Bitcoin in the Beltway Conference to Make Waves in Washington D.C.

May 2014
Contact: M.K. Lords
Email: [email protected]
Website: bitcoinnotbombs.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Bitcoin in the Beltway Conference to Make Waves in Washington D.C.

(Washington, D.C.) This year has seen a rise in the amount of Bitcoin conferences, but one in particular is priding itself on featuring the most radical movers and shakers in the Bitcoin community while also putting charity center stage. Boasting such rebels as Defense Distributed’s Cody Wilson, Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne, Antiwar.com’s Angela Keaton, and Blockchain’s Andreas Antonopoulos, Bitcoin in the Beltway will be highlighting the most disruptive elements of blockchain technology in the heart of government regulation—Washington D.C.

Jason King, founder of Sean’s Outpost Homeless Outreach, came up with the idea of the conference. Sean’s Outpost has been one of the most inspiring bitcoin charities, delivering 60,000 meals to the homeless in the Pensacola area in one year. The co-chair of Bitcoin in the Beltway is Elizabeth Ploshay of the Bitcoin Foundation, who is also known for her great work with bitcoin charity projects. A keynote panel comprised of Jason King, Davi Barker, Andreas Antonopoulos, and M.K. Lords will be discussing the broken nonprofit system and how blockchain technology can provide better solutions.

“I come from a technology background out of the start-up technology world, and there’s a concept of methodology there that a small team of highly trained, efficient people can knock an incumbent off of their seat by being more focused and result oriented, so we’re trying to apply that same thing to philanthropy and nonprofits.”—Jason King of Sean’s Outpost in a Bitcoin Not Bombs interview.

Music will be another feature of the conference. Bitcoin in the Beltway will feature the talented Tatiana Moroz, creator of the infectious Bitcoin Jingle, DJ/hacker extraordinaire YT Cracker, and Zhou Tonged, also known as the bitcoin world’s Weird Al Yankovich.

The conference will take place June 20-22nd at The Marriott Renaissance DC Downtown. Tickets can be purchased at bitcoinbeltway.com and 10% of proceeds go to Sean’s Outpost Homeless Outreach. You don’t want to miss this revolutionary event built around the most exciting technology since the internet.

Time is Running Out for Mark Williams Prediction of a $10 Bitcoin

If there is a villain to bitcoin, Mark Williams would likely be named. He infamously made the prediction, in December 2013, when he declared bitcoin was not an innovation but a “smoke and mirrors deception”. At the time, bitcoin was still trading near $1,000.00. He went on to predict that by mid-year 2014 the price of bitcoin would pop by 99% and be trading for less than $10.00. Bitcoin chaos ensued on the bitcoin forums.

The attention he suddenly received brought more attention from mainline news agencies.  He didn’t seem to be promoting his new book: Longwood Covered Courts and The Rise of American Tennis. It strangely enough wasn’t found listed on the New York Times best seller section or Amazon.com, but if one was fascinated by the subject of covered tennis courts there may be a copy of it to be found here.

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When not predicting bitcoin’s ill fate, his day job is teaching economy classes at Boston University where his former students gave him mixed reviews. This being the case, many in the bitcoin world have wondered, “What is in it for Mark Williams”? Some have theorized he was simply riding the popularity of bitcoin’s rise and found his dissenting words brought him sudden attention. Perhaps it was simply at this point in his career he longed to be… relevant.

For the few people in the world who are paying attention to bitcoin, many remain sidelined. They watch the battle of ideas and likely remain largely confused. Mr. Williams found himself providing quotes affirming many reporters’ confirmation bias against bitcoin. Financial experts were likely embarrassed to miss the call on bitcoin which they commonly referred to as the next beanie babies, or tulip bulbs but may go down as the biggest investment story of their lifetime. Rightfully, their clients and viewers may some day wonder…”How in the world did you miss that“?  When the time comes for contract renewals and reviews they now have somebody in their back pockets to point their fingers at.  Perhaps he’s been their naive “patsy” all along.

Exaggerations

Mr. Williams became a great example of a bitcoin antagonist. In front of cameras and reporters his exaggerated warnings about bitcoin were repeated and echoed by several news sources. His comments found their way into minds of investors who watch the financial news programs and read the websites. They listened to Mr. Williams’ radical rants about bitcoin being an Existential Threat to humanity. That particular phrase is usually reserved for nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons.  His penchant for exaggeration didn’t stop there. In the Committee on Small Business hearing, he gave testimony that bitcoin’s price increase of 9,000% was never seen on this planet – or any planet. Quick, somebody get Carl Sagan on the line.

Some things he got wrong:

  1. He told only half the truth: He stated facts about merchants not being able to accept it because it was too volatile.

Retailers typically work on tight margins and the immense volatility of the e-currency could eliminate all their profit or even result in losses. In this bitcoin world of uncertainty and risk, commerce would ultimately decline and stone-age bartering would increase. “Naturally, as bitcoin price swings increased, the number of businesses willing to accept e-currency risk would decline

He doesn’t admit that merchants sign up with payment processors like Coinbase and BitPay who convert the bitcoin to dollars immediately. He only admitted to these services in a Committee on Small Business hearing under further followup questioning later on.

  1. He stated that a computer program running a steady currency supply was “farcical”.

To assume currency can be computer generated, run in a decentralized manner and outside of the central banking system and controls is farcical and economically dangerous.

Many believe It was thinking like this that lead to the financial meltdown in 2007/2008. The advice from several financial experts stated that there was too much money in the system trying to find a home. (Literally and figuratively). Nobel Peace Prizewinner for economics Milton Friedman himself recommended using a currency system only needing a computer to control currency with mathematics. This would largely eliminate the need for a Federal Reserve. Not surprisingly, somebody working for the Fed would find this idea threatening to their “gravy train”, and therefore must be dismissed.

  1. He actually defends the current banking system of money transfer between banks that take three to five business days. He told the International Business Times:

“When we think about where eBay is right now, the backbone of PayPal is the ACH system, which is tried, true, and stable. When we compare that to bitcoin, it [bitcoin] isn’t stable.”

We see that banks are now rethinking the system of transfer that is still in use with technology dating from the 1970s – long before the internet. Perhaps the new payment train has already left the station with Williams still standing on the old banking rails.

4.      He claims that 90% of bitcoin is hoarded. Although how he could possibly know dead bitcoin from those available for sale is still a mystery. He later admits we don’t even know who owns them. The bitcoin referenced could easily be “legally dead” on a long buried hard drive. There have been no reports of him with shovel-in-hand trying to recover them.

5.    In his version of the world, central banks always know best. He’s a product of standard Keynesian economic thinking. This theory provides excuses for unlimited budget deficits and no debt ceilings. They essentially have no problem if debt is never to be repaid, or the debt becomes worthless through inflation.

For currency to be adopted as a medium of exchange there has to be trust in the ability to honor the underlying obligation and the ability for central banking policy to control inflation.

Even officials at the Federal Reserve realize the situation they’ve created is a ticking time bomb.  We’ve seen this before…see socialism and the economic theory used by list of currencies that ended in hyperinflation and ruined currency systems.

He does not admit that most of the world remains unbanked and has been completely left out of the system. To these people, their countries’ central banks have already failed them. We can now see that other central banks have begun to shift their attitudes without first consulting with him. They don’t appear to share Williams view of impending doom. His screams of “The Sky Is Falling!” seem to be met with ambivalence from those same central bankers he appears to believe he is protecting.  Cue the crickets.

Bitcoin community responds.

andre

Many bitcoin fans have been waiting for the day to arrive for Williams to “eat crow” and admit he was wrong.  Williams is now being referred to by some in the bitcoin community by the nickname “Professor Bitcorn”. A dedicated website was created and includes a real-time countdown for the expected final hour of his prediction (ending on July 1). The name “Bitcorn” that is referenced came from his miss-spoken word for bitcoin used in the hearing. Many bitcoiners have made unanswered wagers for Williams to put his money where his mouth is. If he was confident enough to meet these challenges and happened to be right, he might have some serious money on his hands.

South Carolina Representative Mulvaney puts it in perspective.

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The silliness of his manic bitcoin predictions and declarations that bitcoin was in a massive bubble was summed up nicely by Representative Mulvaney at the Small Merchant hearing.  He simply asked point blank: “So What”?  (56:20 minute mark). To his point, who cares?  He echoed what a lot of people were thinking; “Why was he raising such a fuss” ? Coinbase admitted their internet merchant penetration was still less than 1% of all internet merchants  doing business. It also was just a blip on the screen for brick and mortar locations. Who exactly was Williams intending to help?

Williams stated that it would make a big difference for the 47 people who presumably owned 29% of all bitcoin. Forty.   Seven.  People.  These were the same people he had just moments earlier emphatically accused of being “hoarders”. These were people that, if they still owned the private keys to access the bitcoin, bought or mined them for pennies or less. He also was rising to the defense of the people who owned the top 1,000 wallets containing the most bitcoin. His version of the Existential Threat of Earth had now boiled down to 1,000 people. These are people who likely heard the mantra to not invest into bitcoin more than they could afford to lose. They presumably knew the high risk for the possible high reward.  It wasn’t immediately clear why he wasn’t making the same kind of effort for the victims of the estimated 190 billion in credit card fraud being conducted each year.

The fading relevance of Mark Williams.

The days are winding to a close for his prediction that we only note in this article because of the breathless headlines it took on six months ago. He has become quieter regarding bitcoin lately and the requests for his opinions seem to be fading. The world has seemingly moved on and ignored his dire predictions as new investments and start up businesses are buzzing with excitement and new jobs. Even his beloved Federal Reserve is recognizing the potential boom in global commerce. That must have stung.  The results of his efforts being relevant in the world of digital currencies appears to be fading.  History doesn’t look to be in his favor.

Williams may soon be joining the assembly of short-sided critics who scoffed at the Wright Brothers flying machine. Ben Franklin, Tomas Edison, and Einstein each had their cynics and disbelievers as well. Who were these skeptics?  They are the forgotten, left in the dustbins of history and long since forgotten. The reward for being a critic or pessimists of grand ideas is negligible. Even if their prognostics are right it’s unlikely that anybody will be writing songs about them. His legacy might only be “road kill” as the bitcoin freight train races forward to its destiny and stops for no one.

It may soon be time to start a new timer countdown in honor of Mark T. Williams. This time we may appropriately set it for 15 minutes. That will be countdown of his last 15 minutes of fame believed by many as the time allotment of fame each of us are allowed in this world. Meanwhile, the creative geniuses that are now diligently creating bitcoin’s future will not slow down to reflect. They’ve got a new world in their imaginations for which they must prepare for us.

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Bitcoin market aimed at college students

Coinbase, a San Francisco company created to act as a wallet and platform in which merchants and customers can “transact” with bitcoin, is now offering the digital currency to students.

CyptoCoins News reports that any student that signs up for Coinbase will receive $10 worth of bitcoin. Students must verify enrollment by signing up with an email domain ending in “edu.”

Fred Ehrsam, who founded Coinbase in 2012, used Twitter to announce the limited time offer, which according to Ehrsam’s social media account, is currently only “enabled for a small handful of .edus at the moment.”

He has not yet revealed which schools will be participating, but did respond to a Twitter user who attempted without success to sign up with a University of California Berkeley account.

Ehrsam replied, “It’s because so many people have signed up from Berkeley today (seriously).”

Students at other colleges including Notre Dame and UCLA have reported success in signing up.

College investors

Giving away free bitcoin to college students in order to encourage investment is clever, but not new. Earlier this month, more than 4,000 MIT students enrolled in the 2014 fall semester will receive $100 worth of bitcoin.

The brains behind the program, Jeremy Rubin and Dan Elitzer, were able to launch the program after receiving nearly half a million dollars in donations from MIT alumni and the bitcoin community.

“Giving students access to cryptocurrencies is analogous to providing them with internet access at the dawn of the internet era,” said Rubin.

While many are excited about the give away, some are curious about what will happen if they try signing up with a school that’s not yet listed.

Others say the promotion could be taken advantage of by non-students creating an email account with the domain “edu,” which some experts say is relatively easy to do. Drew Cordell of CyptoCoins News wrote, “If the promotion is meant to have a long duration, it will need to be refined significantly in order to prevent abuse and provide full access.”

Despite Ehrsam’s reassurance that abuse will be prevented, Cordell argued, “It is very simple to create an .edu email address for free in minutes. Creating false email accounts could allow users to abuse the system and continually claim the $10 bonus if the system is not well regulated.”

By offering young people a chance to invest in Bitcoin, companies like Coinbase could be key players in expanding the market for digital currencies. This could potentially ensure monetary freedom for the future by allowing bitcoin into the hands of our youth.

Coinbase currently has over one million consumer wallets, 30,000 merchants, 5,000 API applications and U.S. bank integration. They also have a remote team consisting of 35 contractors.

My 2 Cents for Your 2 Cents: Cryptiv Empowering Content Creators

There’s a simple reason as to why strippers in the USA get more tips than strippers in Canada: the dollar bill. Canadian strippers miss out on gain because throwing coins is impractical, and giving up a fiver is too much. This doesn’t just stop in the strip club. The USA generally has a richer tipping culture, which would not be possible without the ease of handing over a single dollar bill to express gratitude, value, and thanks. The dollar bill facilitates easy tipping.

This is needed in the online world. How much more money would Wikipedia raise if we didn’t have to go through paypal to make a donation? When the number of steps are reduced in a transaction, the transactions grow. It’s not arbitrary, it’s significant. A simple button could be worth $300 million.

But we can take it a step further with cryptocurrencies, and a company based out of Toronto is hoping to do exactly that. Cryptiv is an online wallet which makes sending “pennies” over the internet as nonchalant as giving a buck to a bell boy. Currently, if you wish to tip someone over social platforms such as twitter and reddit, there’s a convoluted series of steps: users have to type a specific set of text commands to register with the tip bots and to send and receive tips; there is also no visual interface to interact with. The small nature of micro-transaction deters both parties from transacting; it’s too much of a technical hassle for a penny.

But pennies add up. And pennies would be worth it with an instant system. Mat Cybula, CEO of Cryptiv, hopes to make the process simple enough so that micro-transactions become a natural part of our everyday online interaction. “Cryptiv will facilitate seamless transactions using digital currencies over the internet and across social media,” says Mat, “and it will be currency agnostic, so you can use a cryptocurrency of your choice.” Mat also predicts that Cryptiv will enable the growth of communities since the platform builds recognition for contributors through transparency. “With cryptocurrecies, we are going to see new behaviors that weren’t possible before.”

If micro-transaction are seamlessly integrated into social media, they could shape a new economically symbiotic online culture. We tip bartenders, bathroom staff, and taxi drivers, but what about the people who feed us entertainment through their blogs, videos, articles, and stories? The individuals who create informative, valuable online content? The artists who give us beautiful visuals and words? Everything on the internet is created by someone and most of it is put out for free. These people don’t get paid for their work unless they sell their website and video space to advertisers of which the profits are halved by middlemen like adsense. From a content creator’s bias, this could be a revolutionary step towards independence.

Imagine being tipped for the originality or humorous value of your tweets? A social voting system that financially empowers content creators! I’ll be able to give my 2 cents for your 2 cents.

This is the next step in monetization, except this time it’s a tool for the economic empowerment of content creators and online communities. This is the new, more direct, more democratic capitalism. This is creating a purely voluntary, peer-to-peer support culture. This is an opportunity to bypass the middlemen. We can create micro-economies within already existing online spaces by way of voluntary exchange ecosystems. We have achieved diverse online engagement, so let’s monetize this engagement in a direct way, and enable the growth of financial sovereignty within our online social cultures.

MIT’s Bitcoin Expo and the Students Behind It

MIT’s students have made the news again. Dan Elitzer, president and founder of MIT’s Bitcoin Club, and Jeremy Rubin, a sophomore in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, have organized the MIT Bitcoin Expo which will be held this Saturday, May 3rd at MIT’s Compton Laboratories Building 26-100. The talks start at 12:00pm and will feature Gavin Andresen, a core developer of the bitcoin protocol; James D’Angelo, founder and host of the World Bitcoin Network; and Alan Reiner, founder and CEO of Armory Technologies, among others.

According to Dan and Jeremy, Bitcoin has not gotten the attention it deserves on campus, despite the Bitcoin Club having to deny entry into their filled meetings, most people only know the basics.

What is your goal for the Bitcoin Expo?

“We want to begin educating students and the community about what Bitcoin is and why it’s so exciting, beyond the fact that they’re going to be getting $100 worth of bitcoin. We also want to start equipping students with the knowledge and tools to begin working on projects that utilize Bitcoin. That’s why we’ve got some very senior software developers from Armory Technologies and BitPay leading workshops about transaction scripting and open-source libraries for Bitcoin.”

You might have heard about Jeremy back in December, when he and the co-founders of Tidbit were subpoenaed by New Jersey’s Division of Consumer Affairs and Office of Consumer Protection. Tidbit’s focus was to help websites gain revenue by having visiting users mine bitcoins while on the site instead of using advertising. The start-up took top honors for innovation at MIT’s Node Knockout programming competition in November.

Now the Jeremy is working on a different project, this time with Dan, The Bitcoin Project.

Alumni, the bitcoin community and other donors raised close to $500,000 for the Bitcoin Project. The Bitcoin Project is an experiment where about $100 will be distributed in bitcoin to MIT’s roughly 4,500 undergraduates. The experiment will help see what people do with their bitcoin in a bitcoin community.

Through the MIT Bitcoin Project, Rubin and Elitzer aim “to help MIT continue its long tradition as the preeminent educational institution at the forefront of emerging technologies, and establish MIT as a global hub where Bitcoin-related research, ideas, and ventures are studied, discussed, and developed.”

Currently there are seven businesses that already accept bitcoin in Cambridge, including a few restaurants, an art gallery and even a laser cutting, engraving & 3D printing service according to SpendBitcoins.com

How have local merchants responded to the project?

“We haven’t heard reactions from local merchants yet, but we’ll be organizing outreach efforts in partnership with the MIT Bitcoin Club and others to get as many as possible on board by the fall.”

Did you ever consider making an Altcoin for MIT?

“No. As one Reddit commenter pointed out, this is MIT; we build for the real world. There’s an existing ecosystem outside of MIT for Bitcoin that doesn’t exist for any AltCoins or anything that we would create specifically for this initiative. We want to both leverage that ecosystem and get students contributing back to it.”

What is the interest of bitcoin like at MIT? Are hardware engineers making miners; are software engineers making forks of cgminer; are the English and economic students writing articles on Bitcoin?

“There are a few students working on Bitcoin-related ventures and doing research into cryptocurrencies, but overall there hasn’t been nearly as much activity as we think is warranted. There is a LOT of interest in learning though. The MIT Bitcoin Club had almost 200 students jammed into a classroom to hear Jeremy Allaire give a presentation on Bitcoin back in February. We had to turn people away 15 minutes before the event was scheduled to start because we didn’t have room for them to get in. That’s the kind of interest we were seeing on campus to learn more about Bitcoin, even before we announced the bitcoin distribution.”

If the price of BTC rises by autumn, will the students get more than $100?

“No, we raised the funds in USD and will convert it close to the distribution date. We think the $100USD amount is a powerful psychological threshold, where students will really take it seriously, so we wanted to make sure it would be there.”

Do you have room for more than 200 people?

At the expo, yes. 550 is the room capacity, I believe.

 

 

Why Crypto-investing is Better Than Normal Investing

So far, the crypto-space has had some major home runs, some fizzles, and fair number of outright scams. For folks who’ve been in any successful project for any considerable amount of time, the overall returns have been massive. This is because, once a few issues are ironed out, the crypto-world offers possibilities that are far better than any other fundraising mechanism. That may seem a bold claim, but there are two simple reasons why I believe crypto-fundraising will grow until it dominates the investment landscape over the next decades:

(1) More money

(2) Faster money

Getting more money faster is good for just about everybody. It means less time spent on fundraising and more time spent on building products with a net result of more over all innovation.

How can the crypto-space deliver on this? What keeps money from flowing and becoming stagnant? There are a few reasons, but one simple reason is that professional investors work in a very limited context. What you can and can’t do in the world of venture capital is actually quite restrictive. Let’s examine these restrictions to see why they are lame and figure out how it can be radically disrupted.

Investment Restrictions

There are three basic components: A fund, a company, and a round. Funds are rather hard to set up. Companies are usually not too hard to setup. A round is a funny thing where a restricted amount of money is raised to fuel a company in it’s early stages.

What are the problems? Besides the high cost of entry, e.g. the difficulty of becoming an accredited investor, there’s a huge problem in that, generally speaking, there’s not a lot of time pressure for people to invest. And because they often have better things to do, they ignore you, the little peon, who is out trying to raise money.

What do people looking for money currently do? Well, generally speaking, they spend a lot of time talking to a lot of people and ultimately trying to create some forced scarcity and enthusiasm which then causes people to jump on and in. It’s just hard to get people to act outside of their fixed schedules and assume the personal risk that an investment entails.

Many of these problems are already being solved in the cryptocurrency space. One fascinating change is that the “round,” something I’ve described as a sort of funny restriction, can be entirely reinvented. In some recent fundraisers there is a set number of tokens available, there is no lower limit to the number of tokens that can be purchased, and the tokens are immediately available on the market.

What does this mean? It means that the barriers to entry associated with normal funding rounds (like a minimum size of $10K) are dramatically decreased. It means that the possibility of profitable investments, because tokens can freely trade, are dramatically higher. This will naturally accelerate innovation.

One other innovation is to have a linearly decreasing rate of exchange. This means that in something with existing limits, say 30 days for 100,000,000 coins, that the rate of exchange can vary depending on how many coins are committed.

New Crypto-Investing Features

For instance, at the beginning of a fundraiser I could receive 5,000 coins per BTC for investing early and 3,000 coins per BTC for investing later. Unlike a traditional investment round, in which the lead investor takes on a lot of additional effort for no particularly obvious return, these rounds give a strong incentive for people to get in early.

Another very cool thing is programmable dividends. It is now trivial in Bitcoin 2.0 technology, at least with Counterparty (XCP), to issue dividends. However dividends don’t have to be in Bitcoin or any currency, they can be  a token that represents a free coffee at your favorite coffee shop.

These and a few other half dozen improvements on are the reasons why I’m incredibly optimistic that cryptofundraising is going to rock the world of mainstream finance, potentially serving as the largest factor driving the upward growth in value of the Bitcoin network.

Among other things, it opens up a world of possibilities that didn’t exist before. What if your coffeeshop held an annual fundraiser and awarded a token that entitled you to a free coffee once a month? That’s entirely technically feasible today, and, with the technology we are currently developing, will be a simple process.

As I see it, venture capital used to be cool. It was awesome when the first Harvard Business School guy met the first flannel shirt person and they gave birth to the semiconductor industry. Angels rejoiced in heaven, cherubs plucked their harps and slapped each other on the bum. But over time, like all industries, stagnation seeped in. Now venture capitalists are prancing ponies, waiting for people to come to them since they hold the ticket to success, and complaining about how they are oppressed.

What I see is a massive opportunity for disruption. One key aspect is that venture capital does a rather poor job at ensuring that end users’ needs are met. This is especially true for startups that depend on engaged users like AirBnB. They depend immensely on cultivating a strong community, and yet over time as the investors take a larger share of the company, as much as the founders might wish to respect the users of the platform, they will always lose out when there is a conflict of interest. Engaged users lose, investors win.

This means that there is a powerful logic in allowing your users to be your investors, and it’s now not just logic, it’s business logic. You will be able to build new models of business which grow more rapidly and developed new patterns of corporate engagement that foster long term growth.

More money faster. More user engagement. More innovation. This is what we are building with Swarm.

Euro Pacific Precious Metals Embraces Bitcoin

Long-time Bitcoin skeptic Peter Schiff is embracing the future of cryptocurrency as a valuable form of payment. Late last year Schiff made his skepticism known when comparing the value of bitcoin to gold. He was very outspoken towards this view, but this news makes it seems that his outlook may have changed and is now embracing the importance of bitcoin as a payment method.

SchiffGold is one of the world’s largest gold and silver dealers, for which Schiff is a major investor. The company specializes in making high-quality bullion coins and bars to enhance and expand their customers’ financial profile. The company is based in New York City and does most of its selling in the United States. Additionally, they have built quite the reputation for calling out unsavory practices throughout the industry. The company decided to embrace Bitcoin simply because they want to provide transactions that are easier and cheaper for their customers.

SchiffGold has partnered with BitPay, the well-known Atlanta-based Bitcoin payment processor, to facilitate their digital currency transactions. Although Schiff’s stance has been obvious over the past few years, it has become obvious that his company believes in the technology behind bitcoin, and what it can mean for the future. The established New York headquarteredSchiffGold is currently one of the largest dealers of gold and silver in the world. SchiffGold provides a service that allows users to invest in gold and silver using Euro Pacific Bank, a traditional bank where users can deposit gold instead of fiat. This gives buyers the ability to attach a debit card to each account and use their holdings in gold and silver as traditional money in different parts of the world.

The partnership with BitPay has the ability to bring a whole new market of gold and silver buyers toSchiffGold, and because BitPay allows merchants to immediately convert bitcoin into dollars, Schiff and the company can avoid the risk of volatility. In a recent press release, Michael Finger, SchiffGold’s Director of Marketing stated, “Bitcoin offers tremendous benefits as a medium of exchange for both our domestic and international customers. A wire transfer of fiat funds can be slow and expensive for the customer, and credit card fees are too high to absorb at the low premiums we offer. Not only does it make business sense, but we are excited about giving owners of bitcoin the opportunity to inexpensively and reliably convert any excess holdings into precious metals rather than back to fiat currency.”

