mainstream financial technology will likely depend on it.
Here are three different banks, with very different stances on bitcoin, that reveal just how contrasting the financial industry can be.

JP Morgan

The investment bank JP Morgan stands on the other side of the fence in regards to bitcoin. Recently that company released a report called “The Audacity of Bitcoin”.
From the title itself, it is not difficult to surmise what the organization thinks about the cryptocurrency. John Normand, the paper’s author, writes:
“As a medium of exchange, unit of account and store of value, it is vastly inferior to fiat currencies.”
Its advocates would say, of course, that bitcoin is still new, that it has room for growth as a digital payment mechanism and that every new idea faces a period of early adoption before heading into the mainstream.
Indeed, bitcoin is not as mature as the existing fiat financial system and weaknesses have exposed, especially recently. Yet it should be noted that innovation in bitcoin is moving forwards, and not backwards.
“If bitcoin stopped growing and changing, it would not have a real shot at becoming a widely used international currency,” says Andy Beal, who is an attorney with Crowley Strategy and helps advise early-stage companies.
The startup arena is currently seeing more new companies built around bitcoin – along with an increase in venture capital flowing into the ecosystem. Beal says:
“Unfortunately for JP Morgan, growth won’t stop. The bitcoin community and infrastructure will continue to get stronger and safer.”

The rise in bitcoin related venture capital. Source: CB Insight
The rise in bitcoin-related venture capital. Source: CB Insight

Wells Fargo

In January, the San Francisco-based bank Wells Fargo held a private meeting dubbed ‘Virtual Currency: Viability, Compliance and Direction’. The event, held in New York City, was at the offices of Union Square Ventures.
The venture capital firm has invested in bitcoin over the last year, providing funding for Coinbase in several different rounds: one led by the firm last May, and then the latest $25m influx of cash led by Andreessen Horowitz.
Union Square’s Fred Wilson recently wrote an article for CoinDesk. “I don’t have a problem with regulation per se, but how and when it happens matters a lot,” he wrote.
Wells Fargo appears to be interested in being an innovator in cryptocurrencies, but, as the title of its summit suggests, it has concerns about future regulation in the United States.
There is still potential for Wells Fargo to be one of the biggest banks to first embrace bitcoin, however.
Protected wallets are one service, for example, that could see banks succeed within the cryptocurrency realm.
Josh Siems is the founder and developer behind TrustedCoin – a company that provides third-party secure storage for bitcoin. He thinks it is likely that banks will soon join the bitcoin economy:
“In the future, I think we’re going to see banks like Wells Fargo offering bitcoin storage.”
Fred Wilson’s comment is revealing, however. At the moment, Wells Fargo wants more compliance guidance before it will enter the fray.

Projected bitcoin outputs over the next few years. As the value goes up and more BTC is put into circulation, banks may become interested in storage. Source: Bitcoin Wiki 
 
Projected bitcoin outputs over the next few years. As the value goes up and more BTC is in circulation, banks may become interested in storage. Source: Bitcoin Wiki

Silicon Valley Bank

The Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), based in Santa Clara, California, is an early synergist within bitcoin and banking. The company’s relationship with Coinbase allows US bank holders to easily acquire bitcoin. Verify a bank account with Coinbase, and it’s simple to move your USD into bitcoin and vice versa.
Right now the bank is actively involved with bitcoin business, but not proving storage services. Instead, the bank’s role appears to be as an ACH wire transfer provider.
“They’re not really storing [bitcoin] or anything. They are just basically getting comfortable having a relationship with a bitcoin company,” Siems said.
However, he sees SVB’s position as a banking innovator as a significant part of what makes it so successful. “They are branding themselves as the go-to bank for the whole investor community of the Bay Area,” he said.
The bank is taking a risk by working with bitcoin, but doing so will give it singular expertise on how to work within today’s unclear regulatory environment.
Fraud is one problem with cryptocurrencies, something that SVB is having to learn about.
“It’s really hard when you try to facilitate the exchange between two forms of money – one of which is reversible, and one of which isn’t,” said Siems
That is a challenge that the entrepreneurial SVB appears willing to take on, however.

Silicon Valley Bank locations. Many do not realize SVB has a global reach. Source: Silicon Valley Bank
Silicon Valley Bank locations. Many do not realize SVB has a global reach. Source: Silicon Valley Bank

Banking actions

Each of the banking entities above reveals a totally different mind-set concerning bitcoin business, and each for its own good reasons.
Banks, as enterprises, must align the emergence of cryptocurrencies to their business strategy, which is why bitcoin is seen through a prism that suits each institution’s future prospects.
It’s important for the bitcoin world to be aware of what the financial corporations do with virtual currencies going forward.
“As bitcoin continues to grow and more people use it in the future, it is inevitable that the banks are going to want to have ownership on the larger parts of that,” said Siems.
Bank of America’s positive report on bitcoin backs up that statement. And we can expect to see more of these analyses of virtual currencies published by the banks – they are an easy way for financial institutions to gauge the sentiments of both their customers and the public.
Furthermore, such reports show that a particular bank is at least paying attention, even if it doesn’t quite know what to do with these novel cryptocurrencies within existing monetary systems.
Fiat and bitcoin image via Shutterstock
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