The partnership between the two companies marks a major milestone in the acceptance of bitcoin throughout the world. For SchiffGold, there will most likely be a large influx of new and existing users looking to take advantage of the new feature, which may also include users who sold some of their gold for bitcoin years ago. As more global companies embrace Bitcoin, we are sure to see the transaction benefits on both the consumer and merchant side, saving in costly transaction, credit card and processing fees.

Lamar Wilson and Lafe Taylor talk PheevaWallet, Potluck Capitalism, and Building Community with Bitcoin

This article first appeared at Bitcoin Not Bombs.

When I went to the Texas Bitcoin Conference a couple months ago, I met Lafe Taylor and Lamar Wilson of Love Will LLC. I learned that they had designed a hot wallet that iPhone users could access by joining a co-op. By getting an enterprise license and setting up the C.O.G. Cooperative, they were able to create a wallet that followed Apple’s guidelines. The Pheeva wallet is very user friendly and they have recently partnered with Gyft to allow users to buy Gyft cards directly from the app.

Based in Lexington, KY, Lafe and Lamar focus on empowering local communities with bitcoin and blockchain technology. They educate younger generations by teaching them how to code and show people of all ages how to get started with bitcoin.The feedback has been positive and they have developed relationships with a wide variety of organizations and colleges in order to spread the influence of bitcoin. Their direct action approach is very effective at increasing freedom for people most in need. There are around 10 million unbanked individuals in the country, and bitcoin provides an accessible service to those people so they aren’t reliant on predatory money services businesses.

Lamar introduced me to the term “potluck capitalism” in Texas, and I found it fascinating and an accurate term to describe how freed markets work for the people. Co-ops are based on the input and participation of the members; the cooperation of the members keep it running. With co-ops there is more of an incentive to give back to the members and workers, and you most often see them as member owned grocery stores or providing the alternative to corporations in mutual aid based societies. The great thing about co-ops is that they provide a community oriented approach to solving problems–the style is more democratic than other hierarchical organizations. By bringing more people into your co-op you are raising its value and it creates a “cycle of goodness”. The Pheeva team rewards users with patronage points for referring people to the hot wallet, and are in the process of developing other apps you can access as a member of the C.O.G. Cooperative. They also plan to ad advertisements for businesses who will provide discounts on their services for C.O.G. members.

You can create your own economy with bitcoin and for those who are restricted by regulations or tough financial situations, bitcoin gives them a reprieve. We discuss remittances in our interview below, and they are a multimillion dollar industry for money transmitter services like Western Union. But, there are outrageous fees attached to using these other services; Western Union charges 10% to send money to other states just within the United States. These fees hit the poorest people the hardest, and by offering an alternative payment system and currency in bitcoin they can save more capital and build value within an economy that better meets their needs.

Another subject we touched on was making bitcoin education more accessible to people. Although bitcoin conferences are great for educational purposes, they are often cost prohibitive to many people who could benefit from the knowledge. Cherise Wilson, Lamar’s wife, suggested doing a webinar series for bitcoin topics. After the broadcast ended, Lamar, Lafe, and I discussed organizing a free web conference for those who wish to attend a conference but lack the funds. Details will be forthcoming.

If you are able to attend the Bitcoin in the Beltway conference in June, consider coming to their talk entitled, “The Least of These and the Giving Economy” that will focus on building the charitable side of the bitcoin economy.

You can view our entire interview below:

Investment without Banking

Imagine, for a moment, you were a new member of China’s growing middle class, and looking to invest your savings. You’ll soon discover that without political connections, your investment opportunities are limited to a filtered selection of domestic companies; lucrative companies are listed elsewhere, and only available to foreigners, state officials, and their friends. If that’s the case, Cryptor Trust might be just the opportunity for you.

Cryptor Trust is not the first investment vehicle in the Bitcoin space. The Winklevoss have discussed plans to involve mainstream investors for some time, and various firms have already invested well-over $100 million. Many firms have backed investment vehicles such as Pantera, which invested in Bitstamp, among others. Financial instruments like Bitcoin Investment Trust let you buy “shares” of Bitcoin as one would oil or gold. Other companies in the space include GreenBank, Falcon Global Capital, and Havelock Investments.

Cryptor Trust, however, is the first global investment company to operate without the use of a bank account. Unlike previous investment companies–which function to serve the well-connected who don’t want to understand cryptocurrency, and prefer to use traditional channels–Cryptor Trust accomplishes just the opposite. They only sell shares for Bitcoin, leaving those unable to overcome traditional investment barriers on an equal playing field.

There are risks to denominating one’s company in bitcoins: a steep drop in value, for example, would presumedly have a dire effect on their share value. Cryptocurrency has become a diverse industry, however, and Cryptor Trust (like other firms) intends to invest in all manner of related sectors, from mining to payment processors. So long as the infrastructure behind Bitcoin is still being developed, there will always be value in such companies.

The Cryptor Trust team comes from an experienced investment background, and thinks they have the knowledge and expertise necessary to mantain returns in such a manner. Latin American chairman Geir Solem is the founder of Elliot Wave Technician, and left Europe in early 2008 having foreseen the banking crisis. In his view, problems in the Western banking world will continue or get worse, making investment via the traditional monetary system a riskier proposition.

“If we contribute to a trend where more companies use Bitcoin or other crypto currencies as their formal capital structure, I think we will have contributed to a positive change going forward,” said Geir. “In many countries, and that includes the US with Las Vegas, it is easier to gamble with your money than make an investment.” Other directors, like Maximiliano Garcia, have said their offering is designed to open the financial world to a new class of investors, who can’t meet traditional requirements.

Obviously, their success will inevitably rely on the success of Bitcoin, no matter how they hedge their bets within the industry. To that extent, it’s in their best interest to help promote a healthy Bitcoin economy, and they have promised to support companies leading emerging trends in the industry. “We believe this model is the right fit for those who want a stake in the future of the Bitcoin revolution. In a few years, using fiat currencies will be a sign that your are a laggard,” said Geir, who also criticized fiat’s unnecessary high fees.

Fundraiser for Latin American companies has already begun with the launch of Cryptor Latam Inc. They expect to raise 25,000 bitcoins by June 6 by selling 25,000,000 shares, legally denominated in Bitcoin at 0.001 BTC each. The company has pre-arranged “lots” and “blocks” of shares, to simplify the process for less experienced investors, and one can invest as little as 0.025 BTC. You can do so easily on their website, as well as access their prospectus.

Andrew Wagner is the Vancouver Ambassador for Cryptor Trust, but he is unpaid and was not compensated for this article. Bitcoin Magazine does not endorse any particular company, nor should its published content be taken as comprehensive investment advice. Spend your coins wisely!

Security – Never Forget

Unfortunately, those of a criminal nature (usually theft) often do not care who their targets (victims) are, whether they be little old grannies, or your local Bitcoin self made millionaire.

Roger Ver (“Bitcoin Jesus”) recently became the target of a hacker, and not of the nice variety of hackers out there. He quickly posted a reward for the apprehension of the hacker who was trying to access his emails, accounts and personal information.

Security - Never Forget - 1st image

As a very successful bitcoin entrepreneur from pretty much what is currently referred to as ‘the early days’, it can be seen that Roger Ver is a likely target for such behaviour.

However, through his quick independent actions of offering an award, he has since stated via Coindesk that the situation has been resolved.

An email address and Facebook account I don’t use anymore were hacked, but it started to spread until I told him I’m offering a $20k bounty for his arrest, then he gave up and gave me the password to all the hacked accounts. I’ll post all the details once I finish locking everything down.

~Roger Ver, Coindesk.

Security - Never Forget - 2nd image

Security In Bitcoin As Security In All

At this point it behoves us to remind our readers that best security practices should not just be implemented in Bitcoin and your wallet software (or incoming hardware) – that security practices should be used where attackers can gain access to such things as your important email addresses, social media accounts, wallet providers and especially your Bitcoin wallet.

2-Factor Authentication (2FA) is generally cried out as a must in the Bitcoin sector. It never used to be available for email accounts, yet email providers are catching up and most now provide 2FA in the form of Google Authenticator or via sending a text message to your mobile phone.

What Is 2FA

2FA can be in a variety of forms.

Google Authenticator is an app that you can download for your mobile and synchronizes random numbers to act as a ‘key’ for the service you have linked it to.

Security - Never Forget - 3rd image

Pros

  • Commonly used.
  • Easy to setup.

Cons

  • Be aware of time zone changes may result in unsynchronized ‘key numbers’.

Mobile texting is another form of 2FA, whereby the site you are trying to access will send you a text to your linked mobile phone, usually of a 5-6 digit number that you will have to enter within a certain period of time.

Pros

  • Easy to setup.

Cons

  • Not as commonly used.
  • Sometimes texts can be delayed.

Emails are another form of 2FA and can be layered with other forms of 2FA. For example, having your account require a password that is sent to your email address, and then also requiring your Google Authenticator code.

Pros

  • Can be layered with Google 2FA or mobile text 2FA to provide extra security.
  • Email address used may also have 2FA activated (possibly from an alternative phone).

Cons

  • A lot of email accounts are created (by default) to not have 2FA activated.
  • If you are using only an email 2FA for your more security conscious sites (wallet holders/exchanges), you may have to activate your email 2FA.

Though email 2FA provide an extra layer of protection, an account protected only by email 2FA (with no 2FA activated for the email account itself) is in fact only protected by your email password, if an attacker brute forces your email password then they will be able to access your ‘email 2fa protected’ account.

Weakest To Strongest

Email > Mobile Text > Google Authenticator > Email + Google Authenticator/Mobile Text.

It is important to remember, that depending on how you have setup your security, someone gaining access to one of your email or social media accounts may then use these to access one of your financial accounts – or at the very least, use your name to steal from others.

In Roger Ver’s case it could quite easily be argued that setting up ‘Honey Pots’ is an excellent way to give yourself warning that an attacker has you in their crosshairs.

Passwords

Your password is your first line of defence. A small (few characters) simple password can be brute forced by an attacker; it is generally recommended that your password be at least 15 characters, contain numbers and symbols and a mix of lower and upper cases, and do not use whole words.

Honey Pots

Defined as easier to hack/access than your more important accounts. When these are broached you have clear warning that someone is targeting you.

Bitcoin.org offers some very sound advice with regards to your bitcoin security, which can be found here: https://bitcoin.org/en/secure-your-wallet.

And of course, cold storage via USB sticks, CDs, paper wallets, floppy disks and whatever else you can imagine is always highly recommended. Best practices for security does not stop at the financial/final destination, it only starts from there.

More details of Mr Ver’s case can be found via the following reddit post – http://en.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/26d79c/roger_ver_hacking_incident_full_details_376_btc/.

Bitcoin in the Twenty-First Century: What Piketty can Learn From the Blockchain

So far in 2014, the biggest news in popular economics has been Thomas Piketty and his book Capital in the Twenty-First Century. It has struck a nerve with a worldwide populous that is still reeling in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, with some estimates putting sales of the book at over 200,000 in just a few months.

This is remarkable for a 600+ page tome on economics, a subject which the general public usually regards with disdain. Harvard University Press, Capital’s publisher and a company that considers a book with 60,000 sales in a year a blockbuster, has been flooded with orders. In a world searching for answers to economic turmoil, Piketty’s insightful publication has been welcomed with open arms.

For those who have not read the book (disclaimer: I have not, besides a quick overview for the purpose of the article) or one of the web’s many summaries, here’s the quick run down of Piketty’s research and the conclusions he comes to:

Using comprehensive financial data from Europe and the United States dating back to the 18th century, Capital presents evidence for a central thesis that, in a capitalist economic system, the rate of return on capital is usually greater than the rate of economic growth. What this means is that, over the long-run, we can expect inequality to rise as the rich (who make their money largely off capital – defined as real assets such as land, natural resources, houses, office buildings, factories, machines, software, patents, and stocks and bonds that represent a financial interest in those assets) get richer, while the poor and middle class (who make their money working in the larger economy) fall behind. Piketty argues that this should be avoided because he believes that such a concentration of wealth will lead to economic instability. In conclusion, he proposes a global progressive tax system to curb these negative externalities produced by the nature of capitalism.

It is with this conclusion that Piketty runs into problems. He himself admits that the proposal is “utopian” and that, at best, reformists can hope for regional wealth taxes in areas the size of Europe or the United States, no larger. And this is dependent on the actions of politicians, many of whom win or lose elections based on the backing of wealthy donors. In an email exchange with Bloomberg Businessweek, Piketty said “this is political, not technical”. Following this, the prescription recommended by Capital seems doomed to fail.

The Inefficiencies of Finance

As I have covered before, economists don’t think very highly of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Although they are coming around to the idea, the discipline as a whole still views the nascent technology as not much more than an interesting experiment. So it should be no surprise that Piketty doesn’t consider what it could do to help solve his crisis of inequality. However, when looking at his research, there are interesting connections between what he views as a leading cause of inequality in the past 30 years and the inefficiencies that cryptocurrencies were invented to solve.

In his book, Piketty identifies the source for rising inequality in the U.S. and other English speaking countries as the advent of “supermanagers”, by which he means top executives of large corporations with very rich compensation packages. In his review of the book, Nobel winning economist Robert Solow says this is an issue because “With or without stock options, these large pay packages get converted to wealth and future income from wealth.” This, in turn, continues the trend of inequality. From Capital:

“(T)he explosion of top incomes explains most (generally at least two-thirds) of the increase in the top centile’s share of national income; the rest is explained by robust income from capital. In all the English-speaking countries, the primary reason for increased income inequality in recent decades is the rise of the supermanager in both the financial and nonfinancial sectors.”

The reason Piketty identifies a distinction between financial and non-financial sectors is thus:

“It is also interesting to note that the financial professions (including both managers of banks and other financial institutions and traders operating on the financial markets) are about twice as common in the very high income groups as in the economy overall (roughly 20 percent of the top .1 percent whereas finance accounts for less than 10 percent of GDP).”

Now, it is important to address two things. First, Piketty does not point to the finance industry as the sole driver behind rising inequality. He is careful to say that “80 percent of the top income groups are not in finance, and the increase in the proportion of high-earning Americans is explained primarily by the skyrocketing pay packages of top managers of large firms in the non-financial as well as financial sectors.” Second, while Capital is a book intended to have worldwide scope, this phenomenon of supermanagers is labeled as a mainly American phenomenon.

Nonetheless, these findings strongly support the idea that the financial industry has become bloated, furthering inequality and, in the words of billionaire investor George Soros, “acting as a parasite on the real economy.” Even if, as Piketty argues, the phenomenon of supermanagers is a largely American issue, it still has effects on the rest of the world. Globalization has made markets so interconnected that financial crises are no longer isolated to single countries. That is why the 2008 disaster, largely an American production, has created lasting worldwide issues.

Furthermore, while “80 percent of the top income groups are not in finance”, the rise of supermanagers in the United States has coincided with the trend of executives receiving most of their compensation in stock options instead of cash. This directly ties their income to Wall Street, and the financial industry that rules it, even for executives of businesses that normally would have nothing to do with the stock market. Together with Piketty’s data, all of this creates a picture of a world where the main driver of inequality, and all the ills it brings, is greed by those who control the commanding heights of the economy.

What Satoshi Said

The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks.

Bitcoin’s creator, Satoshi Nakamoto did not say much about what Bitcoin was meant to accomplish. As Alec Liu of Vice put it, he seemed to have an “inherent awareness of PR game theory”. This was probably wise. Digital money is a controversial enough subject without any inflammatory comments from the “CEO of Bitcoin” for the mainstream news to attack. But, as the above genesis block note implies, he probably had issues with the way the 2008 financial crisis was handled. One can only assume this is what he meant by inaugurating the blockchain with such a bold statement.

It is not far-fetched to extend Satoshi’s distaste with the 2008 crisis to a belief that he saw Bitcoin as an improvement over the financial system that spawned it, an argument supported by his statement that “the utility of the exchanges made possible by Bitcoin will far exceed the cost of electricity used. Therefore, not having Bitcoin would be the net waste”. As Andreas Antonopoulos says: “Bitcoin allows anyone to participate in financial and banking innovation and to build new financial applications, financial instruments and transaction types. From global lotteries, to escrow systems, international payments, investments or simple retail transactions, the possibilities for incredibly novel uses are really almost endless”.

And here we come back to Piketty’s problem of treating inequality. In terms of stopping one of the main causes of rising imbalance (the continued dominance of supermanagers that are closely tied to the world of finance), the intelligent utilization of the technology behind cryptocurrencies is a far more feasible treatment than his “utopian” idea of implementing a worldwide tax on capital.

To be clear, I am not saying that if the entire world switched to using Bitcoin for every transaction it would solve issues of inequality. As others have pointed out, the Bitcoin economy is extremely unequal, with a few wallets controlling massive amounts of coins.

Instead, what Bitcoin and the open source blockchain technology can do is provide a foundation on which humanity can build a more efficient system for facilitating global finance, one which is based off of mathematics instead of the choices of a privileged few. Will it reverse all of our current inequality? No. Much of the capital that Piketty addresses in his book is entrenched physical wealth held securely by the super rich. It will take a long time to reverse this imbalance. But the intelligent utilization of Bitcoin’s technology can at least begin the process of slowing the growth.

Familiar Sentiments

Piketty’s book is a triumph of economic research and a fantastic educational tool on one of the most important social and political issues of our times. His contributions should be celebrated. However, he falls short in finding a solution to the problems revealed by his data.

Of course, this is nothing new to economics. In the late 18th century the discipline was nicknamed “the dismal science” by Victorian historian Thomas Carlyle. He was inspired to bestow the moniker in response to economist Thomas Robert Malthus’ prediction of impending mass starvation based on the mathematical principle that, while population grows exponentially, food production grows linearly. Malthus said “The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man.”

Today it is easy to see where Malthus went wrong: he underestimated the power of human ingenuity. While the global population has indeed grown exponentially, our ability to grow food has evolved as well. Enough food is grown today to provide more than enough caloric intake for every person on the planet. The problem is, most people don’t have enough money to buy it, so almost half is thrown away. Many factors contribute to this problem including lack of education, poor infrastructure and, of course, global inequality.

It is easy to come to the same conclusion as Malthus: these problems are too big to solve. That is what I think happened to Piketty. He tried to solve inequality with existing tools (global taxes) instead of letting his imagination entertain the possibility of what new innovations (Bitcoin and the blockchain) could do to replace today’s inefficiencies (a bloated financial sector).

I find it hard to blame him though. If I was writing a 600-page book it would be easy to miss the news about an upstart digital currency and the revolutionary technology behind it.

Now that he’s done, maybe he’ll have time to catch up on the times.

Featured image uses charts from Thomas’ paper on income inequality.

Profiles in Bitcoin Outreach: Will Pangman

Passion is a trait not difficult to find among bitcoin enthusiasts. In my experience, however, few others come close to the passion and dedication of Will Pangman. His sincerity in wanting to spread the glory of bitcoin is incomparable.

Pangman is the Chief Communications Officer at Tapeke, a cryptocurrency personal finance platform; the founder of the Milwaukee Bitcoin Meetup, BitcoinMKE; and an active proponent of bitcoin education initiatives in tandem with the Bitcoin Foundation. Through all three of these roles, he has carved out a niche as a premier bitcoin outreach expert.

I chatted recently with Will about bitcoin outreach, education, and communication.

Joseph S. Diedrich: How did you get involved in the liberty world?

Will Pangman: I was fortunate enough to be raised in a home that valued libertarian philosophy. I encountered it at a very young age. I saw lots of sophisticated bureaucratic and political abuses up close. I saw the custody battle my parents were going through for much of my childhood. I saw the way that fathers and children were treated by the family court system. For example, why isn’t the guardian ad-litem repeating exactly what I told him? Why do I have to see five different child psychologists before the next hearing? In addition, my dad ran for state supreme court justice twice and state senate once. I helped him on his campaigns as much as a young kid could.

JSD: How did you get involved in the bitcoin world?

WP: I have been looking for something all my life that I could totally buy into. There were things about the liberty movement or the Libertarian Party or conservatism, all these kinds of sociopolitical movements or attitudes, that I couldn’t completely get behind. The thing that I totally immersed myself in as a teenager was Ayn Rand’s Objectivism. Even that didn’t cover everything that I was concerned about. Then I learned about bitcoin in the middle of 2012. I put it on my list of things that I needed to research and know about. There were endless months of sleepless nights learning about it. Bitcoin was the first thing in my life about which there was nothing I couldn’t fully get behind.

I was at a definite ceiling in my professional life. I was uncertain about what direction to take. I was dissatisfied. I wanted an industry, a field, a profession that I could immerse myself in fully. Bitcoin showed me that there was [an] arena that valued your merits and your hard work. You can find fulfillment financially, philosophically, and socially in this space.

JSD: When and how did you become involved with the Bitcoin Foundation and the Education Committee?

WP: I decided to start phasing myself into freelancing around this time last year. I wanted to have more professional freedom and have the ability to pursue bitcoin projects. In the middle of June, I started a bitcoin Meetup in Milwaukee. A couple months later, I was invited to get on a conference call with Charles Hoskinson, who’s currently the CEO of ethereum. At that time, he was chairman of the Bitcoin Foundation Education Committee. I joined the committee. Not long after, Elizabeth Ploshay became committee chair, and we’ve worked closely since, including on some best practices guides for new users.

JSD: There’s a very special project you’ve been focusing on. What can you tell me about that?

Last winter, Pamela Morgan of Empowered Law joined the Education Committee. She’s my partner on a project called BTC-EDU, which we recently proposed to the Board of the Foundation. We’re going to foster the growth of a network of student bitcoin organizations, especially on college campuses. We’ll network them together so they can function as a national charter organization much like Students for Liberty. We’re also going to create course material, curriculum guidelines, and professional development courses. To further the research of cryptocurrencies on college campuses, we’ll create a peer-reviewed journal and promote research projects conceived by, financed by, and supported by the Foundation and other bitcoin trade associations. The project is very popular among the folks we’ve shared it with. We’ll be launching all three parts in the fall semester for the 2014-2015 school year.

JSD: When did you start the Milwaukee Bitcoin Meetup?

WP: I started the Milwaukee Meetup in mid-2013. I saw many Meetups, including in Silicon Valley, Miami, and New York City, that were having lots of success and doing cool things.

JSD: What were your original goals? How have those goals been met, exceeded, or changed?

WP: I wanted to start the group because I figured there were lots of people who were closet bitcoin fans or users. I wanted to meet them. I had this burning passion to see bitcoin take more of a hold in the Midwest. I wanted talented people to get together. I thought we could create a social presence in the community. We could help people learn about bitcoin. We could educate people. Last summer, bitcoin was completely misunderstood. It still is, but much less so. If bitcoin is going to succeed, it’s going to have to take hold in smaller cities and communities. There’s no better town to experiment than Milwaukee. It’s a rust belt city. It’s not suffering nearly as bad as Cleveland or Detroit, but it has had its own struggles. Milwaukee was and is starting to take a healthy interest and attitude of curiosity towards the tech sector. I thought we could show  people that it’s time to love bitcoin out in the open and show people that it’s harmless and altogether wonderful.

JSD: What has the Meetup in Milwaukee specifically accomplished?

WP: We’ve done Satoshi Squares in public, which were really cool. We’ve taken our group to social events like block parties and big events with street vendors and live music. During the summer in Milwaukee, there are large festivals down by the lake. There are lots of weekly concert programs that happen in the parks. We’ve operated vendor booths and set up information booths. People came by and asked us about bitcoin. Our membership skyrocketed after those events. We’ve also raised some money for charity. That expands our visibility. We share our meetings with the YouTube viewing world. We’ve invited bitcoin personalities, entrepreneurs, and business leaders into our meetings and broadcast live Hangouts on Air. Among our guests have been Austin Craig from Life on Bitcoin, Jeffrey Tucker, the ethereum team, and Michael Dunworth from Snapcard. Part of this was also to show the rest of the bitcoin world what kind of activity was going on in Milwaukee. That led to having some prominent names in bitcoin come and speak in person, including Andreas Antonopoulos and Jeffrey Tucker. Many of the people who came to these events were complete bitcoin virgins. They left with a lot more information and a lot better outlook and attitude toward this technology. We’ve also gotten some traction in merchant adoption, and I’d like to see more of that, as well.

JSD: What’s next for the Milwaukee Meetup?

WP: There’s a summer music series in Milwaukee called Jazz in the Park. About 1,000 to 4,000 people show up for that every Thursday. We’re going to take our Meetup outside and do man-on-the-street type activities. We’ll be giving bitcoin away, talking to people about bitcoin, helping them learn how to use it, and handing out information. We’ll be making videos and posting them on the BitcoinMKE YouTube channel.

JSD: Based on your personal experience, what advice do you have for other Meetups?

WP: Meetup.com costs money. Don’t be afraid to ask for donations from your own members. Another way we’ve monetized the Meetup, if you will, has been through informal trades. Walking into a place and saying, “Hey, we’d like to have an event here. I can promise you we’ll bring fifty people to patronize your bar. You’ll get that business if you allow us to use the space exclusively for, say, three hours of the middle part of the evening when you’re not otherwise busy.” They’re happy to do that. And that’s another way to demonstrate to business owners the kind of energy that bitcoin can bring. Afterwards they’re easy sells for bitcoin adoption. I think the secret sauce for having a successful Meetup is meeting once a week. That’s how you get your group established. Get out and do community activities right away. Contact other Meetup organizers, including me. We have 150 members, which is huge per capita. I’m happy to help anyone.

JSD: You work at a new company called Tapeke. What is your role there?

WP: I am the Chief Communications Officer at Tapeke. I handle PR, aspects of marketing, some copywriting, and general customer support.

JSD: What is Tapeke? What products and services will you offer?

WP: Tapeke is a personal finance application for your cryptocurrencies. We’re launching our open beta in about two months. Tapeke will give you a place to see all of your wallets and accounts  in one place. You’ll be able to load all your public keys for all your wallets—cold or hot. You’ll be able to add data to them that can’t be embedded on the blockchain. It’s very secure. You’ll never share your private keys with us. RSA keys and backup passwords are all part of the package. There will also be rich data, analytics, and financial planning tools. What really sets us apart is our wonderfully-designed user interface. It’s gorgeous, intuitive, and fun. We’re delivering a user experience that’s not really available in other apps. And it’s 100% crypto. You won’t need to have a bank account to use the functions of the site.

BFGMiner Development Team Releases Version 4.0 of Leading Bitcoin Mining Software

2014 May 26th — The BFGMiner development team today announced the immediate availability of BFGMiner 4.0, the latest major release of the world’s leading cryptocurrency mining software. Designed to support today’s diversity of miners, BFGMiner 4 delivers a flexible foundation needed for mining at home or as a business.

Available for over two years, since the advent of consumer-friendly FPGA miners, BFGMiner has earned a reputation for performance and reliability. Today, miners all over the world rely on BFGMiner for their mission-critical mining rigs.

With the new 4.0 release, BFGMiner gains automatic hotplugging support, proxy support for GBT and scrypt pools, a common/shared interface for all devices, as well as support for some of the newest ASIC mining hardware: Butterfly Labs’s Monarch, BFx2 mining sticks, newer Drillbit miners, the bi-algorithm scrypt/SHA256d DualMiner USB stick, GridSeed scrypt ASIC miners, HashBuster Alpha, Hex•Fury, NanoFury NF2/NF6, and OneStringMiner boards. OpenCL support as well as scrypt support in general have also seen major improvements.

Planned for upcoming versions, the BFGMiner team aims to expand flexibility, improved decentralised mining, integrating more proof-of-work algorithms, and native support for concurrently mining multiple cryptocurrencies.

”BFGMiner is my go-to choice for mining software. It is fast, simple to use and has excellent support with a huge community behind it. There is so much I can do with it from run a single miner to a whole farm. The sky’s the limit.” -Scott Fargo, CCN

“I’ve always preferred the ease of use, layout and features of BFGMiner, and I’m really looking forward to rolling out v4.0” -Vince Samios

For more information about BFGMiner 4, visit http://bfgminer.com

How to get BFGMiner

BFGMiner is available for almost every platform: Windows users can download it from the website, Mac OS X support is provided using Homebrew, and most Linux distributions provide official packages. Additionally, BFGMiner is integrated into many frontends such as EasyMiner, MacMiner, MinePeon, MultiMiner, and Portable Instant Mining Platform.

About the BFGMiner development team

Luke Dashjr is the lead developer of BFGMiner, having started the project in 2012 to add FPGA support to a popular GPU miner of the time. Besides his work on BFGMiner, Luke is actively involved in core Bitcoin development, maintains the advanced mining pool software Eloipool, and spends much time on general cryptocurrency research.

Nate Woolls joined the project in the past year as the scrypt/Mac/Windows lead developer. In addition to his many driver contributions to BFGMiner, he also maintains the MultiMiner GUI frontend for BFGMiner and the MobileMiner service for remote miner monitoring and control.

Many others have also contributed to BFGMiner. See the AUTHORS text file included with the BFGMiner distribution for a more comprehensive list.

Increasing Adoption with Pheeva Wallet and Pheeva Plus

Love Will Inc., the creators of the Pheeva Wallet, have launched an exciting new feature aimed at simplifying the user experience and boosting Bitcoin adoption. Last week, the company unveiled Pheeva Plus throughout their existing iPhone and Android bitcoin wallet applications. More than a month ago Pheeva made its debut as the only bitcoin wallet that followed Apple’s restrictive rules. The company took an uncommon route to be able to provide iOS compatibility, which consisted of long conversations with Apple and setting up the COG Cooperative (Cycle of Goodness) to be sure the application was following the “rules.”

Users who are part of the COG Cooperative receive some great benefits including access to the organization’s in-house applications, future revenue sharing and exclusive discounts. The organization is based on the power of numbers, focusing on the idea “united we are powerful and that power can wield change that benefits all of us.” The COG allows users to share Coin!Ds, offering increased sharability between users who join and gain access to the Pheeva wallet. Coin!Ds allow users to easily set up and send virtual currency.

The process of downloading Pheeva Wallet is a bit unconventional and requires users to sign up for the cooperative before downloading the application. After completing the free sign-up, users are given a link to download the application, which is featured on the Play Store but not available for direct download on the App Store. But for those iPhone users who didn’t crush their phone after the Blockchain debacle, Pheeva gives all the functionality and security for iOS users looking to spend their digital cash.

Pheeva has become one of the most popular mobile wallets in the bitcoin space and by continuously adding features, the company is retaining and growing its user-base. Lamar Wilson, CEO of Love Will Inc. stated:

“Pheeva Plus adds value to our critically acclaimed wallet offering through partnerships we are developing with some of the largest brands in the cryptocurrency space. We have every confidence that, as it matures and more partners come on board, the Pheeva Wallet and Pheeva Plus will be instrumental in increasing the adoption of bitcoin across a much wider audience. Best of all, it means more opportunities for you, and more ways to enjoy the freedom of using bitcoin.”

The company landed its first partnership with digital gift card giant Gyft, which will allow the wallet to add new levels of utility and usability to new and existing users. Having tried Pheeva Plus Gyft, I was incredibly satisfied with how seamless and simple the transaction was. This partnership has huge implications to further promotion of frictionless payments, helping Pheeva users spend their bitcoin in more places in a more timely manner. The transaction was complete in seconds and I could easily send it to a friend, or selfishly keep my new gift card for myself.

In addition to Pheeva Plus, the company also announced an infrastructure partnership with Blockcypher, a cloud-optimized blockchain platform that powers a variety of bitcoin applications. Love Will Inc. and Blockcypher are working together to find the best ways to utilize their combined back-end architectures to achieve increased transaction speed and reliability. For Pheeva, these partnerships will surely be instrumental in the mobile wallet platform’s continued growth and user adoption. “Beyond Gyft, we at Love Will are constantly working to add other brands, apps and features. Count on other announcements in the near future,” Wilson stated in the announcement.

It is an exciting time for Pheeva, and furthermore, the Bitcoin community. As more and more companies establish their position in the market and create innovative technologies based on the blockchain, new users and merchants will realize just how simple and advantageous Bitcoin has become. The individuals at Love Will Inc. are doing exciting things to make this happen.

 

Check out www.pheeva.com and sign up for the COG Cooperative for access to these new features.

Govt. Dislikes Bitcoin, Unless It’s For Politics

In the same breath, government officials list bitcoin as a potential threat to national security, but if you wish to fund political committees, they will accept cash, credit, check, and bitcoin, the digital currency they can’t control.

On Thursday, May 8th, the Federal Election Commission (FEC) voted in favor of accepting bitcoin as payment in support of political committees.

Unlike like last fall, when officials hesitated to allow bitcoin donations, this year they quickly passed the measure 6-0. The vote also allows political action committee (PAC) members to purchase and sell bitcoins, but officials must convert them to U.S. dollars before depositing them into a campaign account.

It’s unclear what changed the minds of FEC members. Citing the possibility for contributors donating in bitcoin to conceal their identity, FEC officials delayed approval, saying they needed more time to “study the issue and develop a formal policy to govern the use of bitcoins in campaigns.”

Still, despite non-existent bitcoin regulations, FEC members quickly passed the measure unanimously. A decision has not yet been reached regarding the maximum dollar amount that will be accepted, however, an advisory opinion request by Make Your Laws (MYL) PAC asked to accept increments up to $100.

“The $100 limit was really important to us,” said Commissioner Ellen Weintraub, a Democratic appointee.

“We have to balance a desire to accommodate innovation, which is a good thing, with a concern that we continue to protect transparency in the system and ensure that foreign money doesn’t seep in.”

Weintraub’s statement is interesting.

The only time the government appreciates “transparency” is when it’s directed at the public, and not them. One of the government’s biggest complaints about bitcoin is its lacking transparency, which some call privacy, or freedom.

Wachovia and other Big Central banks caught funding the drug war were anything but transparent, yet the government never pursued criminal charges against them. Instead, the government merely gave them a slap on the wrist in the form of a fine substantially smaller than what the bank earned illegally.

The bitcoin group behind FEC’s vote

Make Your Laws (MYL) PAC, the group behind the FEC measure, is a pro-bitcoin group divided into three different organizations, a PAC, a Super PAC, and a non-profit.

“The group, based in Durham, North Carolina, was founded by Sai (who only goes by one name),” reported vocativ.

Politicians with strong libertarian supporters are expected to be among the first to accept bitcoin. Officials accepting the digital currency will be required to report their bitcoin values on the day contributions are received.

MYL noted, in order to prevent anonymous donations, if the contribution cannot be determined “to be from a legal source, the treasurer must refund the contribution within 30 days of the receipt of the deposit or the discovery of the illegality.”

The committee’s decision is the first to be made by a government agency regarding the use of bitcoin. The ruling will be subject for future amendments since it’s not yet a binding law or regulation.

The Role and Future of Altcoins

Just the name “altcoin” evokes a sense of disdain–altcoin, as in “alternative to Bitcoin,” a copycat late to the scene. Why do we persist in using such terminology when altcoins and Bitcoin are all cryptocurrencies of the same basic category? Many long-time Bitcoiners accuse altcoin developers of pump and dump schemes, longing to be early adopters, and envious of their fortunes.

There are some good reasons to pay attention to emerging cryptocurrencies, however. Like any tool, one size doesn’t fit all, and different cryptocurrencies function more or less effectively in different scenarios. For example, while Bitcoin’s pseudoanonymity strikes a fine balance, there are times when a citizen might wish to have total anonymity; conversely, we might want to use a more traceable solution when it comes to investment firms and tax agencies.

Already, we can see currencies for different purposes emerging. CryptoNote, for example, yields near-total privacy via built-in one-time wallets and group signatures. Dogecoin works great as a mainstream promotional tool for cryptocurrency. Freicoin can be used in situations where deflation is not ideal, and currencies like 4C can be used to tackle political issues like global warming (whatever your position on that particular issue may be).

There are lots different niches for cryptocurrencies to fill, but even if two currencies aren’t readily differentiable, there’s a lot of value in having competition in the cryptocurrency field. In a monopolistic scenario, the developers influential over the leading cryptocoin could become lazy, or worse–corrupt. Most cryptocurrency enthusiasts would agree that the free market is usually the most efficient system, so shouldn’t that apply to Bitcoin, as well?

Critics argue that a plethora of coins will lead to confusion, but the beauty of crypto is that it’s not like traditional infrastructure-based industries: multiple competing power networks leads to a tangled mess, but cryptocurrency wallets are relatively simple programs. One could easily hold varying currencies in a single wallet application, and paying in different currencies at a point-of-sale terminal is one more press of a button. One could conceivably detect which currency is requested by the QR code displayed, making it an easy process.

Another point of criticism is that this will lead to too much volatility in crypto, as investors jump between one coin and another. While it hasn’t become an issue, yet, that’s arguably because altcoins haven’t caught up in market share. While that could be changing soon, there are already plenty of traditional currencies on the planet, so one would think such an issue would have already manifested itself in the fiat realm. Such volatility would make investment in and use of cryptocurrency difficult, but that might be a simple problem for a new coin to solve.

The emergence of multiple competing cryptocurrencies is likely to lead to the development and use of basket cryptocurrencies. As Bitcoin decreases in dominance, people will still want a way to invest generally in cryptocoins, without worrying about variances within the market. By making each basket coin redeemable for an assortment of significanat coins on the market–each in a quantity proportional to the number of that coin on the market–one could efficiently store a fraction of the total cryptocurrency market share.

If that’s still too volatile for everyday transactional use, we can make a coin for that, too–just program its coin production rate to increase or decrease whenever it deflates or inflates (respectively), and set the confirmation time as low as possible. People will use them if they’re necessary to buy things, with or without their investment potential. Unlike traditional industries prone to monopoly, it’s in the nature of crypto to promote the free market; Bitcoin having to contend with competitors is not a matter of if, but when–and how.

SatoshiPoint Bitcoin ATMs UK

More Bitcoin ATMs for the UK

Bitcoin now has multiple dedicated Bitcoin ATMs in London, allowing the public to buy and sell Bitcoin for cash. This makes London one of the leading cities for these machines globally.

UK Bitcoin based startup SatoshiPoint has just announced the installation of three Robocoin ATMs that will be live from Friday, May 30th. To celebrate, they are throwing a Bitcoin bash. This official launch party will be on the same Friday at Old Street Tube location Nincomsoup, starting from 6pm.

The Launch party will be in conjunction with Bitcoin POS XBTerminal, who is also crowdfunding investment through crowd funding platform BanktotheFuture.

A second launch party will be held a little later, to celebrate the opening of Bristol’s first ATM location on the the 3rd of June. The arrival of these Robocoin machines represent SatoshiPoint’s first. The company plans to import further machines, with a focus on operating full size commercial grade machines that allow the general public to both buy and sell bitcoins for physical cash in seconds quickly and simply.

Satoshi Point’s three machines will currently charge a flat 5% fee over the live bitcoin price on Bitstamp. The company has future plans to integrate with cointrader to allow for faster withdrawals.

locations
SatoshiPoint Locations

The machines will be located at Old Street, Nincomsoup, located within Old St Tube station AKA Silicon roundabout. Also, Oxford Street Rathbone News, Rathbone Place, London W1T 1JS – Closest tube Tottenham Court Road. And, Bristol City Centre, SuperFoods 25-27 St Stephens Street, Bristol, BS1 1JX.

These are second generation Robocoin machines that include a passport scanner (a UK first) as well as biometric palm reader and driving licence reader. These security features will not be implemented from day one but are in place to future proof the machines and make sure they comply with any future regulatory requirements.

SatoshiPoint is a founding member of the UK Digital Currency Association. Managing director Jonathan James Harrison says:

“SatoshiPoint wants to take Bitcoin mainstream in 2014 and believes that Bitcoin ATMs are essential in making this a reality. Bitcoin ATMs provide a familiar and consistent way for normal people to get hold of bitcoin fast, or sell it quickly for real world physical cash.”

SatoshiPoint has been funded by its two director-shareholders Jonathan Harrison and Hassan Khoshtaghaza. The two plan to scale up quickly and roll out more machines nationwide in other major cities. Investors will soon have the opportunity to invest in Satoshipoint Ltd with either bitcoin or sterling in return for real shares in the company.

The company has been through Bank to the Future’s business crowdfunding program and is looking to raise £150,000 to fund rapid expansion. Satoshipoint has already been approved by HMRC for the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS) which allows private investors to offset money invested in Satoshipoint against their personal income tax or capital gains tax.

Anyone interested in attending either of the free opening party events should RSVP the organisers here. They promise to be a lot of fun for all to mark this momentous occasion.

Cody Wilson and M.K. Lords Discuss Dark Wallet and Philosophy

This article first appeared at Bitcoin Not Bombs.

I had the opportunity to sit down with Cody Wilson, the creator of the world’s first 3D printed gun and founder of Defense Distributed, at the Freedom Summit in Phoenix, AZ. We were both there to give talks on Bitcoin and the event was put on by radio host Ernest Hancock of Freedom’s Phoenix and Declare Your Independence.

In this interview we discuss philosophy, decentralized resistance, Dark Wallet, Defense Distributed, and the role of humor in activism. I really enjoyed talking with Cody, who is fascinating and frank in this interview, and we covered a lot of ground. Cody highlights the effectiveness of doing activism without asking permission and how Kafka-esque the current system is becoming.

Cody will also be at the upcoming Bitcoin in the Beltway conference put on by Jason King of Sean’s Outpost. You can see him and a lot of other awesome folks and help charity while you enjoy the conference–10% of proceeds go to support Sean’s Outpost Homeless Outreach.

Live Tracking of All Things Bitcoin and Altcoin with Blockstreet

There is a new digital currency app in town and it is giving ZeroBlock a run for the money. A California startup, Blockstreet has released its first iOS application, providing everything bitcoin and altcoin. Currently in Alpha stages, the application made its debut in the App Store last week, giving users access to Bitcoin and Altcoin prices, market cap, news and information, along with a fully functional currency calculator. While most other applications just offer information on Bitcoin, Blockstreet provides up-to-the-minute information on everything happening in the world of digital currency.

Blockstreet CEO Ken Feldman runs the company from a Bitcoin incubation space called Bitropolis in Santa Monica. Their aim is to be the mobile Wall Street of the crypto community, and through Feldman’s leadership as a successful serial entrepreneur, Blockstreet is focused on placing the entire marketplace in the palm of your hand. Feldman has a lot of experience in the Bitcoin and Altcoin space and has launched companies in telecom, aerospace and media industries.

Users who download Blockstreet will enjoy the application’s easy-to-use interface and functionality. Blockstreet has the ability to keep users apprised of all trending digital currency news, market cap and information from the world’s leading exchanges. In addition, the application also features a cryptocurrency calculator that easily and accurately calculates rates from fiat-to-crypto. Users can view over a dozen different currencies including Bitcoin, Litecoin and Dogecoin across a variety of exchanges, and every option is customizable to the user’s preference. The initial launch of this free application has been very successful and due to its feature rich interface, Blockstreet gives investors and enthusiasts a new and exciting look into the world of digital currency.

“Cryptocurrency is a burgeoning industry, and the demand for more information continues to increase,” Feldman stated. “There are other apps, but many just focus on Bitcoin, aren’t easy to use, or [are] built as a side project by a developer and have little ongoing support. We are hyper-focused on giving users the best possible tools for them to understand the entire marketplace and make smart decisions.”

Blockstreet is currently rolling out the app to Bitcoin and Altcoin enthusiasts, who are encouraged to send their feedback in order to further improve the user experience. Going forward, the company plans on introducing new features regularly, although none have been specified as of yet. Blockstreet will even name the feature after the user who made the suggestion, which shows just how much faith the company has in the community.

“The Bitcoin and Altcoin communities are very supportive and we just wanted to create an application that is all about the user experience,” the company said in a recent press release. “Users by and large need to access data on the go, which is why we created Blockstreet to meet their cryptocurrency needs wherever they are.”

The iOS app is currently available for free via the App Store with an Android version currently in development. Users can be notified when an Android version is available by visiting the Blockstreet website. http://www.blockstreet.info

 

Bitcoin is on Speed

Eight hours of sleep is too long to be disconnected from the ever-changing crypto landscape. Currency urgency permeates business dealings, investor interests and journalistic pursuits. We are literally involved in a world that is changing at a truly phenomenal rate. Try to keep up, will you?

The Speed of Business

If “The Social Network” taught us anything, it’s of the importance of getting there first.  Technology moves fast, and bitcoin is an excellent example of this. For business owners and entrepreneurs with ideas, getting to market first is everything. Take BitAccess, a locally-run business out of my hometown of Ottawa, Canada.

The co-founders literally came up with their idea for Bitcoin ATMs (BTMs) at a pub, over drinks, with their ideas and plan scribbled on – yes, you guessed it – a napkin.  “Just like in the movies,”  Haseeb Awan, co-founder of BitAccess, exclaims.

The company’s model is based on speed: BTM’s are the quickest way for consumers to get into bitcoin. Arrive with cash, enter basic personal “Know Your Client” details, feed cash into machine and BAM! you’ve got bitcoin. Cash out your bitcoins within minutes, using their BTM’s.  Haseeb and his team are experiencing incredible success, having only been in business for a few months. The one aspect of their business they wish they could speed up is the production of the machines: “To do it right, it takes time,” Moe, a co-founder, exclaims. “It’s a pain-point for us,” Haseeb adds. “But every time we do it, it gets more streamlined; it goes faster.”

Haseeb attributes his company’s incredible success to another factor of speed: their responsiveness to clients and prospects. The company has recently been scaling, adding a new employee to work solely on Customer Service: “[Customers] have our direct line. They need something? They call. We listen, respond, and improve. This keeps [clients] confident, knowing they can reach us.” BitAccess co-founders include Ryan Wallace, Vignesh Sundaresan, Moe Adham and Haseeb Awan. They currently employ 10 staff.

Speed is infused into almost every aspect of their business: “RedBull is free here, thanks to Invest Ottawa and Shopify,” Haseeb laughs. Invest Ottawa is Ottawa’s business incubator, where BitAccess has its headquarters. Shopify is another huge Ottawa success story, who knows better than most the importance of energy during long nights of work. BitAccess often works all throughout the night, ensuring every one of their BTM’s is up to their standards before shipping them around the world. Belgium, Australia and Slovenia are just a few countries expecting BitAccess BTMs. These countries patiently await their product, but everyone knows that you can’t bypass quality – it takes time. At the moment, BitAccess claim they operate in 10 countries on 5 continents, and aims to increase that number to 30 countries within the next 2 months. Pass another flat of RedBull over.

IMG_0020
BitAccess’ headquarters at Invest Ottawa. Haseeb and his team claim all parts are made in Ottawa, making the busines “100% local.”

Another pain-point the BitAccess team faces – the same that many other bitcoin businesses also face – is that they are so focused on the highest priority items (getting to market, carving out their share, perfecting
their product) that secondary items like reputation management,
content management, public relations, government relations and human resources, often get sidelined. This is where the need for businesses who can assist with these “softer skills” come in:
“Working with a business that can take care of these things for us
would be perfect, as we just don’t have the time to do it ourselves,” Haseeb explains.

The Speed of Journalism

Not having the time to focus on these soft skills can be a nuisance.
For example, the company recently dealt with a misleading article on the source of their funding. The article explained that the company was expecting a $10M investment from a U.K.-based investment firm. A similar article appeared on CoinDesk. It has since apparently been removed. “We’ve never announced or confirmed any deal. We have received interest from investors, and will announce as soon as something is confirmed. However, we’ve bootstrapped our start-up,” explains Haseeb.

To correct the misleading journalism, BitAccess e-mailed CoinDesk once to remove the article. They wanted to clarify that they had never accepted outside investment with the cited firm.  CoinDesk never replied. BitAccess did not follow up to remove the article, citing the issue as “unimportant, when we have to focus on getting our product out.”

This is just one example of what highly-technical businesses face: the lack of direct and appropriate attention to ‘softer’ sides of their business. However, it is these ‘softer’ sides that can make or break them.  Public relations, branding, reputation, lobbying, being abreast of government decisions, or even proactively working alongside key decision makers are aspects that influence mass adoption and business success. When you’re a firm that is laser-focused on getting your product to market before others do, these aspects are not prioritized, but they have a major impact on sustainability.

Indeed, journalism these days tends to skip through person to person at an incredible speed.  One Tweet can be retweeted to hundreds of people in seconds and suddenly, any misinformation appears to becomes truth. Journalists or bloggers in the field who work in transmitting information need to slow down and do more due diligence before exclaiming something as fact. This can be excruciating when we see something that we want to share with the world as soon as possible. Taking the time to dig deeper can be difficult when we want to be the first to break the story!

In this regard, like our bitcoin business counterparts, we must remember to balance quick information transmission with the importance of our reputation as good content deliverers.  Tweeting too much incorrect information can tarnish our reputation. And for businesses, negligence of public relations can harm their reputation. Information moves with incredible speed; it’s worth it to slow down and learn what is truly important.

The Speed of Purchasing Bitcoin

The same goes for bitcoin “investors”. The bitcoin world is exciting, and we all want to be a part of it – yesterday. When someone “gets” bitcoin, they are almost unstoppable in their need to buy the cryptocurrency. For us hardcore bitcoiners, we don’t see any problem in putting everything into the currency.  We believe in it more than fiat.  But for those who are learning, and perhaps aren’t as hardcore as us, what happens here is twofold: 1) people fail to properly understand  how bitcoin can fit into a financial plan and believe it will always go  up, and 2) people fail to do any due-diligence before sending their  money to a possibly poorly run business (Mt. Gox), and risk losing  everything. In both cases, you’re asking an excited investor to slow  down, which is difficult for them to hear.  “But what if I miss the  jump?” We all know that feeling.

With BTM’s in place, transactions of under  $3,000 CAD can occur instantly. Without  education or financial advice, excited    investors who expect their “investment” to  constantly rise (“it’s 18x since this time  last year!”) face anxiety, regret and fear  when they see the value drop. They panic,  sell, and begin telling their friends to “stay  away from bitcoin!”, which doesn’t help  adoption.

Even after financial education, if  consumers don’t inform themselves on the  faces behind the sites, they could risk  losing everything they “invest.” However,  in a world that moves as quickly as bitcoin  does, asking people to take a few more  days to create a proper financial plan and  vet exchanges is challenging.

Unfortunately, we can change the way we  transfer value, but we can’t change human  nature.  Bad players do exist who use our enthusiasm for bitcoin to steal money. When we all slow down a little, sustainable businesses will appear and remain, investors will be true believers in bitcoin even when its price drops, and journalists will communicate and share properly-researched stories that reflects more reality than simple hearsay.

Perhaps it is wise to do as Goldman Sachs suggests and take a cold shower. The players who do this properly are the ones who will last. If we want to encourage adoption, we all need to slow down, build something legitimate and spend the time necessary to do so.

Bitcoin isn’t going anywhere, so let’s do this properly.

North Bay Gets Bitcoin

Andrea Ciceri and Mike Walker are excited. They are the first people to bring bitcoin accessibility to their North Bay home.

After months of preparation and planning, the founders of Crypto Kiosk enthusiastically unveiled their company’s first ATM – a machine made by fellow Canadian bitcoiners BitAccess – at their local pub, the Fox and Fiddle. People in North Bay are now able to learn about bitcoin, access it immediately and visit Mike as he shows off and educates on the machine. It is found at 112 Spencer Avenue in North Bay.

While launches of Bitcoin ATM’s are no longer incredibly huge news, this installation marks at key turning point for Canadians. We are now finding them in almost every large city – and now, in smaller, more remote locations, too.

This is exciting, as it is the first step into exploring the potential of the interconnectedness ATM’s can provide to the bitcoin network. We are using Canada to iron out any of the kinks that exist in the new technology, observe its workability, and help us determine the feasibility of bringing this specific infrastructure abroad to places where transferring money is a much harder task.

India and Indonesia are two prime examples of places that could potentially benefit from an ATM infrastructure. Canada is a great place to start, especially in helping to encourage bitcoin education and adoption and, of course, smooth out any operational glitches that could potentially arise before launching the technology globally.

Being able to touch, see and get real-time teaching on this new innovation is essential for people to feel safe and comfortable. Many complain that they can’t see or feel bitcoin; this allows them to normalize the process. Like many other Canadian ATM owners, Mike often sits by his machine, ready to help walk anyone through the process, and give a little Bitcoin 101 explanation.

It is this kind of development that drives excitement and adoption.

Andrea and Mike are planning to expand their business, with a clear aim of making bitcoin more accessible, and enabling consumers to buy and sell on demand. The frustrating part of entering the bitcoin market can be the wait times for exchange accounts; these accounts are harder to open than bank accounts and require a great deal of due diligence and Know-Your-Customer homework. An ATM, on the other hand, allows people to pay a premium to get in instantly.

North Bay now joins Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver and Saskatoon, amongst others, as places with Bitcoin-ATM accessibility. What’s next? After ironing out any possible kinks with the technology, places like India and Indonesia are natural next steps, allowing Canadian immigrants to quickly and inexpensively send money back to their families. And these two countries can likely support the kind of infrastructure needed to house an ATM.

While it may be considered ‘old news’, this development is still very much ‘good news’ and what can develop from this step is still yet to be seen. Please visit www.crypto-kiosk.ca for more information on Andrea and Mike and their company.

 

Twenty Mind-Bending Secrets About Bitcoin

This article will introduce some of bitcoin’s Mind-Bending amazing abilities only few people know. As you read this list, remember your favorite so can impress your friends with your new incredible bitcoin knowledge.

 

1.  Fun with programmable money

 

calandar
gps

 

  • Bitcoin wallets are like personal debit cards that you can create and assign yourself to store your bitcoin. Some new wallet versions can be programmed with bizarre abilities.
  • You can program features like GPS coordinates on your phone that make the money unavailable off if your kid leaves the city.
  • You can also create “treasure hunts” where coins will suddenly be released for you to use if you find yourself in the right place at the right time.
  • You may also release money by calendar dates –  gifting bitcoin money that can’t be used until their 18th birthday or Christmas. Or set up a will that releases amounts in intervals long after your death.
  • Huge potential for ideas not yet imagined.

2.    First purchase with bitcoin

pizza

  • Bitcoin’s price wasn’t established by a committee, government, or special council.
  • Florida resident Laszo Hanyez may go down in history for buying the most expensive pizza ever recorded. He also makes history for making the first significant purchase using bitcoin.
  • His 10,000 bitcoins used in June of 2010 bought two Papa John’s Pizzas worth about $30 at that time.
  • Today’s equivalent price is about $5 million.
  • For the first 18 months they were worthless. The pizza purchase was the event that set the price of bitcoin at about a third of one penny each.
  • Within weeks, they were being bought and sold for 8 cents, representing a price increase of over 1,000%.

3.   Bitcoins to billions

house

  • In 2013 the price of a single bitcoin went from $13 to over $1,000 for an increase over 7,000%.
  • At that rate, the owner of one bitcoin today would be a millionaire in two years.
  • And would become a billionaire only 18 months after that.

4.   Bitcoin is not alone

 

coins

  • Thousands of other digital currencies have since been created once bitcoin became popular.
  • Litecoin, peercoin, dogecoin and many more can be purchased on various online exchanges.
  • Thousands of people buy altcoins, hoping the bitcoin lighting strikes twice.

 5.   World’s fastest supercomputer

warehouse

 One bitcoin warehouse of bitcoin processors out of many throughout the world.
  • The current computing power protecting the Bitcoin network is over 6,000 times more powerful than the top 500 supercomputers of the world combined. And still growing faster.
  • Computer power is measured in “petaflops”. One petaflop is equal to one thousand trillion calculations per second.
  • Top 500 supercomputers combined can calculate 250 petaflops. (Indicated by the arrow on the graph below).

graph

  • By comparison, the bitcoin network can calculate 883,000 petaflops.
  • It is roughly the equivalent in scale between eight sticks of butter verses the largest 15,000  pound African Elephant.

6.   The amazing bitcoin wallet

earth

  • Before you buy bitcoin you can create your own personal bitcoin wallet before you fund it.
  • The number of possible wallet IDs that can be created are roughly the same amount as atoms on the earth.
  • You can create as many as you want. They are free.
  • New wallets can be secured with two or more passwords.
  • You can also print your wallet to make a “Paper Wallet”  that allows you to store your bitcoin off-line.

7.    Spend bitcoin with smart phones for everyone

phones

  • The $25 smartphone is on the way.
  • It is estimated that in 2014 there will be more cellphones than people on earth.
  • Many poor countries just skipped  land-line telephones and went straight to cellphones.
  • Where they don’t have electricity, they charge them daily using solar panels.
  • Most developing countries do not have access to banking – but the bank can come to them with bitcoin and a smartphone.
  • Sending digital cash has already proven to lift entire villages out of poverty.
  • This opens up their entire world from which to buy and sell items rather than just a few neighbors with cash on hand.

8.   Magic the Gathering and bitcoin

mtgox

  • The first big online bitcoin exchange was Mt. Gox. It got its start and name by trading playing cards for “Magic The Gathering Online EXchange.
  • They once accounted for over 80% of all Bitcoin trades.
  • They started trading bitcoins when they were worth less than a dollar.
  • Unsurprisingly, when the world found out that bitcoins were worth a lot more than playing cards, the tiny company was overwhelmed.
  • More than half of all first generation Bitcoin exchanges have closed down.
  • Now big finance companies are creating their own exchanges in the US that are regulated and insured.

9.    Say goodbye to “Bitcoin” and hello to “Bits”

shave

  • Currently, one full bitcoin is divisible down to eight decimal places.
  • The Bitcoin community has started referring the the sixth decimal point from a full bitcoin where they will be called “bits.”
  • Bits are part of bitcoins as pennies are to a dollar – except it would take a million of them to buy a full bitcoin.
  • Calling them “nano-dimes” sounded dumb.
  • Today one hundred dollars migh buy you .2 bitcoins. Or it can buy you 200,000 bits.  It’s the same amount, but which one makes you feel richer?
  • At some point, we might be able to sing that song (commonly played with hand- drums).  “Shave and a haircut..  2 BITS”

10.    Spy Vs Spy. Your bank in a microdot

dot

  • Future Bitcoin billionaires can include their entire banking Bitcoin fortune – in a dot the size of a period. When you have access to any computer or phone with Internet connection you can simply type in your account number and password as needed.
  • Your account is all stored and available to you on the public ledger available anywhere in the world with an Internet connection.

 11.    Forget money laundering. Your activity is recorded

nsa

  • Every transaction is tracked the Bitcoin public ledger, recorded and shared around the world. The ledger cannot be changed and it’s continually reconciled, verified and protected by bitcoin’s world-wide network.
  • Every time a bitcoin trades hands, a trail of digital breadcrumbs follows it forever.
  • You may or may not allow people to know your personal wallet information, so your bitcoin account is as secret as you want it to be.
  • Once bitcoin passes through widely known wallet addresses, it may be traceable by super-secret organizations that may, or may not, rhyme with Em- essay.
  • Relax, if you aren’t doing any really, really bad – it’s probably not worth the trouble for anybody to track your every spend. Not one bit.

12.    Gambling once accounted for most transactions

satoshidice

  • The web gambling site “Satoshidice” once accounted for about half of bitcoin transactions.
  • Due to murky gambling laws in various jurisdictions, gaming on  Satoshidice is currently not allowed from US-based IP addresses.
  • Provably Fair (http://provablyfair.org/) is a website that  has risen to act as an independent probability odds checker for people to validate the odds of customer bets being mathematically fair for the computers running the gaming systems.
  • Many online casinos are having their computer programs independently and voluntarily certified.
  • Today bitcoin use is spread over several industries in addition to gambling.

13.    Watch people trade in their paper money

fiatleak

  • The website Fiat Leak shows a world map which allows you to see which country is exchanging their native currency for bitcoin in real-time.
  • The larger the coin floating up – the bigger the dollar amount.
  • The amounts all accumulate over a 10 minute period, which is the point that the ledger is reconciled and copied throughout the world for verification.
  • Once you go digital, you don’t go back.
  • Ask the tape recorder.

14.   It might become currency for poorly run countries

peso

  • Total value of bitcoin measured in US Dollars has surpassed 100 national currencies out of 160.
  • Some are beginning to ask if it is possible to one day to scrap some smaller national currencies that continue to fail –  and use bitcoin instead.

15.      Bitcoin may be more important than the internet

mosaic

  • Several hundred million dollars are projected to be invested into Bitcoin startups by large corporations in 2014.
  • Comparisons of importance are made by experts and scientists daily, who often talk about the importance of how this will change the world and often compare it with the invention of the Internet itself.
  • Marc Andreessen, who invented Mosaic, the first web browser, is one of many technical professionals who talk about Bitcoin and reminds him of how he and his friends changed the Internet and World Wide Web back in 1993 when it was still considered a techie geek technology.  As a reference point, most of the US was using the internet regularly just seven years later.

16.   Watch bitcoin network grow

youtube

  •  See the time-lapse representation of the bitcoin network build out as it assembles and grows together around the world.
  • It’s not much different than watching the progress of the early internet grow.

17.    Robbing money may become obsolete

mugger

  •  New digital wallets will require at least two signatures (passwords) or more to use.
  • This might include government’s robbery of its own citizens as many countries help themselves to one’s banking funds when they want.
  • One can require as many signature passwords as you like. Go nuts and require 51 signatures… Imagine the Senate being compelled to reach majority before spending your taxes locked in a public wallet.

18.    It can stop identity theft

hacker

  •   As making payments with bitcoin is the equivalent of cash, there is no banking information required from a retailer.
  • The hacker attack at Target, Neiman Marcus, and Michael’s (among a host of others) that stole users banking credit card information wouldn’t have happened if they had only accepted bitcoin payment.
  • Paying in bitcoin is not a promise to pay. It’s payment in full.

19.   No permission required

 

check cashing

  •   Over half of the world have no banking account. They can’t get access to regular loans, credit or checking account. They can’t get permission from the creditors.
  • Bitcoin doesn’t require a bank account or credit report, and you don’t have to be of legal age for contracts. And they can buy and sell in a world-wide market for once. They didn’t need permission from the courts.
  • One doesn’t need to be a citizen, or have identification or forms to fill out to own it. It requires no government permission.
  • You are your own bank. No permission required.

 20.  Bitcoin the currency is only the beginning

bitcoin2

  • The Bitcoin network and ledger has features that can also function as a way to store records of ownership, titles, copyrights and trademarks, home and car titles.
  • It can replace the function of a notary public.
  • All records are shared and distributed in a central location shared by the entire world copied on thousands of millions of computers.
  • As the Internet did to the publishing industry, Bitcoin could similarly disrupt several other fields or even render them obsolete.
  • Anybody’s job it is to move funds from one account to another may need to learn a job as those functions can now be programmed, automated and transparent.
  • Bitcoin 2.0 technologies and new start-up companies have already begun.

 


 

This list is only the start. Look into the amazing bitcoin and report back your own found mind-benders in the comments section. Then play bitcoin trivia with your friends – they may not believe you.

For more related information see:

You Say Bitcoin Has No Intrinsic Value? Twenty-two Reasons to Think Again, at: http://buff.ly/1o2urAU

 

Putting the Blockchain to Work For Science!

Buried beneath the myriad of indistinguishable pump-and-dump altcoins, every now and then a cryptocurrency is born that truly revolutionizes the field. While this doesn’t necessarily obsolete Bitcoin–the protocol can be upgraded at any time–it’s important to examine these new coins in order to keep up the pace of innovation. Take Gridcoin, for example.

Some background: one of the primary arguments against Bitcoin has been the wastefulness of its mining network, which consumes massive amounts of electricity. Instead of crunching arbitrary numbers, many in the community have hypothesized that all of that processing power could be put to more practical. A mining algorithm, however, must meet very specific conditions (immensely difficult to calculate one way; arbitrarily easy to calculate in reverse–among others), which nearly all scientific problems fail to meet.

This conundrum stumped many cryptocurrency experts, who have reason to be content with crypto’s existing accomplishments. The Gridcoin community, however, may have finally found a solution. In many ways, it’s just like Litecoin: the coin production rate halves every four years, a new block is mined every 2.5 minutes, and it utilizes a scrypt-based proof-of-work system.

Unlike Litecoin (or any other cryptocurrency), however, Gridcoin is linked to the BOINC (Berkely Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) system. For those not already aware, BOINC allows volunteers to join their computers with a cloud computing network to solve massive. Communities based around this network already exist, and have been invaluable to scientific research in the processing power they provide.

For example, SETI–the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence–processes the conditions of stars in the night sky, to look for signs of habitability. BOINC is also used to help find neutron stars, and processes experimental results such as from particle accelerators, as well as the weather simulations that keep your picnics dry (or try to). Most promising of all, BOINC can be used to fold proteins and map genes, which leads to all kinds of advances in medical science. The cures for cancer, HIV, and various mental illnesses are likely to be found this way.

So how does Gridcoin incorporate this? As mentioned before, having the network’s miners just run BOINC in a secure manner is technologically very difficult, if not impossible. Gridcoin does use cryptographic proof-of-work, but with a twist: miners can opt to participate in BOINC on the side. A dual system, essentially.

This might sound like altruism, but the incentives are built in: those not running BOINC only receive 5 GRC for mining a block, while those who are receive up to 150 GRC, depending upon how much of their relative computational power has been dedicated to the task. Since the miners are still doing proof-of-work on the side, the network’s security is maintained, and the difficulty of the BOINC calculations scales upwards in proportion to increasing mining difficulty.

While some waste still occurs in the proof-of-work calculations, competing mining schemes are far more wasteful, and thus Gridcoin represents a significant improvement. As a side-benefit, this makes Gridcoin more resilient to ASICs and other specicalized mining hardware: memory-intensive scrypt algorithms help a little, but BOINC is more CPU-heavy, and a miner needing to run multiple different algorithms needs a diverse piece of equipment–basically, a personal computer.

Whether or not you think Gridcoin can or should take off, we have to be honest with ourselves about the things it does better than Bitcoin. If we want to have a more humanitarian and democratic currency that can propel us into the future, Bitcoin will have to learn a thing or two. Either that, or go obsolete.

This article was inspired by a comment left by user anonerd on the Bitcoin Magazine website. Join the online discussion, and if your project is interesting, it might get similar treatment–but no promises.

BloomNation – Disrupting the Flower Industry

Businesses that accept Bitcoin are blooming up everywhere. Sometimes it can irk me that some businesses accept Bitcoin but do nothing to promote it; however, this is not the case for the co-founders of the budding flower marketplace, BloomNation.com.

I spoke with two of the co-founders, Farbod Shoraka & David Daneshgar; unfortunately their other co-founder, Gregg Weisstein, was unable to join, but Farbod and David shared their inspiring mission to help small florists with me.

Farbod, David and Gregg met freshman year in college over ten years ago. Farbod and David went to Berkeley together and Gregg was at UC Santa Barbara. After college, they all went their separate ways. Farbod went into Mergers & Acquisitions, David traveled playing professional poker, and Gregg went into consulting.

Years later they came back together and out of the frustration of sending their girlfriends and mothers flowers that weren’t the quality they pictured, the idea of BloomNation was born.

Farbod then asked his Aunt, a florist, about why this happens, and there are two main reasons. One: the local florist doesn’t develop a connection with the consumer since they never meet. Two: a lot of the time florists don’t make any money on the deal since the brokers take such a large cut.

The three then went around Chicago and noticed that the local florists were also experiencing the same problem. So, they created a platform for local florists to sell their flowers, BloomNation.

Florists were happy to join BloomNation’s platform, because they would receive 90% of the sale, get paid the same day and they got to develop relationships within the community.

You may think 10% is a large cut but about 30% of that goes to credit card and processing fees, the rest goes towards marketing the platform, maintaining it and other overhead costs.

Now in comes Bitcoin, the cost saver. David told me the decision was easy. David, being the former World Series of Poker champion, gave me a great analogy for the decision. David said that “business is about making quick decisions and out-thinking your opponents” just like poker. The “old school poker players fold if they don’t have a decent hand, but if you want to win, you have to be innovative.”

BloomNation was willing to challenge the traditional business model and payment system. Startups are more willing to take risks in changing the game, they are quicker to adapt, while the large “old players” usually become complacent and fall to the plight of their past success.

BloomNation isn’t just accepting Bitcoin, they are also doing their part in promoting it, going above the standard blog and Reddit post. “Now accepting Bitcoin” is one of the first things you see on the site and Farbod went on Fox News and Bloomberg to share the business’ decision to accept it.

Farbod mentioned the lower risk profile of bitcoin transactions and that bitcoin transactions were significantly more secure compared to fraudulent credit card purchases across the web; it wasn’t a hard choice. Not only that, but since accepting bitcoin, BloomNation’s business has increased steadily and everyday bitcoin transactions relative to all purchases is growing faster.

You may think, like I did, that the decision to accept Bitcoin may have stemmed with BloomNation’s notable venture capital investors from Andreesson Horowitz, but it came a lot earlier than that. The three were introduced to Bitcoin when they were in the business incubation stage. They had spoken to someone from a Bitcoin startup in the incubator and became fascinated with the technology.

Since accepting bitcoin in January, the decision has proven successful. Not only are purchases in bitcoin on the rise, but customers using bitcoin spend on average 50% more than credit card users. As you would guess men tend to buy more flowers, but women spend more on their purchases because they view flowers as a reflection of themselves. Accepting bitcoin, which is mostly held by men, has helped even out the disparity.

For the florists to accept Bitcoin individually it would take a lot of effort, but because of BloomNation, these florists can join the tech-savvy. All this has helped the nearly 2,000 local florists on the platform, some of which were on the verge of closing doors and are now hiring more people. The co-founders told me this is what makes them the happiest.

The company has also introduced BloomSnap to make sure your beloved doesn’t receive wilted flowers. BloomSnap lets the florist send the purchaser a picture of the flowers and/or card to make sure everything is how you pictured. The photos open up a dialogue between the florist and the buyer that wasn’t there before BloomSnap and eliminates the wilted flower problem.

Bitcoin can’t buy love, but it certainly can buy your love flowers and help small businesses in the process, thanks to BloomNation.com.

Bitcoin 2014 Roundup

Well I attended Bitcoin 2014 in Amsterdam and it was a blast. I met lots of people who I’ve been emailing/skyping with over the last six months so that’s always fun. The conference had a few keynote talks for all and all the rest was broken out into four parallel tracks, which is always annoying as one wants to attend more than physically possible.

There was a robust collection of exhibitors (approximately 40ish) on the show floor and that was fairly impressive for such a young conference. Each session in the tracks had at least 100 or more like 150 attendees. Although I have no other Bitcoin conferences to compare it to, this conference seemed to consist of about 70 percent business oriented fairly mature businesses with the rest being very small startups and random stuff like bitcoin t-shirts and trinkets.

One of the highlights was Satoshi Nakamoto’s (oops I mean Gavin Andresen’s) state of Bitcoin address. Gavin’s presentation was calm as usual, one of the reasons he’s so good at his job. He noted that his and other core developer’s tendency is to be very conservative with changes to the core code. Clearly a good choice, since as Bitcoin becomes more mainstream, a LOT of money is reseting on the core code. That being said they are open to the experiments of altcoins in general and when the community is ready core code does get changed. Gavin has been able to turn over the role of chief maintainer to Wladimir van der Laan, another core developer, and as Gavin expressed, he is now able to start taking off the many hats he was given at the start of the project.

The main keynote talk was by Dr. Patrick Byrne, the CEO of Overstock.com. He presented a long incoherent history of philosophy and currency that lasted over an hour and never really tied it all up to Bitcoin. Amusingly ,in a group of 4 people I was just talking with after the talk, 3 out of 4 agreed with me, but one loved the talk, so who knows.

Dr. Patrick Byrne expounds on philosophy and more
Dr. Patrick Byrne expounds on philosophy and more
Gabin Andresen's State of Bitcoin Address
Gavin Andresen’s State of Bitcoin Address

Gavin's State of BitcoinGavin Mobbed after Keynote

The various panels and sessions that were part of the parallel tracks covered every topic imaginable. Some were good, some not so much. But it was great to listen to so many points of view. Clearly, however, the focus of the conference was business, how can we make money off bitcoin, and why is my new whiz-bang bitcoin idea the next great thing.

There was also the “Blockchain Awards”, a kinda fun kinda hockey award show. It was fun but no Academy Awards type event (yet!). Satoshi himself was the first awardee (Gavin Andresen).

Satoshi Accepts first Blockchain Award for
Satoshi Accepts first Blockchain Award

One particularly nice touch that I only learned of via the foundation website:

Blockchain.info (@Blockchain) will donate 1 BTC to each category winner, and the award will be permanently and historically written into the blockchain as proof of ownership.

I’ve been to a lot of technical conferences and one thing that I’ve never seen which was fantastic was the way the conference handled lunch and coffee break. Rather then setup a big room with tables and force that awkward “with whom and where do I sit” moment, the food and drinks were served by roaming bands of waiters. They had food in tray and liquids in back packs strapped to their backs; it was a great touch.

Coffee and Food Service with Roaming Bands of Waiters
Coffee and Food Service with Roaming Bands of Waiters

I also attended the Annual Bitcoin Foundation Member Meeting which was the usual kind of largish meeting. It was mostly “mother-hood and apple pie” run by Jon Matonis, the executive director of the Foundation, and Peter Vessenes. He introduced the new board members, Mr. Lee and Pierce, who both said hello and how glad there were to be there. The silly Pierce controversy was brought up and addressed by Peter Vessenes as “a waste of time”. I couldn’t agree more.

Of interest was the finances of the foundation. It apparently began life with an “endowment” of a large chuck of bitcoins which is now worth approximately $4.6million. However the burn rate is now approximately $150K/month as there are now ten employees. Alluded to by Matonis this is fairly non-sustainable. Approximately 70% of the income comes from industry members and 25% from individual members with the rest from donations. This is typical of other foundations I’m familiar with.  Clearly some other type of fundraising and raising of dues will be needed as the Foundation covers the running deficit by eating into the endowment, not something you want to do for too long. That being said I do think the Foundation is performing a vitally critical role in the bitcoin ecosystem by supporting the development of the core code. One thing different about this Foundation unlike the W3C (for example), is that the Foundation itself is key to the development of software. The software requires care and feeding and the Foundation is the backbone of the Bitcoin software. Satoshi should be a happy camper.

note: all photographs by Sandy Ressler

Inside Bitcoins Conference Heads to Asia

As Bitcoin is becoming a household name around the world, the Inside Bitcoins Conference series is hosting conferences around the world with the next stop in Hong Kong on June 24-25.

Mediabistro issued the following press release:

Inside Bitcoins Conference Heads to Hong Kong to Demystify the Myths and Spur Wider Adoption of Bitcoin Across Asia – Get 15% OFF

Inside Bitcoins Conference and Expo heads to Hong Kong SkyCity Marriot Hotel on June 24-25, 2014. Inside Bitcoins Hong Kong is Asia’s largest conference on bitcoins and cryptocurrency, and has lined up an experienced group of speakers to share their expertise on the distributed payment protocol and the overall cryptocurrency scene during the two-day conference.

“Remember the gold rush in the 19th century? Asia is going through a similar period; except this time it’s not around gold, but bitcoins. The feverish passion for cryptocurrency exuded by the people in Asia makes the region a very interesting market for us to observe how bitcoin would be adopted,” said Alan M. Meckler, Chairman and CEO of Mediabistro Inc. “With Hong Kong introducing its first bitcoin ATMs as well as bitcoin retail store, we can see the city’s interest in cryptocurrency is surging. We are very excited to launch Inside Bitcoins Hong Kong to spread knowledge on this subject to allow attendees to gain a better understanding of bitcoins and how it provides opportunities for start-ups and players in different industries.”

The conference encompasses over 20 seminar sessions and 45 speakers from technology and financial sectors. Among the list of guests, Bobby Lee, CEO and Co-Founder of BTC China, will host a keynote session on the topic “Bitcoin in China: Second Generation of Products and Services.” BTC China is the largest bitcoin exchange in the nation, and Lee will talk about the current bitcoin scene in China as well as its development over the past three years.

We’re excited to have partnered with Inside Bitcoins Conference again to offer 15% OFF full conference passes with code BITMAG14. Register now!

Mediabistro will soon announce firm dates for additional events taking place in 2014 in Melbourne, Australia; Tel Aviv, Israel; London, England; Las Vegas, Nevada; and Seoul, South Korea.

 

All About AirBitz With Paul Puey

Don’t you wish there was a resource that knew all the businesses that accept Bitcoins in your area? WelI I had a chance to talk to Paul Puey, the CEO/ Co-Founder of Airbitz, a Bitcoin wallet and business directory that does just that. Their web-based business directory went online on Mar 17. The iOS app came a week later, and the Android app was released April 7 at the Inside Bitcoin NYC conference. Paul studied Electrical Engineering & Computer Science at UC Berkeley, California. He was a 3D graphics software engineer at Nvidia for 7 years, although he had also done software projects in web user interface.

“I always loved being able to visualize my work,” says Paul. He then left engineering and started working in small business, where he gained a lot of insight into the intersection of business, consumers, and technology. In between all of this, Paul discovered Bitcoin.

“I wanted to find a way to incorporate it into my life. It was perfectly aligned with my belief systems as I feel that large establishments consistently mislead us — whether it be medical, pharmaceutical, food, or financial. As much as I can, I try to support local companies and merchants as opposed to the big establishments. However, I wasn’t able to sink my teeth into any of these issues as I’m not a doctor, pharmacist, or nutritionist. Bitcoin was something that aligned with my beliefs in disrupting these establishments, and I could finally do something about it.”

After having used Bitcoin, Paul realized it needed a strong effort to make it consumer friendly.

“I didn’t see Airbitz as a way to simply make money,” says Paul. “I saw it as a need for the Bitcoin ecosystem. Our team wants Bitcoin to succeed, and we were convinced that its usability was a significant barrier to adoption. The fact that you don’t know where to spend it was where we would start.”

It is pretty hard to use a currency when you don’t know where to spend it. Airbitz began building a tool that makes Bitcoin easy to spend and easy for the consumer to find a location at which to spend it. Two of his co-founders, Damian Cutillo and Tim Horton, came from a prior startup, Breadcrumbs, and rolled into Airbitz with the knowledge and experience to build a great looking, high quality business directory. Two Airbitz developers, Damian and William Swanson, also worked closely with Amir Taaki on the Dark Market hackathon project in Toronto and won first place. “We make it as frictionless as possible for businesses to get listed on our directory,” says Paul. “Go onto airbitz.co, click Submit a Business, and send the name of your business, URL, and email address. We have curators that will find the rest of the info related to your business such as hours of operation, photos, and description.”

There are many wallets out there that are very centralized. If their servers go down, you can’t send or receive money. The data model of the Airbitz wallet is to use public bitcoin servers, so even if Airbitz goes down, all of their users will still have a functional wallet. To accomplish this, Airbitz utilizes their own bitcoin server nodes in addition to public servers running the opensource Libbitcoin project. Written by Amir Taaki, it is one of the first complete re-implementations of the Bitcoin protocol. Paul notes, “A terrible experience would be for a user to go to a restaurant to use Bitcoins and when they get there it doesn’t work because the wallet servers are down. It’s a huge blow to the usability and the impression people have of bitcoin, and we don’t want people to get that impression.” On privacy and security, Paul states, “Every other wallet in the Bitcoin ecosystem makes wallet security and encryption an extra step, and backing up their wallet keys yet another step. This is extra friction that hinders adoption for the masses.

When using the Airbitz wallet, you’re automatically encrypted, secured, and backed up, but it happens without you even knowing. We use strong encryption and password hashing, and it all happens behind the scenes. It feels like you’re using online banking when you’re really encrypting and backing up your keys. Keys are held by the user, not by Airbitz. Airbitz has no ability to look at metadata, private keys, or even public keys. If someone knows you’re using an Airbitz wallet, and they were able to hack all of our servers, they wouldn’t know which blob of data on the server to try to hack to get to your money. Privacy actually increases security. People think of them as different, but here, privacy increases security a great deal.” “Ultimately,” says Paul, “We aim to achieve the most user friendly, easy to use, easiest to secure solution for bitcoin both in the wallet and business directory space. We’re the wallet you can refer to anybody you know, grandpa, mom, or lady at the cafe. We’ll make it super easy. If you can handle online banking, you can handle using Airbitz.”

An Interview With Coinme, the Company Behind Seattle’s First Bitcoin ATM

As a resident of western Washington, I was happy to find out that a Bitcoin ATM had recently been installed at the Spitfire sports bar in downtown Seattle. I decided to make a trip to try out the ATM and learn more about Coinme, the company behind Seattle’s first Robocoin kiosk. General Manager Nick Hughes and Compliance Officer Neil Burgquist were kind enough to sit down and have a conversation, where we covered topics ranging from the regulatory environment surrounding Bitcoin ATMs to their thoughts on the future of cryptocurrency in Seattle.

What inspired you to start Coinme?

Neil: I’ve been tracking Bitcoin for a long time, I had a lot of friends who were early miners. Especially being part of a technology incubator (Neil is the director ofSURF Incubator in Seattle) you find a lot of early adopters and for me it was always just a curiosity.

One of the trigger points was when Coinbase secured financing from Andreesen Horowitz, and I respect a lot of their theses and statements. Fred Wilson made an investment as well and then it really started capturing my attention because I look at those folks to really understand where future trends are going. Then a local guy approached me who’s a co-founder for a pretty large tech company who wanted to open a kiosk and I said hey ‘you should have the kiosk at SURF incubator’.

Long story short he needed more help than just a location, so I ended up helping better define the regulatory environment trying to solve some of his compliance questions. I’m connected to a lot of the policy makers and a lot of people here locally who are excited to build future economies around the tech sector and cryptocurrency is definitely one of those potential sectors that has a lot of people’s attention right now.

Nick: First of all my background is mobile payments and I’ve been in the payment industry for a few years now. But I think what really inspired it was when we started reading all the stuff about Mt. Gox and all these stories that in my opinion were not doing the industry very much justice or good will. We looked at that and said how could we be a part of this industry, but also help it along.

So we started thinking about how there needs to be better actors, companies that are building the community and being positive, and we looked at how we can do that the best. Then we started seeing these machines being deployed around the world. That’s when we said, ‘there’s not one in Seattle, not in the state of Washington, let’s make this happen’. So our goal of building a community then fell into this physical thing that helps to be a talking piece to build the community around.

You have advertised yourselves as the first licensed Bitcoin kiosk in the U.S. What does this mean?

Neil: We are the first Bitcoin kiosk to receive a money transmitter license. We are vocal about securing a license because it’s a big accomplishment for Bitcoin. We’re solving a very complex regulatory environment. You can see what’s happening in New York with the Bit License and everyone has their own opinions about that, but here in Washington State by being licensed the DFI is giving us a stamp saying that we’re accountable, that we’re leading with consumer protection, and we have the ability to run a legitimate financial services business. We really wanted to prove that so that consumers who probably aren’t early adopters or technologists feel comfortable engaging with Bitcoin. And that’s what Bitcoin needs right now. It needs to cross the chasm from early adopters to the early majority.

You had to deal with the Washington State government to get your money transmitting license. What was that process like?

Nick: It was tough. We worked very closely through the application process
with what’s called the DFI (Department of Financial Institutions) of the State of Washington. We actually even spent time going down to Olympia and talking with them and it really was a process of helping them understand our vision, but also, interestingly enough, they were waiting for a company like us. They were ready for this conversation. It wasn’t like we were going there and they were pushing us aside. This is a strong interest to them.

So we had to go through the application process and really play by their rules. A lot of it is what you’ve probably heard of, it’s called Know Your Customer. Any financial institution has to collect certain information on anyone that’s interacting, whether it’s a bank or a system like ours. So they call that an anti-money laundering program. We have to follow that. And so there’s just a ton of paperwork and a ton of legal, ton of regulatory issues and we went through all the steps and finally got approved three days before we launched.

Neil: I need to give them credit in the sense that they were cautiously open to the idea. When you introduce someone to Bitcoin, you need to consider what they already know or don’t know about BTC, and unfortunately, their opinion usually is just what they read in the headlines. And that’s not an entirely accurate representation of what Bitcoin is. So it’s an education process. And I commend the WA State DFI for putting in the time and effort to learn about it. As people begin to learn more about it, I’ve seen this many times before and not just regulators, their fear is removed because it makes sense.

What’s it been like to work with Robocoin?

Neil: I think very highly of the team over there. They’re very smart and they’re moving very quickly, they’re leading edge. They made a statement recently saying Bitcoin ATMs are so 2013. They’re on to the next thing. And I respect them for that. At the same time though, they are moving so quickly and the rest of the market and regulators specifically are still caught up in 2005, trying to get up to speed with a lot of other things.

We talk about ridesharing for example which is just now getting regulated, and Uber has been around for five plus years. Seattle specifically, it recently hit city council and now they’re getting restricted. You want to talk about crowdfunding, Kickstarter has been at it for years, and now legislation is catching up to endorse equity-based crowding funding ventures. Now regulators are getting up to speed on cryptocurrency and Bitcoin. Robocoin has been great to work with but I tell you they do push the envelope in a very healthy way.

Nick: It’s interesting. They’re coming out of the gate and they’re definitely aggressive in their marketing tactics and looking to spread far and wide. I will say that I’m quite impressed with their customer service. On launch day we had some technical issues, we moved the machine and then there was a network issue. Then the machine for some reason was having trouble connecting to the internet because there were actually two accounts. Essentially there were two different user accounts, and there should’ve been only one.

So I had to troubleshoot that and their customer service was very quick. This guy got on the phone with me to remote access our system, and essentially made some changes and we restarted it and it works. They did a great job; I was actually pretty impressed.

What makes Seattle a good fit for a Bitcoin ATM?

Nick: We are a great tech-focused community. We have a heck of a lot of smart people around here and there’s a lot of money and a lot of innovation, so we feel like it’s a perfect environment to launch something like this. Secondly, given the direction financial technology is going, Seattle can and will be a hub for that. Based on, if you follow Marc Andreesen’s “software eating the world” concept, I think we’re sitting pretty for the future of where this is all gonna go.

Neil: I think there are a lot of markets that are a good fit for a Bitcoin ATM. I think Seattle is a good fit because this is where we’re located and Seattle has a very strong technology community that tends to be very progressive. It’s also an international community and we see a lot of the benefits with an international, more transient population. In Seattle our focus is threefold: we want to increase cryptocurrency literacy, help build the local cryptocurrency economy, and provide the safest and most secure solution for buying and selling Bitcoin.

Even though Seattle has a significant tech sector, there hasn’t been much cryptocurrency activity in the city. Currently there are less than ten places of business that accept Bitcoin payments. So what do you think the draw will be for Seattleites to use BTC?

Neil: Well it’s a two-way ATM, so there’s the use case for buying and the use case for selling. I think selling is pretty clear because a lot of miners who own Bitcoin want to become liquid, or people that have bought it through exchanges, don’t want to wait several days to convert it to US fiat, they would rather go to a kiosk and have the transaction almost immediately.

For buying Bitcoin, we’re seeing a lot of people buying for several different reasons. Some are buying it for the novelty aspect. They’re buying it for international money transmission, they’re buying it to have as an investment vehicle, people buy it for e-commerce shopping, or simply because it’s interesting.

And I think we can all agree that Bitcoin is a lot of different things to a lot of different people right now. I think we’re all waiting for more tangible use cases to be presented and it’s up to the entrepreneurial community to create those beautiful user experiences that will compel people to engage with Bitcoin as the Internet of money.

Nick: I would say most of the people that are using it at this point are putting money in perceiving it as an investment, and I think that’s fair. That’s a lot of what people are using it for. I don’t encourage that just because I’m not trying to encourage people to put money into something that’s possibly volatile. But what’s really cool, and what people are getting when I explain it to them, is that it’s almost like a PayPal account. So they’re putting money into this alternative money account that then they can use in different transactions online or to send money to friends. So really it’s a diversification of their finances into a digital realm that, in a way, it could go up, it could go down, but they are putting it into an account that then they can make payments to people or organizations quicker and easier.

Where do you see Bitcoin growing in Seattle?

Nick: One thing that, whether it’s Seattle or beyond, I really think there are interesting aspects to media, and online media especially, where rather than having all this advertising splashed all over the, I mean that’s the only way, sponsorships and advertising is really the way that GeekWire or TechCrunch and other outlets actually sustain themselves. So what if you could wipe all that advertising away and have this digital cryptocurrency attached to your web browsing experience. And they’re just taking a small sliver every time your read an article. And it’s not one cent, it’s a lot cheaper than that.

In terms of Bitcoin, it can be divided up to eight decimal places. Imagine it’s not a paywall but it’s automatic, if you subscribe to their resource, anytime you read an article, just a small amount is deducted. Seamlessly. Micro-payments, instantly. That hasn’t been possible up until now because of the transaction fees involved with credit cards and all that other crap, so not necessarily Seattle, but I see that in the world actually being somewhat of an interesting aspect.

In terms of Seattle I do have a harder time seeing an establishment like this [interview took place at the Spitfire Sports Bar in Seattle where the Coinme kiosk is located] taking Bitcoin unless innovators can make it a lot easier for transactions to take place. It’s not hard to take out a $5 bill and pay for your beer. It doesn’t get easier than that.  Even though we’re rolling this business out, I’m not the biggest advocate for in-merchant transactions, just because that would be solving a problem that’s not necessarily a problem. Online transactions are a problem.

Neil: With all due respect to the community I haven’t seen that many Bitcoin companies, here, locally. The CEO of BitGo lives here, CoinLab is here. There’s just not a lot percolating here right now.

Do you think that’s going to change?

Neil: Yes. There are a lot of big mining operations in this state, in Eastern Washington. I think we have the talent. I’ve talked to a lot of people that think Seattle could be the future financial sector for cryptocurrency because we have the talent necessary to run the industry and we like to think we have some smart capital here. If we wanted to really build a compliant product or service we could get funded in Seattle. I don’t think you’d have to go out of market for it. But, I haven’t personally drawn a line in the sand saying what the best opportunities are yet, for me, but I think there are definitely opportunities to be had.

What has the public response been to the ATM so far?

Neil: It’s been really positive. We didn’t just launch a kiosk. We launched a community and a personal concierge. We have a phone number and a website and we are everyday meeting with people and just talking about Bitcoin. That is a value that is not necessarily monetized but it’s a value that is really creating this Bitcoin enthusiast community and helping people understand what it is. The response to that has been very positive. We’ve had a lot of interested people showing up and saying ‘what the hell is this thing’. And we tell them what it is and help them interact with it.

Nick: Very, very positive. Very excited, interested, intrigued, confused, all of the above you know. And the public, it’s just been awesome. I think Seattle has definitely been waiting. There was news that came out a couple months ago, so people were waiting for this, but now that we’re here people are just excited. They’re excited to see, kinda like you, you walk up, you’re actually able to turn your Bitcoins into money, that’s awesome. So people are excited about it.

What plans do you have beyond the kiosk to further this community development?

Neil: We’ll be doing a few more kiosks locally. We’re still figuring out the demographic location. Potentially U-District (near University of Washington), potentially the Eastside, potentially the Southend, we haven’t announced where it will be but we’re looking at a lot of different markets. Obviously a younger population, from what we’ve seen, tends to be very engaging with Bitcoin, roughly 10-20% of students in computer science and business will own Bitcoin, or maybe not specifically Bitcoin, but cryptocurrency. So we’ll see where the next one will go.

Nick: Creating conversation is really the big thing. And bringing in experts and executives that are maybe running companies that have been running for a couple of years in the Bitcoin industry. This would happen through events and meetups and other things. I think it’s being consistent on holding events. We had our launch party here and we had a panel, we had a general council from the Bitcoin Foundation, we had the CEO of BitGo, and we had an angel investor. And those three are very tied into the community. So we anticipate doing that on a monthly basis.

Really it’s just about creating events, having community, having conversation, and bringing in knowledgeable people to help educate others. We’re really looking at doing something like a Bitcoin weekend or some sort of event that would span the weekend, that would encourage an educational session. Maybe a few panelists for a few larger talks, keynotes. Then there would be a hack-a-thon.

I think that’s a big thing that CoinMe really wants to encourage. Not just people using the machines, but actually innovating around Bitcoin. Starting new companies, maybe innovating around the machine. What other businesses can you create that involve our kiosk? Maybe there’s some cool stuff around that. So there would be a hack-a-thon involved in this weekend, and then something like a pub crawl that would start to bring in the merchants that actually, at this point don’t accept Bitcoin, but maybe they do after this event. Maybe there’s five to ten bars along Fremont or Belltown, or whatever, U-District if you will, that would be a part of this and people can go there and buy their drinks that night with Bitcoin. So spurring commercial activity through that.

Our goal is to be a leader in the industry, especially in Seattle, about bringing this to the general public. We’re constantly searching for analogies and terms that people understand. Like essentially your digital wallet is like your email address, and other than people sending you messages and digital letters, people can send you cash. They can send you Bitcoin into this account. It’s things like that. Helping people understand by using analogies and translating.

These ATMs collect a lot of personal information. Are you worried that this will deter customers? And how do you secure this information?

Nick: I’m not. We’ve had one individual that has been a little more aggressive, and he actually chose to reach out on Twitter. He was giving us a bit of slack for all this information. But, first of all, for us to get the money transmitter license, these are required aspects of it. In terms of Know Your Customer (KYC), this is required information. And what are we doing with it? Nothing.

Secondly, I believe that if Bitcoin is going to transition into the “normal world”, to really become part of general society, then these sort of things need to take place. The anonymity of it is partly what gave it its bad name. I’m not an anarchist sitting here saying it has to be anonymous and your name should not be attached to it. In my opinion, to play along the lines of what the government dictates in this country, especially with finances, companies like us that are bringing in new technology need to align with that. Or this is never going to get into the mass public.

For security, we work in partner with Robocoin, who has manufactured the device. A lot of the data in the back end goes through their system. So we’ve entrusted them as well. But we’re also looking into further security. You can never have too much security, especially with what we’re doing so I’m already talking to some professionals in cryptocurrency and cyber security so we can go above and beyond what is standard with these machines. We’re starting that process and we’re looking into doing it and we insure it based on the standard procedures right now in terms of where the information is going. But we’re looking further into being highly secure.

Neil: Well the hand scanner was intended to be more of a convenience factor, than to collect data. Why would we care about what your palm looks like? The only information we have is whether it’s your palm or not. It’s a yes or no protocol in the software. And so if we can identify a palm then we can just use it as a key in order to shorten the transaction time.

When you set up an account on a kiosk it’s an eight step process. Type in your phone number, recieve a text message, input the PIN from the text message, create a unique PIN of your own, insert a government I.D., take a photo. In the future you just sign in and use your palm instead of having to insert your I.D. and take a photo every time.

For security, we have a VPN and it’s on a secure hosted network. There’s never been any issues with customer data. You know relative to credit cards, it’s actually much safer because if information were ever to be compromised, you don’t have people that will be able to run transactions on your behalf. We don’t hold the private keys.

Do you see a time in the future where people won’t need to give up so much information to interact with Bitcoin? Or are these regulations here to stay?

Nick: Well let’s put it this way, if you open a bank account you have to give them quite a bit of information. And not saying that we are a bank but I think that the general public is just gonna be willing to go through these measures. I don’t think we’re gonna back up and not collect the data in the future. Just like when you open up a bank account you give them your social security number, you give them quite a bit of data. I have an iPhone, and I have the newest one with fingerprint capabilities which Apple knows every time I’m opening my device. So I’m kind of over that and I think people will be as well.

Living in a world where Facebook can recognize every face, people have become desensitized.

Nick: I have my concerns about privacy as well. But in terms of how we operate our business and our company, again it’s required, and that type of information we don’t even have access to in our system – it’s on secured servers.

What do you think is the biggest misconception about Bitcoin?

Neil: That everyone’s using it to buy drugs, sex, and hitmen (laughs). That was an interesting point brought up in the security debate, one security proponent here locally said that people use Bitcoin for the anonymity of it, and while that may be the case for some use cases, before Bitcoin can cross regulatory hurdles, there need to be certain security measures in place in order to enable law-abiding citizens the ability to utilize the technology.

Bitcoin comes from a Wild West type industry where there is no accountability and no anonymity – and it goes both ways, if the user wants anonymity, well then you’re going to get an operator who also wants anonymity – and a situation where there is no accountability. And exchanges can close and websites can be up that are supposedly anonymous and you can supposedly do whatever you want through it, but if we want this to reach a larger market, there are certain security measures that need to be in place to protect the consumer from irresponsible operators, and to protect the consumer from the downside of using Bitcoin.

Nick: I think it’s two things. One of the biggest misconceptions is, and this is partly the media, partly the players that were involved, but I think it’s that this is just for thieves and the Silk Road and buying drugs and weapons, because it’s anonymous. It’s not the black market’s money, it’s actually the Internet’s money. It’s actually a new currency the entire world can use. Money is simply neutral. It can be used for good and for bad. I think the biggest misconception is that people think that this is a questionable industry. Which I think it’s not.

Secondly, I think another misconception is that it’s a get-rich-quick scheme or an investment vehicle. Who knows what price Bitcoin will go to in a year or two. But I have a hard time believing that it’s gonna go to $10,000, $40,000, $100,000, and that you’re gonna retire and be a millionaire off it. That’s just, the volatility, well actually in the last three to six months it’s actually been pretty stable around $450 to $500. So I believe that people shouldn’t view Bitcoin as ‘oh I’m going to buy it now and I’m going to get rich because the price is gonna go so high that I’ll be able to cash out and make a ton of money.’ I don’t think that that’s the case.

I think that it’s going to be used as a method of transaction, a possible currency, I think that it’s going to be used almost like a language translator. Like right now we have apps on our phone that you can talk into your phone and, say you’re in Japan or China, and you can literally talk in your phone and the other person on the other end will hear it in their native language. I view Bitcoin as that kind of technology, that I can be working with U.S. dollars and essentially send it and instantaneously someone in China receives it in their native currency. It’s just a translator, it’s not necessarily an end currency to itself. I think it’s a method of transfer. And it’s a really hard concept to grasp, but I believe it’s the way that money will flow around the world.

What is the mentality you have noticed from your fellow entrepreneurs in regards to Bitcoin?

Neil: There’s people who love it or hate it or just don’t know. Here (SURF), I’ve seen people love it. Maybe it’s because they are able to understand what’s under the hood, so to speak, and they can appreciate it. There’s people here in the Seattle community who were early employees at Microsoft back in the 80s and helped write foundational programs like .net, and they’re saying things like ‘Bitcoin is like owning a piece of the Internet in the early 90s’, and this is our opportunity to get involved. They’re wealthy and very smart and it gets people’s attention. To see some of the smartest people I know be completely inspired by this is inspiring for me.

The quote that’s been coming out is that the smartest people in the room are talking about Bitcoin.

Neil: And the smartest people, in my opinion, don’t happen to move together like sheep. They tend to be very independent, and I feel like a lot of them have independently come to similar conclusions and are now finding themselves in agreeance. And because of that it kind of goes against this sort of hype mentality. I think the hype is seen when people don’t know much about it they just buy it because they want to own a piece of it, that’s where the hype comes into play. But when you see all these people on panels and building companies around Bitcoin and the Blockchain, or investing they’re the ones that I don’t see following hype. I see them following sound assumptions.

You mentioned that people seem to love it or hate it. Why do you think there is such a strong divide?

Neil: When I see people hate it, I think, one, they don’t fully understand it and two, I sometimes just see people hate new technology. And I don’t know why they just tend to hate new technology or new things or change. Maybe it makes them feel uneasy. I’m not sure, I’m not going to speak on their behalf but it reminds me of when Tesla had that string of car fires, but it was really only three cars that caught on fire. And no one was injured. The truth is, Teslas catch on fire way less than gas powered automobiles. Yet Tesla, was in the headlines as if all ‘these cars were on fire’ – Seriously questioning the safety of the car. It just reminds me how people just love to bash things that are exciting and new and innovative, progressive. Tesla is rated consistently as the safest car in America. And yet people still want to bash it and bring them down.

Nick: When we’re talking about money, money is pretty personal to people. It stirs up a lot of emotions and that’s what attracted me to this industry. I thought ‘this is a pretty polarizing industry, there’s obviously something here’. The worst thing about a company or business is when you launch it and no one cares. When you look at this industry and it’s so volatile and so polarizing, that tells me that there’s some transformation that’s going to happen. You have existing incumbents fighting for their life and saying ‘no, no, no, this is nothing and we can’t accept this’. It’s because they’re a business and their industry relies on old financial technology.

Then you have this new, 21st century technology, and you have innovators and technologists that see the efficiency around it, because the financial industry has quite a bit of inefficiency. So you have that side really playing and pulling for it. And I think it’s because, when we’re dealing with money, there’s strong emotions around it.

When you’re dealing with money, there’s certain entities and certain organizations that can take advantage of other people. And Bitcoin solves that. Because there’s less transaction fees, you don’t have a lot of the, some of the leverage is gone, and so that helps consumers so we’re not spending all this money or paying all these fees to banks or other financial institutions. We’re happy to not pay those fees and they’re frustrated because they’re seeing their fees decrease. So now you have this tug-o-war. And then, lastly, I think of information and privacy. Obviously the bigger conversation is the NSA and all this information collecting. Then you look at Bitcoin and how all of that information is plugged in, and so people are heightened a bit.

It’s refreshing, you don’t have one organization that needs to control everything, that needs to know everyone’s information. It’s just a math equation. A math equation doesn’t care who you are.

Nick: And it’s a true or false statement. Transaction either completed or not. And you don’t necessarily have to have all this personal information attached to an account. Or, at least, what I like about Bitcoin is there’s a clear barrier between your personal information and the transaction. With banks right now, and credit cards, there’s no barrier. Someone hacks your bank account, someone steals your credit card, they basically have your identity. And that’s where the problem is and what Bitcoin does is create a barrier. If your account does get hacked you might lose your Bitcoins, but they’re not gonna access your personal information.

What sort of things would you like to see from the government in concern to Bitcoin (laws, regulations, etc.)?

Nick: I think that we need the government to be more flexible. They are evaluating it very strongly, but I think at this point the government and the Fed really needs to accept the technology. And that’s different than accepting Bitcoin as a currency. I don’t think the dollar’s ever going to be gone, I don’t think Bitcoin’s ever going to take over, but I think if the government could actually, well first of all, probably change it from a property. The IRS has already called it a property or essentially a commodity for tax reasons. I think we need to look at it possibly a little differently. But I think if the government was a little more willing to accept it then small businesses will be in a better position to accept it. So then we’re down the process of having a wider acceptance of this technology. That’s one wish I have, that the government would play a little nicer.

I think another one is, and this is more the developer community, it’s still confusing. There’s still a lot to be desired. And this is going to take time but we need more innovators to come in and actually solve problems of helping people understand what it is, making the transaction process easier and quicker and more user friendly. A lot of the user experience is still a little bit uncomfortable or shaky. So it’s just rounding those corners and providing a better user experience all around.

Neil: I don’t think the ‘ask’ is on the local government right now I think it is on the local entrepreneur. I think the question is what kind of consumer experiences can we create that make Bitcoin a compelling use case. I think it’s on us.

There’s enough of a regulatory environment from the government?

Neil: I think some of the larger companies are going to need more of an understanding before they get involved, but right now I think it’s really on local entrepreneurs to build products and services on top of Bitcoin that create compelling use cases. Because right now there is not a phenomenal reason to use Bitcoin for merchant transactions. Even sending money abroad, using Bitcoin can be cumbersome. I think ATMs provide a phenomenal access point because they make it extremely easy to buy and sell Bitcoin through an ATM as opposed to going through an exchange. And so I think that’s a big crossing of the barrier. As kiosks become prolific and easier to use people will become more familiar with Bitcoin. But I think it’s really on the entrepreneurs.

What are some companies in the Bitcoin sphere that inspire you and why?

Nick: At our launch event, the CEO of BitGo was here. They’re a San Francisco based company but he lives here and they’re newer on my radar but they’re definitely inspiring and I’m very impressed with their digital wallet and the security levels and authentication that they have around it. I think that they are pushing the envelope on security and privacy in this industry, which is needed. So they’re definitely an inspiration.

I think Coinbase is another one, although kind of a competitor to BitGo, I feel like they just do it right. Obviously they’ve been backed by some pretty significant venture capital, but I feel like they’re presenting things in a pretty solid and very, at least down the lines of, user friendly way – though we all know it can get better.

Blockchain is another one. I met the CEO a couple weeks ago. He’s really sharp, very nice guy. And he was the one that said, he said two big things that I took away. One, the industry just needs to innovate around user experience. The underlying technology is there but the design, the user experience, the way that you access your account, how do you make a payment or how do you cash out, it’s essentially the user experience layer on this whole thing he said that’s what we need to focus on.

And then the second thing he said is translators, the industry needs translators to take it from the tech savvy or even the engineer that’s been mining for three years and bring it to the general public. And that’s our goal, to be translators. So when he said that I thought to myself ‘that’s what we’re gonna do’, we’re gonna be those translators. I think those three companies right now are pretty interesting and they’re all kind of in that digital wallet sort of thing.

If I was gonna say another one, I think Namecoin is another, where they’re pursuing identity using the blockchain and the protocol. Which is very interesting and I would say do some research on them. Because right now online identity is ‘logging in with facebook’, now we know who you are. Or, here’s your email, it’s essentially your identity. But the level of identification that they can take using the blockchain is insurmountable and it’s really cool that you can essentially use the Bitcoin platform to verify a person’s identity. Facebook, anyone can create an account, a business can create an account, but you can’t fully verify that that is that person. Not only that, but I think there’s really interesting things going on with identity, then security, then logging in and having an authentication system through using the blockchain technology.

Bitcoin Shows Off

Movements succeed with numbers. Many people must partake to create the change we want to see.

Bitcoin has come a long way since its introduction in 2009, and we are currently in mainstream media almost daily. Both the American and Canadian Senates are investigating our beloved virtual currency. However, we still have a long way to go to dispel the myth that many people hold that Bitcoin is an underground currency used to buy and sell drugs, or is not financially viable.

The key in efficiently and effectively increasing adoption is in numbers. The more people we can reach at once with factual and accessible information, the faster adoption grows. I will call this Expedient Adoption. There’s no doubt about this: those who hate bitcoin simply do not understand it. Those who do understand it tend to love it. Some of us even drop everything in our lives for it.  The key is understanding, one person at a time.

But won’t that take a long time? Each one of us talking to 1 or 2 people a day? I suppose it’s like network marketing: there’s power in numbers and introductions. Still. There must be a better way besides our valiant word-of-mouth efforts that often result in us being dismissed as “crazy” or “on something.”

How do we encourage adoption without involving the very parties that reach the masses using media, but depend on ‘if it bleeds, it leads’ tactics to keep them distracted and entertained?

I may have just uncovered one of the best ways of Expedient Adoption. This method touches people all around using the internet. It is accessible and educational – and fun! And, the best part is, it gives those who watch and participate in the process free bitcoin. Yes.  Free bitcoin. Free.

takemybitcoinlogo.jpg

Oh, did I mention that it’s also fun? Is there any better way of encouraging adoption than making it fun and profitable?

I’m speaking about Take My Bitcoins!, an online 1970’s game show-style web broadcast that explores bitcoin in an uncomplicated way. It is available for anyone with internet access, anywhere in the world, to watch, at any time.

Mike Rotman is the mastermind behind Streamin’ Garagea company that literally began with a few cameras, a garage, a great team of people with a lot of faith and an idea — create excellent online shows. After discussing bitcoin with a few friends in an online Facebook community, Mike and his team had a collective lightbulb moment: “introduce people to bitcoin, and let them have fun with it.” His goal with the show is to “bring bitcoin to the masses.”

Show Off

Here’s the really fun part, in my slightly nerdy point of view: Take My Bitcoins shows the mining of bitcoins in the week leading up to the show. There is literally a camera on this mining equipment 24/7. I know it’s like watching a cage at a zoo with a panda bear in it that never appears, because nothing active really happens, but the fact that I can pull this up online and show someone real-life mining is pretty neat. It certainly helps with explaining the mining part.

At the end of the week, one lucky participant who guesses the number of bitcoin mined by the machines will win bitcoin. “We cut [the mining] off 3 hours before show time, so guests have that amount of time to guess how many bitcoins the show has mined,” Jeff Ownby, of Butterfly Labs, explains. However, bitcoin can be won in many ways, including answering simple questions about the currency and protocol. So, people are winning, having fun and learning about bitcoin.

Mike has a strong background in television production, direction and writing, having written for major network shows. He left the television industry 5 years ago to focus on internet production and content, “especially live,” he explains. “[Streamin’Garage] live streams a lot of different events. We were the first mulit-camera live HD network on the web and want to continue to find new ways to break ground in live.”

The Techie Side

Take My Bitcoins! is no small endeavour. If you watch the show, you will see that the quality is incredibly high. Make no mistake, Mike’s team clocks hundreds of hours a week in hard work to produce this entertainment for us. “It is a lot of work,” Mike explains. “From the production side, we are using a NewTek Tricaster 860, we built an entire set for the show, we have lighting, a 5-camera HD studio, and we employ 8 crewpeople.”

Technically, the show runs a live chat room during its broadcast, where staff ask the audience questions: “Those who play along [and have an answer] are called on their phone, so it’s really a live, interactive game,” Mike explains. “We are working with a global audience, and people’s internet runs at different speeds. Some people can be 20 seconds behind, 2 minutes behind due to a bad internet connection. It’s a live show, similar to a radio game, so we call them and connect with them live.” The show itself is based on a radio-model, incorporating fun, play-along games, which can be played via cell phone.  The show also incorporates social-media games, like #TakeMyMeme and a “Guess How Much We Mine!” game. “When we first came up with the concept, it was very ‘Price-Is-Right’ meets ‘Let’s Make A Deal!’”

The show really does give away everything Butterfly Labs mines that week: “The game doesn’t stop until our wallet is empty,” Mike laughs. “Everyone can see us mining, they can see all the transactions we do. Like bitcoin, it’s all very transparent. You can see our wallets are full, you can see that they’re empty. That’s part of the whole process.” bitcoinwallettmb.png

Winners will send in W-9 paperwork if American and W8-BEN if international so they comply with American federal tax law. “Our tax accountants had no idea what to do with this,” Mike laughs. “We want to cover ourselves. In the end, we are giving away currency, so we treat it like that. It makes the process and the currency legitimate and safe.” The team is very set on being transparent and upfront with the process. “The more legitimate it feels, the better everyone feels about bitcoin.”

So, why bitcoin? “It seemed like a perfect fit, because it’s decentralized and accessible around the world. It just makes sense that everyone [with internet access] can be involved in this,” Mike continues. Going back to Butterfly Labs, showing everyone the mining equipment during the week, leading up to the airing, adds to the transparency of the show. “We’re on camera; you can see the systems the show is using,” Jeff adds.

Bitcoiners Doing What Bitcoiners Do

Our community is unique in that we are incredibly supportive and helpful without expecting anything in return. We always seem to be dedicated to adoption. “It’s great how supportive the bitcoin community is,” Mike says. “It’s really cool to watch the adoption happen, too. We had a winner last week, and she had no idea what it meant to win bitcoin. She said, ‘what do I do?’” The team walked her  through the process of setting up a wallet, and explained how and where to spend her bitcoin. We have people who say, ‘I would play, but I can’t pay my rent with it.’ We say, ‘Well, technically… you can.”

The show’s target audience is anyone who is interested in bitcoin, but they tend to attract a “bright” audience with their “snarky and smart” entertainment: “We definitely want the bitcoin audience, and they do tell us we need to ask more bitcoin questions, but we don’t want to alienate. The point of this is to introduce bitcoin to everyone,” Mike clarifies. sammlevine.jpeg

“We are all from the bitcoin community,” Jeff adds. “It’s just a natural progression for us to target that market first, then take it from there. The idea is to get different guest hosts in every week, some from inside the industry, some from without.” The show’s modus operandi is to feature popular hosts, who can then introduce their own fan-base to bitcoin. Samm Levine, (shown far left) of Freaks and Geeks and Inglorious Basterds fame hosted the show last week. After appearing, he was enthused about the currency: “How do I get this! Send me some! How do I use this!?” Alex Albrecht appeared on the last segment of the show to introduce bitcoin to his large (over 80 thousand Twitter followers!) fan base. Illeana Douglas is also scheduled to appear. However, the show also intends to include “bitcoin luminaries” and “known bitcoin people” to help explain the more technical side as the audience plays along.

As I explained in an earlier article, the key to adoption is through clarity of purpose, legitimacy and cooperation. New adopters are already scared of bitcoin based on the negative media the currency has received, so businesses must embrace these values if they want to positively influence bitcoin use. Mike and Jeff show these values in their business practices.

Take My Bitcoins! is building a strong audience base with their weekly shows. The producers are pleased with the word-of-mouth advertising they have been receiving, especially from the bitcoin community itself. After all, it is much easier to send someone to a fun game where they can win money than continuously beating your head against a wall explaining bitcoin to your inner circle. Sometimes, seeing it and hearing it from a third party is the tipping edge for them. As Mike says, “the best way to get bitcoin out there is to give it away.”

The bitcoin community can also help by giving honest feedback to “help frame the game.” The show is active on Twitter and very responsive. You can message them with your thoughts here.

Purpose-Driven Production

Both Mike of Streamin’ Garage and Jeff of Butterfly Labs see bitcoin as a world-changing phenomenon. “I have been with Butterfly Labs since the beginning, but to be honest, the turnaround for me that made bitcoin into something bigger than it had been previously was my trip to New York City last year. I was leaving the conference in a cab, going back to my hotel, and my cab driver asked me, ‘What is bitcoin?’ I explained it to him, and he said, ‘So I can send this to my brother in Pakistan?’ And that changed everything for me. I realized how truly powerful this can be. I picture this taking over Western Union, and banks, and everything else. I see this now from a social justice perspective.”

Mike is no different: “It started off as a fun chat on investments on Facebook, but then I realized that we had the power to give away currency that everyone…anyone in the world can use. We always had a big international following with our show “Stupid For Movies” but this is even bigger. We have people calling in from Saudi Arabia, Japan, Israel, and now we can give them something back, rather than just content. This is a worldwide currency. We will evolve in the future to give away bitcoin to charities such as animal shelters, Autism and other good projects. We give back. We want to do good.”

A Bit of Fun

The show is ultimately transcending multiple boundaries by showing us what is really possible on the internet in terms of interaction, production quality and content. Their team are all dedicated to the cause and even take their entire pay in bitcoin.

Streamin’ Garage really started as something small, and it grew because of a group of people who really believed in it.” And that sounds a lot like something else we all know and love.

This is a really great way to get people involved in bitcoin. Watching role models they know and follow interacting with and giving away bitcoin is a huge step towards bitcoin adoption. People relate to what they know. Part of what makes bitcoin so scary is that it is not understood. But we feel like we know celebrities. They are familiar to us. Combining celebrities with bitcoin is genius.  Mike has done it again. The show has aired only twice, and will be running weekly.

 So, Bitcoin, let the fun and games begin!

Bitcoiners, you can help encourage adoption. You and your network can tune in every Thursday at 8:00 PM (PT) to watch Take My Bitcoins live! Missed an episode? No worries.  Catch re-runs on their site, too!  Show everyone how accessible and fun bitcoin can be.

Disclaimer: I have not been compensated by Butterfly Labs or Take My Bitcoins! or any related party in any way for writing this review/article. I am simply a woman who loves bitcoin and wants to see it adopted by everyone, and I think this is a great way of introducing bitcoin to people in a fun way. 

 

Federal Reserve’s Bitcoin Policy Begins to Take Shape

On Friday, May 9th, 2014, the Federal Advisory Council and Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve met for their quarterly meeting in Washington D.C. This meeting was historically held in secrecy until Bloomberg News “won” a Freedom of Information Act request under the Freedom of Information Law requiring the Fed to make the meetings minutes available to the public.

The Federal Advisory Council (FAC) is “composed of twelve representatives of the banking industry, consults with and advises the Board on all matters within the Board’s jurisdiction…” according to the Federal Reserve in “About the Fed / Federal Advisory Council.”

FederalReserveEducation.org (maintained by the Federal Reserve) breaks out the Structure and Functions of the Federal Reserve in an easily digestible format. It explains that the Federal Advisory Council is one of three “statutory advisory councils” and the the Board of Governors (also known as the Federal Reserve Board) is responsible for conducting the United States’ monetary policy, and among other functions “… exercises broad supervisory control over the financial services industry, administers certain consumer protection regulations, and oversees the nation’s payments system…“

On February 27th, 2014, it was widely reported that Janet Yellen, the new Federal Reserve Chairwoman, stated the Fed does not have the authority to regulate Bitcoin. Here is a C-Span video clip where Chairwoman Yellen tells Senator Manchin at the Federal Reserve Board’s semiannual report on monetary policy and the U.S. economic outlook for the year that “{Bitcoin is} payment innovation that’s taking place entirely out of the banking system…The Federal Reserve simply does not have authority to supervise or regulate Bitcoin in any way…”

Chairwoman Yellen did deflect some of the discussion by telling Senator Manchin that Congress should be asking what the “legal structure” should be. Indeed, Congressional Research Service issued an “under the radar” report late last year, “Bitcoin: Questions, Answers, and Analysis of Legal Issues.” The report specifically stated that Congress is interested in Bitcoin because of its effect on the ability of the “Federal Reserve to meet its objectives (of stable prices, maximum employment, and financial stability)” and discusses whether or not “Bitcoins {Will} Affect the Fed’s Conduct of Monetary Policy.”

Until the Federal Reserve posted May 9th’s Record of Meeting (PDF), the Bitcoin data produced by the Fed has been mostly academic in nature with the regional members publishing their own respective research (see table/timeline). The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis has been most aggressive in this regards, posting no less than six videos on Bitcoin on Youtube.

All of the Fed research to date has contained disclaimers such as “The views and opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis or of the Federal Reserve System,” as stated in David Andolfatto’s (Vice President of Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis) March 31st Dialog with the Fed: Possibilities and Pitfalls of Virtual Currencies.

The May 9th Record of Meeting (PDF) is a national (as opposed to regional) component of the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Advisory Council can make recommendations to the Board that steer policy. There are no disclaimers here, though the Council’s influence can be limited. One infamous example of conflict was in September 1934 when the Council recommended that the Board return to the gold standard and was told that they were trying to involve themselves with matter that was “none of their business.”

The Connecticut Day reported on September 29th 1934 that:

“The federal reserve board caustically replying to a demand by the federal advisory council for the return to the gold standard, a balanced budget, and an end to monetary experimentation, yesterday told the council that such affairs were none of its business.”

There were seven items in the Record and Bitcoin was item number five and took up more than two and a half pages…or nearly 25% of the report. One could then assume that about a quarter of the meeting was discussion about Bitcoin. Why was a considerable amount of time discussing Bitcoin at this meeting, if Bitcoin is outside the realm of Fed policy? It’s possible that we are experiencing a similar tug of war from 1934 but this is purely conjecture on my part.

Frankly, how could they not discuss Bitcoin? Bitcoin may be the paradigm shift that Federal Reserve Governor Laurence H. Meyer forewarned about in his speech from 2001. Meyer explained what would happen if electronic money were to reach critical mass:

“A decline in the demand for currency… lower[ing] the monetary base and hence reduc[ing] the size of the Fed’s portfolio of securities. The size of the Fed’s portfolio, in effect, determines the seignorage the government obtains through the issue of the monetary base. To the extent that the demand for currency declines, the monetary base and hence the Fed’s portfolio would shrink, and the interest earnings on that portfolio would diminish…. The Treasury would lose seignorage even from the first dollar of substitution of e-money for currency. If the Fed were to lose so much seignorage that it could not cover its costs under current arrangements, it would have to look for other arrangements to cover its costs in a way that supported its independence.”

At the Fed meeting, it was asked first and foremost: “Does Bitcoin pose a threat to the banking system, economic activity, or financial stability?”

It plays down Meyer’s concerns by stating that:

“Systemically, Bitcoin’s nascency makes it more curiosity than threat. Its greatest near-term hazards are its avoidance of consumer protection measures and illicit use, both of which support increased regulation. Medium- to long-term effects could be more pronounced as the network self-refines and adoption increases…”

I was surprised to read the Fed’s admission that Bitcoin can be used as a tool for for the unbanked especially after World Bank connected CGAP issued its own report dismissing Bitcoin’s utility for financial inclusion:

“Bitcoin enables cheap international remittance to the developing world and the developed world’s ‘unbanked,’ expanding financial inclusion.”

Other favorable and interesting attributes mentioned in the Record include:

  • Bitcoin does not present a threat to economic activity by disrupting traditional channels of commerce; rather, it could serve as a boon.
  • Illicit applications are rampant but not endemic to Bitcoin; sovereign-issued currencies and other precious goods are similarly used.

And the Fed is pro Bitcoin regulation:

“Regulation is advisable; considerations include protecting consumers, addressing illicit use, and avoiding Balkanization.”

In this regards they recommend, “Regulatory oversight to ensure that exchanges invest in appropriate cyber and other security measures. This includes fully secure storage of Bitcoin wallets.”

If (?) the adjective “fully” in regards to “secure storage of Bitcoin wallets” means that an exchange must hold the private key of a Bitcoin wallet it does not address how this would even be possible with a decentralized exchange. Actually I’m not entirely certain what the Fed actually means by ”fully secure storage of Bitcoin wallets” (a Google search first)? Perhaps they mean secure storage of Bitcoin? If (?) they mean wallets then we circle back to the theory that they would require that an exchange hold a user’s private key. Not just semantics?

The Fed’s direct involvement in Bitcoin at a policy level is likely to be triggered by one of two events.  The Fed notes that “Should adoption accelerate, banking could participate increasingly in Bitcoin fund flows, especially as multicurrency accounts proliferate and reputational concerns subside.”  Moreover Bitcoin could develop into a “systemic contagion of instability.” This would make Bitcoin no longer as Chairwoman Yellen put it, “taking place entirely out of the banking system.”

If Bitcoin were to be regulated by the Federal Reserve we could see an amendment to  12 U.S. Code § 262 if regulators were to clearly define the purpose of the Federal Advisory Council as related to Bitcoin.

Federal Reserve Bitcoin Timeline

October 2013

St. Louis Fed: There Are Two Sides to Every Coin—Even to the Bitcoin, a Virtual Currency: “In this article, we describe the unique features of the bitcoin and explain how it works.”

November 12, 2013

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke: Letter to Congress: ”Bitcoin and other virtual currencies may hold long-term promise…”

December 2013 (document actually created same day Ben Bernanke’s letter went out)

Chicago Fed: Bitcoin A primer: “Bitcoin solves two challenges of digital money— controlling its creation and avoiding its duplication—at once”…and quoting an economist: “…it represents a remarkable conceptual and technical achievement, which may well be used by existing financial institutions (which could issue their own bitcoins) or even by governments themselves…”

December 4, 2013

Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan “It’s a bubble…You have to really stretch your imagination to infer what the intrinsic value of Bitcoin is. I haven’t been able to do it…

December 16, 2013

Richmond Fed: New Private Currencies Like Bitcoin Offer Potential — and Puzzles: “…unlike gold and silver, bitcoins have no nonmonetary use”…Quoting an economist “the value of any medium of exchange, and especially fiat money, ultimately depends at least partially on faith.”

January 2014

Cleveland Fed: A Little Bit on Bitcoin: “Bitcoin is the first digital currency to successfully simulate cash.”

February 27, 2014

Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen: Monetary Policy Report “The Federal Reserve simply does not have authority to supervise or regulate Bitcoin in any way.”

March 31, 2014

St. Louis Fed: Bitcoin and Beyond: The Possibilities and Pitfalls of Virtual Currencies:  

“A virtual currency with zero intrinsic value and no legal backing.”…”Well-run central banks should welcome the emerging competition.”

April 4, 2014
“The continued use of a currency depends on the stability of its value and the existence of alternatives for achieving final settlement.”

April 8, 2014 
Fed Presentation in conjunction with Jeremy Allaire, Founder, Chairman & CEO, Circle Internet Financial (Bitcoin Company)

May 9, 2014

Federal Advisory Council and Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve put Bitcoin on Agenda at quarterly meeting

Addendum

Also See “Currency King Set to Battle Bitcoin” a Print Exclusive in Bitcoin Magazine Issue 18 which discusses the Giori Patent Application “System and Method for Providing and Transferring Fungible Electronic Money.”

 

The Future of Touchless Payments – Why iBeacon Technology Needs Bitcoin

Apple released a device update weeks ago that made large improvements on existing iBeacon technology. The update allows devices to search for existing beacons without the application being open on the device, while also enabling nearly all iOS7 devices to send and receive beacon signals. This means that retailers can send messages to customers, accept touchless payment and gain valuable customer information, all without dedicated hardware. There is little question that Apple has plans to dominate mobile commerce, but did they make a mistake by outlawing digital payment systems like Bitcoin?

iBeacon technology began simply as a device offering a low powered system for sending push messages to devices within a determined proximity. The technology uses Bluetooth Low Energy 4.0 (BLE), and has the ability to not only send and receive geo-fenced notifications, but also opens the door for touchless payments. This means that businesses with iBeacons can attain valuable customer information while pushing the latest deals, product information and more to the customer’s device.

Furthermore, what Apple is most likely doing is positioning iBeacon to become a fast and easy way to make contactless payments directly from a mobile device. Apple’s most recent device update brings users one step closer to this being a reality. In the future, a user will be able to pay for items at their favorite store by simply using the iPhone’s existing biometrics technology, TouchID. But just how could Bitcoin fit into this platform?

Bitcoin is a digital currency and peer-to-peer payment system that is completely decentralized from any central banking institution. Bitcoin is controversial. It is a form of payment for thousands of e-commerce retailers, brick and mortar stores, and peer-to-peer transactions. Although Bitcoin is digital, its tangibility lies in your Bitcoin wallet, which is supported by an algorithm that secures the Bitcoin network. The payment network is fast, easy, secure and allows people to make instant payments to anyone in the world.

The growing number of Card Not Present merchants throughout the world has made alternative payment solutions increasingly important. Due to this, more businesses are choosing to accept Bitcoin because it equips merchants to reduce costs that come from chargebacks and processing fees. As a merchant, other benefits of Bitcoin are the ability to accept payment globally and the possibility of microtransactions.

What could it mean?

Both iBeacon and Bitcoin technology have huge implications in the future of mobile payments. However, with Apple’s recent ousting of popular Bitcoin wallet “Blockchain” from the AppStore, many are wondering if Bitcoin has a future in Apple devices. The reasons behind the removal of Blockchain are still unknown, but my guess is that Apple is doing what many businesses are doing: seeing how the acceptance of Bitcoin plays out, in terms of consumer and business adoption, legislation and politics.

For brick-and-mortar retailers, iBeacon technology has the ability to create an entirely new customer experience. Initially, there were two barriers to entry for retailers looking to use iBeacon. First, merchants had to convince customers to download their dedicated application, and secondly, they needed to prompt people to open the app once they walked in the store.

However, the new update allows retailers to bypass these steps and send messages to users even if the application isn’t opened on their device, as long as location settings and Bluetooth are enabled. This pivotal update opens the door for a different type of mobile commerce. For example, an iBeacon could trigger a prompt for payment when a customer reached a certain location inside the store. Furthermore, those customers could then be prompted to review their experience, product and service.

This technology when paired with a currency like Bitcoin could provide retailers with even less barrier to entry. Small brick-and-mortar retailers could save on costly POS systems and not be burdened by fees associated with accepting credit card payments. This is because of the decentralized nature of Bitcoin and the security of the network, which is more powerful than 20 of the world’s largest supercomputers combined. By being based on cryptographic proof, Bitcoin gives users complete control of their funds without having to trust an outside third-party. For retailers, this means saving thousands, if not millions, on transaction fees and chargebacks. For customers, this means a quicker and more secure checkout process.

By combining these two technological innovations, both businesses and consumers could benefit from streamlined touchless payments, increased payment security and a revolutionary customer experience. Imagine walking into a storefront, receiving a personalized message, choosing your items and making payment. All without having to wait in line or share sensitive personal and credit card information.

Combining iBeacon and Bitcoin could be the future of touchless payments, and change the customer experience as we know it, but it may take some time and convincing.

 

A Ripple Gateway in Mexico

Mexican Bitcoin Exhange Bitso has officially launched as the first Ripple Gateway in Mexico.

Bitso will be the first issuer of Mexican Peso (MXN) balances on the Ripple Network. The company intends to use the unique characteristics of the Ripple network and protocol to tackle the remittance market between Mexico and the US.

Bitso is a Mexican-based provider of cryptocurrency services, including remittance facilities and consultation. The company has offices in Mexico City, Puebla and Vancouver.

The intention with becoming a Ripple gateway is to extend service offerings available to its clients. Through the Ripple network Bitso will enable its clients in Mexico to send and receive value to or from anywhere in the world instantly, at negligible cost. This includes Mexican pesos, bitcoins and U.S. dollars.

Bitso CTO and co-founder Ben Peters notes:

“We are committed to developing the infrastructure required to revolutionise the incumbent remittance ecosystem in Mexico, harnessing the transformative innovations of cryptocurrency.”

In addition to directly facilitating the creation of a US-Mexico corridor on the Ripple network, this latest development will enhance the functionality of the Bitso Bitcoin Exchange, allowing for easier funding of accounts and boosted liquidity.

Bitso is a member of the IRBA (International Ripple Business Association) and is an issuer of XBT (bitcoin) balances, with more currencies to follow in due course.

Ripple is a sometimes misunderstood and hotly debated piece of open-source technology. The protocol provides for an asset agnostic, distributed payment system. It enables near free and instant payments with no chargebacks. For this reason it offers functionality that is appealing to many businesses in the space, including Bitso.

Ripple is engineered so that businesses of any size can easily build payment solutions, such as banking or remittance apps, and accelerate the movement of money on the network. The stated aim of Bitso in this implementation is to enable the world to move value in the same way that it moves information. Ripple is still in beta, but it has been gaining momentum in 2014.

Bitso-Logo

With the addition of Mexican Peso’s on the system, through the Bitso gateway, traders and platform users will benefit from the addition of this new unit.

For those new to Ripple, Gateways are organizations that help move money in and out of the Ripple network. They are the interface between the legacy financial infrastructure and the Ripple network.

Once as user signs up with a gateway the can deposit money into their Ripple Wallet and begin using Ripple’s payments and distributed currency exchange. Once money is moved in through a gateway it moves around as a debt instrument, or IOU, of the trusted Gateway. XRP are the only native asset of the network. All other instruments are debts of a gateway issuer, for redemption through a trusted gateway.

It is Gateways like Bitso that allow the protocol to function as instrument agnostic and interface seamlessly with the ‘real-world’. Like all other networks, Ripple benefits from the positive network effects that come with additional participants and gateway providers offering new and unique currencies, assets and instruments.

Bitso will also benefit from the unique characteristics on the Ripple network. With proper practice and implementation, those remitting funds will also benefit from lower costs and the greater ease of use that comes with turning all assets into information.

In speaking with CEO Pablo Gonzalez, he did acknowledge some resentment towards Ripple in the Bitcoin community. However, he was quick to point out that:

“We see Ripple as a great intermediary tool for transferring anything of value, no matter what the two endpoints are…we see Ripple as a robust intermediary step on the road to a world where Bitcoin is universally accepted.”

Further:

“As Bitcoin gains traction, there will be much greater liquidity, and at the same time less need to transfer back and forth to fiat. In the meantime, the Ripple network provides the volatility-free high-liquidity distributed platform for value exchange that can actively compete with the incumbent centralized remittance businesses.”

In reality, bitcoin’s value proposition is real and exists regardless of any individuals opinion within the ‘bitcoin community’. It is this utility that will surely continue to see it adopted as a technology by businesses, going forward.

With Buy Ads, Mycelium Local Trader Becomes a Fully Functional Exchange

Mycelium has recently come out with a feature for their Android wallets called Local Trader, which allows people to buy and sell bitcoins locally, in person, with cash. Initially, the trades were limited to sell ads, meaning people willing to sell bitcoins could put up an ad, and those wishing to buy bitcoins could contact them and set up a time to meet and trade. The option to set up a buy ad, which would allow locals to convert their bitcoins back to cash, was delayed, since Mycelium wanted to first focus on helping those new to Bitcoin to have an easy way to get their first bitcoins. Now, with the release of Mycelium Bitcoin Wallet version 1.2.9, which finally adds buy ads to Local Trader, Mycelium’s Local Trader became a fully functioning bitcoin exchange.

Mycelium is a bitcoin wallet for Android phones that focuses on more advanced user features, such as full key management and cold storage spending. The new Local Trader option is a feature that is built right into the wallet, and allows users to find locals in their area who would be willing to exchange cash for bitcoin, bypassing banks and centralized exchanges completely. Since all private keys are stored in the wallet right on the phone, there is no risk of an exchange losing your coins. There are also no risks of websites shutting down temporarily or disappearing completely, as Mycelium connects to a group of redundant servers, and in a worse case scenario, all wallet private keys can be easily exported to be used in other wallet services. There is also no risk of exposing your private information to hackers, since all trades are done directly in person. To keep things as anonymous as possible, Mycelium Local Trader uses coarse locations, only uses your bitcoin address to register and authenticate with the exchange, and encrypts all communications directly between trading parties using their respective private keys. If Mycelium servers were to be hacked and data stolen (or logs were requested by authorities), the only things that would be exposed are the trader’s nicknames and bitcoin addresses, and a general rough location of wherMycelium Logo 120dpie the sell and buy offers are available – information that is already publicly visible. Any communications would just come out as encrypted gibberish.

To create a buy or sell ad, users simply create an ad in the Local Trader menu, where they can set up a location from which to trade, choose a base exchange price and fee, the currency they wish to trade into, the amounts they wish to limit the trades to, and any additional notes for traders that they wish to display, such as time of availability or extra instructions. The great thing is that traders are not limited to the amount of trade ads they are able to create, and can set up tiers that charge different fees for different amounts traded, or set up trades at different locations with fees reflecting the difficulty of getting there. Anyone who wishes to buy or sell bitcoin using one of these ads simply clicks the Buy/Sell Bitcoin button, and instantly receives a list of available offers in their set area, which they have to change manually, and which is based on a coarse location (another privacy feature; Mycelium will never query your exact location automatically). From that list they can check prices, get more info on the traders, and even look them up on a map. If they find a price and a trader they are willing to deal with, they just hit the Buy (or Sell) button and initiate a chat to discuss when and where they could meet.

Mycelium hopes that this feature will make bitcoin more accessible to everyone, especially in areas where bitcoin is difficult to get, such as China and Russia. Since Local Trader also includes an open API, in the future you may even be able to use it to find local bitcoin ATMs, and possibly even bitcoin businesses. And now that the Local Trading platform is finished, Mycelium can start work on the next major feature: Hierarchical Deterministic Wallets (BIP32), which will let you back up all your keys by making just one backup of a seed, and will allow you to stay more anonymous by never reusing change addresses.

To get Mycelium for your Android phone, you can download it from Google Play or directly from Mycelium.com.

Mycelium – Decentralize ALL the things!

Disclosure: Rassah works as a community manager for Mycelium. If you would like to support our project (or at least add some beer funds to our overworked developers), you can donate to 13YxhmcAyr9W1frumWr3trXLAj2hSHWBmo

Bitcoin’s Rally Cry on China’s War on Bitcoin. We are coming.

To our Chinese Friends, Countryman, and Government – lend me your ears. The Chinese government has now ordered their press to censor news of bitcoin and our Global Bitcoin Summit. It’s already too late. We are bitcoin and we’re already there.

People are using our currency quietly…carefully today. Does your government think their citizens don’t know what the press is forbidden to report? Do they not hear your whispers behind closed doors? Your kingdom may be crumbling from corruption from the inside, yet the lies among their ranks has become circular and corruption is the fruit of their betrayal.  They ignore the lessons of history and are confused by the reasons of why no one speaks.

How childish to think their currency will be trusted to become the reserved currency of the world they so desperately desire. They are fools to believe they deserve that valuable respect. Do they believe they’ve fooled the world of  the value of the Chinese yuan when their own people desperately try to escape it? The laws they’ve implemented to keep your money from leaving the country has done nothing but  allowed even more corruption.  They know of this, yet can’t contain it.  Much of your population still live in poverty with little faith in the future while the privileged leaders maintain expensive mistresses with expensive taste and eventually blackmail your leaders to save face using your money.

When your desperate fellow countrymen began committing suicide by leaping to a preferred death from their factory compound windows, you saw the despair they could no longer bear living in slave conditions they were forced to endure. How did your government respond? Was it with kindness and understanding while removing the yoke of slavery? No. They  installed nets underneath their compound windows to catch them from their escape from earthly bondage. They then silently and ruthlessly returned them to the factory floors as if they were simply broken pieces of machinery that fell out of place.  This was China’s way of handling the situation…and we saw what they did when they thought nobody was watching.

What kind of leadership is that? China has allowed itself to become a rotten example of poison to the world killing your own people by the millions and still your oppressive leaders believe themselves to be  honorable?  They pompously lecture the world about currency while hypocritically demanding respect?  The hour is at hand and somebody must say it loudly.  Your Chairman  has no clothes!   Do they think hiding their people from bitcoin is going to help?  Our message to the great people of China: There is hope.

We ask the great people of China, why do your leaders consider bitcoin a threat?   It can’t be the size of bitcoin that frightens them. The entire market cap of bitcoin could be swallowed in just a few hours of corruption at the standard rate of corruption in China.  Bitcoin is a drop in bucket compared to the political cesspool from which you are forced to contend.  Is it possible that the idea of the currency representing freedom they find intolerable? Are they afraid that bitcoin will become the currency of choice for you? Is it possible that they might be trying to hide that possibility from you? Could they be holding secret meetings, counting the days before you stand up united and hold them accountable? With your numbers they should be counting  their days!  We fully expect this article will be censored from the good people of China, and not without cause!  But your great people  will know. Word will spread. We hear your pleads for help. We are coming.

The Chinese government continuously disregard human rights. Many of you know they continue to ban your rights to speak freely. You understand  thousands of websites are being censored from you. The ideas sprouting from imaginations allowed to think freely are allowed to be viewed from responsible countries which afford their citizens the human dignity to learn. Yet China insist on policing your thoughts. We are not surprised that they would come to fear freedom in all forms, including bitcoin, ESPECIALLY BITCOIN! Because it is the money of freedom. Does the idea of currency freedom terrify them?  Their “Great Firewall of China”, even with armies of censors, won’t be able to stop bitcoin. Digital currency has many heads – Bitcoin, litecoin, and hundreds or thousands more lined up behind if needed. We are relentless, we won’t be going away, you will not be abandoned. Each time they try to stamp us out, we will mutate, and get stronger to resist. Each time they stomp, we learn new ways to adapt. Your days of forced isolation from the world are dwindling to a close.

They will try to hide digital currencies from you, but you will find us. We will send you our freedom which will come encrypted. We will come to your rescue contained on secret partitions on USB drives, burned onto CDROMs and any media you can think of. Our currency will be beamed to you from satellites, and embedded inside computer chips.  Your leaders will fruitlessly scour everywhere for electronic  microdots holding your bitcoin keys. They will expend countless wasted hours mindlessly trying to decode every email, and verify every attachment for any trace of our gift of freedom we bring. Will they be desperate enough to use MRI technology in an attempt to read your minds if they suspect you of  memorizing a brain wallet password?  The more they do this, the bigger our legend grows. We are watching and have ears in places that listen to your whispers. We are with you. The currency of freedom is coming.

The USA is now becoming open to the vast possibilities of our currency.  They  recognize your hostility and threat to bitcoin. They will surprise you with secret tools at their disposal to do everything in its power to help bitcoin. Get ready for payback for years of your  currency manipulation from the Chinese government that destroy American Jobs. Perhaps they will create and install a “Bitcoin Plunge Protection Team” similar to the one created by Ronald Reagan in secret after the 1987’s stock market crash (Black Monday). That team was charged with re-inflating the stock market in the name of “national security“. If China tries to crash bitcoin by purchasing huge quantities to dump, they may be surprised who buys it up to support the price.  We will see the good people of China share their rightful place in a “real” free market of the world. Ask yourself, if the Plunge Protection Team is currently working today to prop up the stock market so 401k’s hold together, would protecting the price of bitcoin be trivial? Payback’s a b!+(#.

We are growing. We are underground. We are anonymous. They won’t stop us and will only appear foolish to try. Their actions have just inspired our rally cry to defeat their efforts to contain us. Discover the meaning of  honey badger to understand our nature. We are known as the most fearless creature on earth. We are bitcoin.  This reference will likely soon added to your list of forbidden and unsearchable words.  The currency of freedom will win over tyranny. Know that we judge China not by seeing how they treat people when they know the world is watching; we do so by watching the manner in which they treat people when they  thought nobody was watching. This… defines their character.

Though our size is small, we are relentless. The ideals we carry with us will change the world. Chinese leaders are afraid of the freedom realized by their people when they are allowed to think for themselves. They are afraid of the freedoms that come with choice because in their deep black hearts they know…you will not choose them. The Chinese actions continue to validate who we are and what we represent…

We are bitcoin. We are freedom – and we are coming.

Colored Coins Come to Life in CoinPrism & Open Assets

May 13, 2014 (Dublin, Ireland) – The Irish company who released the prediction market Predictious last year is now unveiling their brand new colored coins wallet Coinprism, as well as the Open Assets protocol (http://openassets.org).

Open Assets is a new generation Crypto-protocol based on Bitcoin. At the core, Open Assets is simply an implementation of the colored coins idea. The concept is that the protocol takes a very small amount of Bitcoins, and “colors” them with an asset type and quantity, defined by an issuer. The assets can then be transferred through the Blockchain, frictionlessly and in a decentralized fashion, by simply sending the Bitcoins that carry them.

Crypto 2.0 platforms can be divided in two families. The platforms that leverage the Bitcoin network, and the platforms that emigrated to a separate network or Blockchain.

Open Assets, Mastercoin and Counterparty are all in the first family. However there are some important distinctions between the “metacoin” approach taken by Mastercoin and Counterparty, and the open approach taken by Open Assets. Both Mastercoin and Counterparty require the users of the protocol to buy units of additional infrastructure (MSC and XCP) before they can use the protocol.

Open Assets follows a direct approach whereby transactions are normal Bitcoin transactions. Therefore, users only need Bitcoins to use it, and even then, they can choose not to pay any transaction fee at all, if they don’t care about the confirmation speed.

“Imagine how the Internet would be like if you could only access it from machines sold by the company who invented it”, said Flavien Charlon, Founder of Coinprism, “this is the state of Crypto 2.0 protocols today. Gateway currencies are entirely unnecessary, and make the system more closed and centralized than it needs to be. We already have a widely adopted crypto-currency, and it’s called Bitcoin”.

When compared to the second family of Crypto 2.0 platforms, which exist on separate Blockchains, Open Assets has the benefit of not asking the user to move off to a separate network. Alternative platforms are fighting the uphill battle of the network effect. In addition to that, Bitcoin is the most secure Blockchain as of today, since a 51% attack would cost hundreds of millions of dollars to the attacker.

Open Assets will particularly appeal to smaller communities who want to have their own currencies but are still unsure how to go about it. The community of players of the popular building game Minecraft, for instance, came up with CraftCoin. CraftCoin is an alt-coin based on Litecoin, and is used by players as the de-facto reserve currency within the virtual worlds they create. For this type of community however, maintaining an entire separate Blockchain is clearly overkill, in fact, it would take only $25,000 of mining equipment to perform a successful 51% attack on the network. Open Assets is a perfect solution for those communities, as it provides both a secure and portable way of issuing and managing their own coin. Because Open Assets is fully compatible with the smart contracts supported by Bitcoin, they could also simulate mining by controlling issuance through a multi-signature address.

Coinprism is the new web wallet that allows people to access the Open Assets platform. The public launch date is set for May 13th. It works like a normal Bitcoin web wallet, except it does not only display the Bitcoin balance of an address, but also the balance of every asset that the user possesses. This allows the user to manage all their different coins and assets from one single place.

Coinprism also lets the user issue their own asset with just a few clicks. The website will ask the user for information about the asset, like the name of the asset, the name of the issuer, a description, and even a customizable icon. This information is then displayed on the wallets of all the owners of the asset.

In terms of security, all the signing and encryption is performed on the client side, within the browser. The private keys of the addresses are only ever transmitted to the server in an encrypted form, so even if Coinprism is compromised, it will be impossible to steal users’ coins and assets.

Several companies have started lining up to leverage Open Assets. Signatur, a hardware cold-storage wallet startup, has already planned to raise crowdfunding capital through Coinprism.

ABOUT PIXODE

Pixode is a startup founded in 2010 and based in Dublin, Ireland. Pixode is in the social and mobile application space, it released several Facebook games and applications for business pages (Forum for Pages), as well as mobile games (Warp for Windows Phone 8, YouTube DJ for Windows 8/RT). More recently, Pixode launched Predictious, now the number one prediction market operating in Bitcoin.

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The Right Kind of Privacy

Bitcoin is unique in its approach to privacy. Uneducated observers lament its advantages for illicit activities, but the blockchain keeps track of every transaction and who has how much coin. The revolutionary part of this system is the fact that one must divulge his or her Bitcoin address to lose anonymity, which leaves us with a new kind of privacy–conditional privacy, known in Bitcoin as “pseudoanonymity.”

Most people who support privacy rights are worried about the invasiveness of governments and corporations, and there are plenty reasons why you might not want to reveal your Bitcoin address. Suppose you were or wanted to support a gay rights group in Russia, or an Occupy movement in the United States. Maybe you want to register a political website, in a country where that’s not allowed. Drugs might take the spotlight in Western countries, but anonymity has real uses in other parts of the world, where the law is used to deny citizens basic freedoms.

Private entities are often little better with our private information, selling it to marketers or worse–an insurance company with access to your medical information could ruin your ability to get coverage, forever. We have no reason to spy upon ordinary citizens, but conversely, anonymity has a different meaning when it comes to people in power. Few will fight for the privacy rights of stock exchanges, banks or governments, as that has failed throughout history. If we want to avoid bank collapses, insider trading, and inhumane secret programs, we have to know what they’re doing with our money.

Once you realize that Bitcoin’s psuedo-anonymity accomplishes exactly that, it’s easy to see why many institutions don’t like cryptocurrency: it encourages a society in which privacy is a privilege, reserved for those we don’t trust with our lives and future. The arrival of exchanges like CoinFloor–which are fully auditable by the public via the blockchain–puts many traditional exchanges in a shaky position. Shouldn’t we be curious why they’re not as forthcoming? If you wanted to know just how flimsy your bank’s fractional reserve is, that becomes easy, too.

The possibilities for reducing economic corruption are just the tip of the iceberg. Now imagine we paid our taxes via Bitcoin. True, mixers to anonymize a person’s bitcoins exist; we can detect if such a system were used, however, and that politician will have to answer some questions. We could conceivably construct a program to trace how all of our money was used, which would shed welcome light on black budgets, how campaigns are financed, and the entire lobbying industry. The blockchain will notice every secret program an agency attempts to fund, and any “gifts” they might be receiving.

Like most ideas spawned by crypto, this is a fairly radical suggestion, and far from becoming a reality. As people start to understand crypto, however, the possibility of a society that runs this way–and the political and economic benefits–will become harder to ignore. Some traditional institutions won’t enjoy the transition, but we’ve got no reason to avoid it–those in positions of power should have nothing to hide.

Building a Bitcoin Economy: How to Stimulate Adoption

Think you have what it takes to be a real Bitcoin evangelist? Want to learn how to start your mission into the world of fiat economics? Having preached the good word of Satoshi to laymen of all kinds, I’ve made my mark and learned a lot about promoting crypto adoption. Before you begin your journey, take a moment to read and learn about the science of Bitcoin evangelism.

Most cryptocurrency initiatives require one of two things: intellectual capital (to code the software and design the systems that make everything work) and financial capital (to pay for hardware, commercial space, legal fees, and intellectual capital if it is lacking). Adoption is probably the only field of the crypto industry that requires cultural or social capital, at least at the grassroots level. But what does that mean in practice?

The first step on your mission is to assess the connections you already have. In my case, that was a network of notable Vancouver Meet Up groups, and a job as a venue promoter. At first you won’t have existing merchants to refer to as references, so you’re going to need to find people who really trust you. Plenty of free solutions to accept exist, and once they realize the advantages of cryptocurrency, they’re likely to stick with it.

Those advantages, however, are not enough. The superiority of accepting payments via Bitcoin is meaningless if nobody is spending their bitcoins. Even if Bitcoiners prefer to spend fiat–maybe because the price is on an upswing–just bringing their business to the adopting merchant provides the necessary incentive, and there are a number of ways you can do that.

This is where experience as a Meet Up organizer will come in handy. If you’re not a member of your local cryptocurrency Meet Up, already, become one, or start your own group if none exists. Community pages at Facebook and Google Plus will also help. Since all of the businesses I signed up were event venues like coffee shops, restaurants and bars, I was able to bring them business directly by holding Meet Ups at their locations. Even for non-venue businesses, though, a community allows you to connect producers to consumers and get the word out.

Once you have a network in place, set about bringing more businesses on board, and that network should grow. In addition to the natural benefits of cryptocurrency, you now can now promise additional benefits in the form of direct customers–look for businesses likely to be open minded, like those already hosting Meet Ups or listed on websites like GroupOn or LivinSocial. Each new adopter you post to social media will bring more Bitcoiners into the fold, which in turn increases the amount of business (and incentive) you can provide.

Eventually, your following should grow to the point that you can bring more customers indirectly via publicity than you can directly. You should probably have a couple local reporter contacts, by now. New crypto Meet Ups and splinter groups will form, and inevitably the majority of events and merchant connections will be initiated by people other than yourself. This is natural in community building, and even moreso in a community based on techno-libertarian roots–don’t be discouraged.

Just go with it, take a step back, and use your newfound marketing power to promote those working together for the cause. If you maintain an honest, non-profit-focused campaign, you will become the face of this new community; forward media inquiries where appropriate, and engage positively with the mainstream media. Soon you’ll be ready to take Bitcoin adoption to the next level.

This how-to guide is part of a series written by director Andrew Wagner on behalf of the Bitcoin Co-op. If you want more information, or to join our non-profit advocacy movement, reach out at [email protected]. We provide support in the form of free publicity, advice, connections, and more! Stay tuned for part 2: How to Close the Loop.

First Bitcoin Exchange to Accept Gold

QuadrigaCX EntrancePlenty of gold dealers accept Bitcoin, but early this month, QuadrigaCX became the first Bitcoin exchange to add gold to its roster. Alongside CAD, USD and XBT, clients in Canada can now buy and sell XAU (gold). Users can now both deposit and withdraw funds into their accounts via gold bullion, shipped or in person.

Founders Mike Patryn and Gerald Cotten wanted to provide a means for people to enter the crypto market without going through banks or fiat. “Other exchanges have allowed for coin-to-coin trading; we wanted to provide a more unique service,” said Mike. “As we have a great deal of past experience with gold trading, it was not a particularly large leap to enable XBT/XAU trades on our website.”

QuadrigaCX is the second Bitcoin exchange to come out of Vancouver, and the first in the world to physically trade Litecoin. The founders and directors of the exchange have contributed a lot to the Vancouver Bitcoin community, and are proud directors of the Bitcoin Cooperative. Lamassu ATMs linked to their exchange can be seen all over Vancouver at their office, Decentral.Bangtown, Steamrollers restaurant, and more on the way!

QuadrigaCX doesn’t have as much volume as older Canadian exchanges like VirtEx, making it more difficult for bulk customers. Regardless, its popularity has been quickly rising due to several interesting factors. Their no-fee promotional period may have come to an end, but their still the cheapest option in Canada at 0.5% trading fees, one third the cost of VirtEx. Deposits and withdrawals remain free of charge (minus what your bank bills you), and verified users can make instant same-day deposits.

The company has high hopes for their latest feature just like other new companies like Bitgold. While not a cryptocurrency itself, gold represents a means of storing value that remains of interest to many alternative currency users. Although not as easy to transmit as cryptocurrency (without relying on a central authority), gold is backed by direct economic demand, and still cannot be arbitrarily created. It’s also resilient to technological failure.

Anything can be lost or stolen, of course, but QuadrigaCX is big on security. Nobody wants their funds gambled on a fractional reserve system, so all deposits are backed by gold held in their vault, which the directors have years of experience storing and securing. Full details on their storage system are obviously unavailable, but their known security measures are comforting: their office itself lies behind a barred entrance, and neighbors the office of their security company.

QuadrigaCX hopes to stay heavily involved with the community going forward, and plans to give away $5 vouchers for their exchange at every opportunity. In the long run, they hope to expand to every major country except the United States. Their autosell feature, which allows you to automatically convert bitcoins deposited to your account, will attract a new demographic of users: those using a free program to accept Bitcoin can send their bitcoins to their account, if they want to avoid volatility. Rumor has it they’re contemplating adding altcoins to their online exchange, but nothing concrete has been confirmed.

Bitcoin for Bad Guys: Virtual Currency as an Anti-Terrorism Tool

One of the big bitcoin stories making news lately is related to a report issued from Combating Terrorism Tactical Support Office. Titled: “Advanced Planning Briefing for Industry”, issued on Jan 30, 2014. It’s being discussed by some of the mainstream press because it reports that virtual currencies may be seen as a potential threat. The reference to virtual currencies in this report was buried a small section on page 46 of an 81-page report. They brought up virtual currencies among a host of new emerging technologies they must consider. This seems to be reasonable and prudent if they are doing their jobs correctly. Digital currencies are a new and should be addressed as they are tasked with designing contingency plans for all that can be imagined. Some in the media might have blown it out of proportion, adding it to the scandalous thread they continue regarding virtual currencies. This latest inclusion by the media seems to be just more of the same.

US Treasury Denies:

However it doesn’t yet appear that all government agencies are on board with the bitcoin terrorism threat idea. The US Treasury Department has also studied bitcoin and has found No Widespread Criminal Bitcoin Use. David S. Cohen, the undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence commented terrorists need “real money” for bribes, weapons, safe houses etc. They advise that terrorists are still relying on good old fashioned cash and help from complicit big banks. The amount of money involved with money laundering and their fines are astounding, dwarfing any potential use of bitcoin by magnitudes.

Since 2008, over 4.8 billion just in fines has been issued to banks for money laundering charges. In all, over 60 TRILLION (with a T) was traveling through these banking systems. Much of the time, they traced the money directly linked to terrorist organizations. During the New York and Congressional hearings on the subject of digital currencies, the matter of bitcoin was discussed to find its possible role used for money laundering terrorist financing. They almost appeared to smirk when they spoke about the size of bitcoin in relation to the problem. These experts are accustomed to thinking in terms of trillions. Bitcoin’s “float” of available money has until very recently been measured in a few hundred million at most. The supposedly “huge” Silk Road scandal was a relative mosquito on an elephant in comparison.

When it was time for FinCEN Director Jennifer Shasky Calvery to speak, she seemed almost dismissive of bitcoin’s role in financing used for money laundering when compared to traditional currencies which must be traced through trillions in transactions.

Pentagon on watch for disruptive technology worldwide:

USA Today ran an article in January 2014 where bitcoin enthusiasts might be offended as bitcoin was never mentioned – as if the Pentagon was leaving us out. They were reported to be on the lookout for new disruptive technologies that could change the rules of military engagement. They seem to be scouring in all areas that might concern them. They discussed their scrutiny of the patent office’s submittals, military records, and use of all manners of algorithms for tracking emerging trends. They admitted to be focusing trends coming mainly out of China and it noted that China’s military related patents have increased 35% over the past decade. Using a program called  “Horizon Scanning,”They’ve created expensive algorithms to do specialized searches for buzzwords. Yes really.

We already have this; it’s called “Google Trends”.

Some say the term “Military Intelligence” is an oxymoron.

Disruptive Thinkers:

Some military groups seem to be on the right track though. An article dated back in April 2012 called: “The Military Needs More Disruptive Thinkerswas posted on the website “Small Wars Journal”. This small group of quasi-military specialists think outside the box, although they appear to be relatively powerless within major military circle elites. They posit the idea that it would be wise for the military to devise plans to train new disruptive thinkers that would be needed to utilize new technologies. This brings all the ingredients together for what may come for a future use for the Anti-Terrorism group. The CTTSO department seems to realize that virtual currencies are a possible emerging threat, The Pentagon seems to be out in left-field running fancy “Google searches” that don’t seem to be finding hits on “virtual currencies” but that will change. There seems to be only one small department in the US of forward thinking disrupters trying to recognize the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats (SWOT) before anybody else.

Turning the Tables:

The “Dark Market” has established crowd funded websites featuring “hit man for hire” schemes. These sites might be nonsense and I’m not promoting the idea of a free-market hit man to start advertising their services for nefarious purposes. This idea sounds creepy and I’m not advocating it in any possible way. However, it might just be a matter of time before somebody connects the dots. Is it not possible to use the disruptive nature of bitcoin to turn the tables and create a “Bitcoin for Bad Guys” strategy?

Military or governments may see strategic opportunity using “Game Theory” for virtual currencies to be a “disruptive” new technology fighting terrorism. How hard would it be to place a bounty paid in digital currency paid to an anonymous wallet? Some may wonder how tempting would it be for a sleeper cellmate to “go for the gold” and finish the job themselves?  At some point somebody’s going to pull out a calculator and figure it’s possibly more accurate and cheaper than a drone strike. Terrorists would have to continually look over their shoulder and wonder which among them is REALLY committed to the ideal verses who is picturing a new beach house.

Our community is custom to thinking ahead of the curve and we are a creative in ways both good and bad (subjectively). In this vein, is it difficult to imagine that in some conference room some day, there will be a military sub-committee looking at this very issue? It seems likely that some military council will eventually get around to asking … “Can this technology reduce spending hundreds of billions on tanks, missiles, warships and jets”?

They might look at the costly after-effects of war including Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and high military suicide rates and consider all options versus having to make that dreaded knock at the door to face the victim’s family. Somebody’s likely going to come around to the fact that this technology might eventually be adopted by some country or organization in the world. It may just be a matter of fate. The price of bitcoin, or other virtual currencies would have to continue to skyrocket for this to be monetarily feasible  and liquidity resistance would also need to be a thing of the past. But with new incentives to consider, perhaps that is an item for consideration some time down the road.

It is likely that the majority of readers of this magazine will consider this idea controversial, as they should. Somebody is going to raise questions about these ideas at some point and they will be debated in public and will likely be debated in private military circles as well. As the technology won’t be uninvented – the roads leading to the possible outcomes of the technology will not simply be closed.

Bitcoin Magazine recognizes the importance of encouraging thought leaders in the community to identify emerging trends and roles of virtual currencies and discuss them publicly. We take the role of being an established leader at the forefront of this technology seriously. Regarding the ideas of “Bitcoin for Bad Guys”; perhaps we should ask ourselves the common scientific question, ”just because we can, does it mean we should?” One day we may be at the crossroads of that question for bitcoin bounties, hopefully we’ll have had time to prepare for the answer before we get there.

What do you think?

The Declaration of Bitcoin’s Independence

We have been brought to a point where it has become necessary to dissolve the bond between currency and institution. We are not required to declare the causes which impel us to push for the separation, but we will oblige.

We hold these truths to be self-evident. We have been cyclically betrayed, lied to, stolen from, extorted from, taxed, monopolized, spied on, inspected, assessed, authorized, registered, deceived, and reformed. We have been economically disarmed, disabled, held hostage, impoverished, enervated, exhausted, and enslaved. And then there was bitcoin.

But we are in an age of appropriation, and nothing is immune. Today bitcoin is not only volatile in its value, but in its very essence. Bitcoin is in the crucial stages of development. Its code can evolve in several directions. It’s under threat from those who don’t understand it; it’s under threat from those who do understand it, but fear it.The crusade to absorb bitcoin into the seams of the State has begun. There is a conscious effort to co-opt. The goal is to swallow bitcoin, process it, integrate it, devolve it, and keep it stagnant in the gears of a failed operating system. Bitcoin’s potential is being hijacked. They have their own idea of what they want bitcoin to be. They have their own plan for its potential, and they have an investment in that plan. But our consent is withdrawn and the power of our ideas is too strong.

Do not underestimate DNA; nothing is born completely neutral. Follow the protocol: it has anarchistic implications. Bitcoin is inherently anti-establishment, anti-system, and anti-state. Bitcoin undermines governments and disrupts institutions because bitcoin is fundamentally humanitarian. There’s an elimination of 3rd party intrusion. It’s purely peer-to-peer. The blockchain is free speech. It’s decentralized, voluntary, and non-aggressive. Bitcoin is not supposed to work within our current mechanisms. Bitcoin needs not entities of authority to acknowledge it, incorporate it, regulate it, and tax it. Bitcoin does not pander to power structures, it undermines them.

Bitcoin is an animal of anonymity. Bitcoin basks in shadow. Satoshi’s facelessness is symbolic of this. Privacy is the point. Bitcoin is meant to function outside of regulatory systems. It is not a cog.

Bitcoin means to channel economic power directly through the individual. This is reflected by Satoshi’s symbolic birthday, which falls on the same day that Roosevelt signed the 6102 Executive Order, which forbade the hoarding of gold. We repeat. Bitcoin is not intended to be integrated; it’s intended to be a ghost outside the machine.

The voices of the people who are working to preserve the purity of bitcoin’s ethos are being drowned out. But actions speak louder than words. Bitcoin is utility. The cypherpunks are building anonymous systems. The crypto-anarchists are making institutions arbitrary. The internet is anarchy. And cryptocurrencies are the printless fingers of the internet.

Bitcoin is not just a currency, a commodity, or a convenience. Just like the internet gave information back to the people, Bitcoin will give financial freedom back to the people. But that’s only the first step. There will be a shift in the structure of enterprise, in the way we interact, in the way we voice our opinions, and in the way we fuel our action. Bitcoin will allow us to shape the world without having to ask for permission. We declare bitcoin’s independence. Bitcoin is sovereignty. Bitcoin is renaissance. Bitcoin is ours. Bitcoin is.

This post has been translated to Dutch as well.

 

Bitcoin Needs Employers, Not Merchants

Disclosure: the author of this article is a partner at KryptoKit

One of the more exciting things to come out of the Bitcoin economy in the last month is the sheer number of new merchants that are accepting it. In the past week alone, we have the Scottish tech store CeX accepting Bitcoin for one of its new promotional offers and including in one of its stores a Bitcoin ATM, Bitcoin merchant payment processing company raising $30 million from Index Ventures and Richard Branson, as well as breaking 30,000 merchants, a large store in Sweden taking BTC, and existing Bitcoin businesses like Cheapair and BTCTrip are expanding their offerings into hotels. Even US politicians can now legally accept Bitcoin donations. However, at the same time, actual Bitcoin adoption is proceeding considerably more slowly. Transaction counts and unique address counts have only just stopped declining since the last bubble and are starting to recover, and Google search volume is still going down, though historically it is known that search volume is one of the last indicators to reverse a downward trend after a Bitcoin bubble. By now, the majority of people in developed countries have heard of Bitcoin, and they have either made the choice to use it or not use it. If we want to see Bitcoin getting used by more people, it is thus the Bitcoin ecosystem itself that needs to change.

In my view, however, what needs to change the most is a fundamental shift in focus in terms of how we want to see cryptocurrency adopted. Currently, the way that ordinary consumers are “supposed” to use Bitcoin is as follows:

1. Buy bitcoins at an exchange, incurring heavy inconvenience providing documentation and waiting for account activation, or at localbitcoins or an ATM, paying a 3-15% fee.
2. Spend those bitcoins at a merchant.

Let us analyze the benefits of doing this versus the traditional credit card approach. First off, the total fee using Bitcoin is substantially larger than the 3% charged by credit cards and Paypal. In some cases, it is less; for example, in the US one can buy bitcoins at a 1% fee with Coinbase, but in many other countries it is substantially higher. Second, the hassle is higher. Most people already have credit cards, and getting set up with Bitcoin is a hassle. Finally, Bitcoin has much higher volatility risk. In some cases, for example where privacy is an issue, credit cards are not available in certain countries or are even used as mechanisms to enforce region blocking, or the recipient does not have a bank account, Bitcoin is superior, but by and large there is little advantage for the consumer to fall into this pattern.

Now, let us consider an alternate case: an employee receives part, or all, of their salary in Bitcoin. In that case, that employee now has two choices:

1. Save the bitcoins, and eventually spend them at a merchant.
2. Convert them to cash, paying a 1-5% fee (generally, more people want to buy than sell, so the “street” fees are lower on the sell side).

In this case, (1) is in very many cases a superior value proposition, especially when combined with the convenience of browser wallets like Kryptokit as well as cash-back offers from Gyft or the money-saving Amazon pass-through service Zincsave. Of course, there is also the option of declining the bitcoins and taking fiat, presumably at a 0% fee, but the general point is that that when people receive bitcoins through their employer the equation radically shifts in Bitcoin’s favor. Now, there remains one question: don’t the conversion fees just get passed on to the employer? However, here there are two solid answers. First, the process of obtaining bitcoins is done by fewer employers, and therefore in larger volumes, reducing fees drastically. Second, quite often the employer should not need to pay any fees at all – specifically, if they are also accepting BTC as a merchant and thus directly receiving it from customers. In the long term, ideally more and more businesses would start both accepting BTC as merchants and paying out BTC to desiring employees, thereby creating increasingly large closed-loop economies with no fees at all.

So why isn’t this happening already? The main issue is a practical one. Although platforms for accepting Bitcoin as payment do exist, and platforms for sending Bitcoin to employees exist, the platforms do not talk to each other. Both input-side and output-side platforms exist independently of each other, and both assume that the business ultimately wants to send and receive fiat currency. There is also another issue: volatility risk. Although businesses that use Bitcoin on both the input and output side would end up shuffling a lot of BTC through directly, one can expect there to be an unpredictable imbalance between the two sides, and so the business would need to keep some quantity of BTC on hand as “float”, and thereby be vulnerable to gains and losses from the change in the Bitcoin price.

To the former concern, the solution is obvious: make a platform that handles both the input and output sides simultaneously. To the second, there are two solutions. The first is hedging: use a platform like Bitfinex to make a leveraged bet against the Bitcoin price going up, and constantly adjust the size of this bet so that the Bitcoin price going up by $1 equally benefits the business by increasing the value of its BTC holdings and hurts it because of the leveraged bet in the opposite direction on the exchange. In this circumstance, of course, the Bitcoin price going down by $1, or by $200, would also have no net effect, so the business is (almost) completely insulated from all upward and downward risk. The second is simpler: give employees who want BTC the option of receiving a “mystery amount” of the currency per day, and calibrate that amount to be exactly equal to all incoming BTC receipts. The rest of their salaries would then of course be paid in traditional fiat currency. A third solution is a hybrid approach: send as much BTC as possible directly from customers to employees’ wallets, and get the rest from an exchange or sell it at an exchange. A full-stack input-and-output enterprise-bound Bitcoin payments platform should ideally support all options.

Finally, of course, such a scheme requires not just technology but a few daring businesses willing to adopt it. Some companies, like blockchain.info, are content to go 100% BTC, but traditional firms are of course not willing to take such a leap. TigerDirect and Overstock, however, would likely be quite happy to integrate a platform as I described above if only someone were to create it. There are undoubtedly enough tech geeks in both companies to completely absorb all of the incoming customer BTC straight into their pockets, and smaller Bitcoin businesses should also try the same thing. The pitch to businesses is simple: some of your customers want to pay Bitcoin, some of your employees almost certainly want to receive at least some Bitcoin, so meet both needs at the same time and cut costs on both ends.

Aside from reducing fees, widespread adoption of such a scheme would not only cut fees down drastically, but also help stabilize the Bitcoin price. Right now, absent deliberate speculation, the default pressure on the Bitcoin price is down. The reason is that there are much more people spending Bitcoin than earning it, and the coins paid to those earning it are generally paid out of the pockets of BTC-holding venture capitalists or customers and not bought at an exchange. If this happens, however, the equation will change, since the default destination for bitcoins spent by customers will simply be tech enthusiasts’ wallets. The price will thereby be able to stay more stable in the long term even without large new waves of interest. And of course, hopefully, the larger number of consumers ready to spend bitcoin will be what actually drives the next wave.

Who Is Bitcoin Girl?: A Conversation with Naomi Brockwell

Bitcoin is more than a currency and more than a protocol. It’s an idea. In order to spread, ideas need a communicator. They need a representative. In short, they need a face.

Bitcoin has found that face in Bitcoin Girl, the always-effervescent Naomi Brockwell. Born and raised in Australia, Brockwell leverages her intrigue and charm to craft educational, informative videos about all things crypto-currency. Degrees in acting, classical music, and musical theatre, combined with a lifelong passion for economics, have prepared her to take on the role as an unofficial spokesperson for a revolutionary technology.

In addition to Bitcoin Girl, Brockwell is a policy associate at the New York Bitcoin Center, a member of the advisory council of the Mannkal Economic Education Foundation, a program officer at the Moving Picture Institute, and CEO & founder of Rainsworth Productions. Her feature film Subconscious is currently in post-production.

Naomi and I recently had a delightful conversation about bitcoin, art, and freedom.

Joseph S. Diedrich: When and why did you come to the United States?

Naomi Brockwell: I came to the United States about 3½ years ago to study opera just for a couple of months. But as soon as I realized what there was for me in New York, it became very clear that I couldn’t go back without making the most of all the opportunities. Since then, my focus has shifted to film, simply because of the opportunities that have presented themselves.

JSD: How would you compare Australians’ perspective on bitcoin with that of Americans?

NB: I go back to Australia twice a year. As far as I can see, bitcoin nodes are a good reflection of how well bitcoin is or isn’t integrated into society. In the entirety of western Australia, there’s one node. That’s in stark contrast to New York. I can basically live within the bitcoin world here. I can buy my groceries with bitcoin. I can buy dresses with bitcoin. I can pay my lawyer with bitcoin.

I definitely see a big future for bitcoin in Australia. Australians have a very individualistic mindset. We’re always looking for avenues that are outside of the government sphere and outside of corporate interests. I think the difference in adoption right now is an educational issue.

JSD: Do you recall how you first became aware of bitcoin?

NB: Yes. I was at an economics conference about two years ago. A friend of mine had a Casascius coin, which is a physical bitcoin. I had heard the buzzword before simply because of the circles I was involved in, but I had never had taken the time to really understand it. My friend explained to me what bitcoin was in detail.

It was and is exciting for me to see this new potential open up before my eyes. We’ve had a government monopoly on currency for a really long time. Suddenly, we have a competitive currency. We have a digital currency that’s keeping up with the digital age and a global currency that’s keeping up with our global economy. Our currency finally seems to be in line with where we’re at technologically.

It worries me that there are attempts to integrate bitcoin into the existing financial system. If it were up to me, I’d say we should allow bitcoin to reinvent the framework. I’d like to see what blossoms if we were to just let it be.

JSD: What do you think the most important event in the history of bitcoin has been so far?

NB: The bitcoin world moves so incredibly fast. I just got back from the Toronto Bitcoin Conference. One of the founders ofethereum was talking about some aspects that they weren’t unrolling for a really long time…you know, six months. To them, that’s a really long time. This technology evolves so quickly. It’s exciting to think about what the bitcoin landscape, the economic landscape, will look like in ten or twenty years from now.

JSD: Over those next ten or twenty years, what do think the biggest challenge facing bitcoin is?

NB: Like with anything new, you’re going to have a lot of people trying to guard the past. New things are scary to people, and when you don’t understand something, that’s especially frightening. I think the biggest challenge is going to be overcoming the demonization of bitcoin, which the mainstream media and government have been perpetuating. We need to teach people what bitcoin actually is. It could be a vehicle for peace. It could be a vehicle for elevating people out of poverty. It could address many social problems. If people realize this, then we’re going to see widespread adoption.

JSD: How can bitcoin empower artists?

NB: Bitcoin can change an artist’s process of monetizing what they do. Microtransactions play a huge part in that. iTunes recognized a market and said let’s allow people to download music and pay per song. People want to buy in smaller quantities, so let’s enable them with a really secure method. That’s when you saw music piracy really go down. At the moment, you also have digital subscriptions to newspapers. You might only read the newspaper once a week, but you’re still paying for the entire subscription. I think what we’re going to start seeing more and more of is the ability to pay per article, especially in bitcoin. We’ll also see donations for free content as a way of showing appreciation for the work of writers, authors, musicians, and filmmakers. We’re going to see more of that now because we finally have an affordable method of transferring value.

The Moving Picture Institute is very interested in bitcoin. They see its potential for lifting people out of poverty and as being a tool for freedom of speech. They’re also interested in the technology and its ability to regulate itself. Working for MPI combines two of my loves—film and monetary policy.

JSD: How long have monetary policy and economics been on your mind?

NB: I’ve always been very interested in individual rights and freedom, and I actually started out studying economics. The passion was really sparked, however, when I moved to New York—the financial capital of the world. I became surrounded by brilliant minds who opened my eyes. Economics is the foundation of society and the fabric of civilization.

JSD: What made you decide to become Bitcoin Girl?

NB: I was heavily involved in bitcoin. I became Policy Associate at the Bitcoin Center when it first opened. I had been trading in the futures market for a while. There were huge changes happening. They were really starting to look into the holes in the Mt. Gox system. There were a lot of things going on that people weren’t talking about except on written forums.

I recognized that educating people about bitcoin is so important, but the avenues that were used to discuss bitcoin were all very esoteric. Reddit isn’t accessible to a lot of people. We needed a voice for bitcoin that was accessible to more people. Using video for educating people was and is necessary to combat the vilification and demonization of crypto-currency. Bitcoin needs physical voices and faces. That’s why I’m so excited about some of the bitcoin-related projects I’m working on with the Moving Picture Institute. They really recognise the power of film in educating people about important issues (thempi.org).

JSD: What do you hope to accomplish as Bitcoin Girl?

NB: Film is an incredible medium for communicating with people. I can use it to help people understand something I think is really important. That’s what I hope to achieve.

JSD: One last question. What can the average person do in their everyday life to further the cause of liberty and freedom?

NB: I think that having strong principles, a lot of integrity, and fighting for what you believe in is the most important thing that you can do. Stand by your convictions. Be open-minded enough to hear other people’s side of things. Don’t be a fence-sitter. Become educated about things. Realize that if you don’t fight for people who don’t have a voice, then it’s the same as persecuting them yourself.

 

BitPay Raises Record $30M in Series A Led by Index Ventures

This morning BitPay, one of the industry’s largest business and payment solutions providers, announced some very big news, bringing sizable implications for the future of Bitcoin as both a payment method and emerging technology. The company announced what has become the record for funding of any business in the Bitcoin space. Led by international venture capital firm Index Ventures, BitPay has raised $30 million in Series A, bringing their astronomical grand total of $32.7M in funding.

The round of funding further solidifies the company’s continued growth, innovation and outreach which has helped the currency reach new heights. With support from many venture capital firms and big names like Sir Richard Branson, BitPay’s Series A funding was received from all over the world – London, Geneva, New York, San Francisco and Hong Kong. This news drives home the point that the Bitcoin business, the payment method and technology are here for good. By raising more venture funding than any bitcoin business, the Atlanta based company plans on tripling its workforce throughout the world, in addition to continuing to expand its solutions for merchants who want to start accepting bitcoin.

The company released an official press release this morning, which follows:

Bitcoin payments pioneer BitPay raises record $30M in Series A led by Index Ventures

Atlanta, GA – 8 May 2014 – BitPay, the world leader in business solutions for Bitcoin digital  currency, today announces a Series A funding round of $30M (€22M), led by Index Ventures, with participation from Horizons Ventures, Founders Fund, Felicis Ventures, RRE Ventures, TTV Capital, Sir Richard Branson, and AME Cloud Ventures.

With total accumulated investment reaching $32.7M, BitPay has now raised more venture funding than any other bitcoin startup. This fundraising round includes powerful venture capital from London, Geneva, New York, San Francisco and Hong Kong. Mr. Jan Hammer from Index Ventures will be joining BitPay’s Board of Directors, along with Mr. Jimmy Furland who represents the original investor group.

BitPay now processes $1 million per day in bitcoin payments for over 30,000 merchants, 50% of whom are in the U.S., with 30% in Europe and 20% across the rest of the world. Its customers include WordPress, TigerDirect, and Shopify. Sir Richard Branson’s commercial space travel company Virgin Galactic also uses BitPay to accept payments in bitcoins.

The company plans to use the investment to expand globally and create around 70 jobs, more than tripling the company’s workforce across its teams in Atlanta, San Francisco, Buenos Aires and Amsterdam. The majority of the new positions will be developers who will work under co-founder Stephen Pair. In addition to BitPay’s core merchant acquiring products, the company is also developing open source projects around Bitcoin such as Bitcore, Insight, and Copay.

“Bitcoin is a borderless and frictionless payment system, which is nearing a tipping-point moment in terms of merchant adoption,” said BitPay co-founder Tony Gallippi. “Unlike existing payment technologies such as credit cards, with their high fees and risk of fraud and chargebacks, bitcoin was designed for the Internet age, offering companies a lower-cost, lower-risk alternative.”

Index Ventures partner Jan Hammer added: “Bitcoin has emerged as the Internet’s payment system of choice and is now a core building block of the future global economy. By enabling thousands of merchants to accept payment in bitcoins quickly, safely and seamlessly, BitPay is already the proven and trusted winner in this space. Tony, Stephen and the team have achieved a fantastic amount with scant resources, and the combination of the huge market opportunity, the quality of the talent and this fresh injection of capital, will surely propel them to success on a global scale.”

“We are active in the Atlanta community, focused on innovative financial services technology, and believe the financial industry is the foundation of all commerce,“ said Gardiner Garrard, Co-Founder and Managing Partner, TTV Capital. “We see BitPay playing a key role in the future of electronic payments and paving the path for [the] digital currency bitcoin.”

 

About BitPay

BitPay is a Payment Service Provider (PSP) specializing in e-commerce, B2B and enterprise solutions for the Bitcoin digital currency.

www.bitpay.com

About Index Ventures

Index Ventures is a multi-stage international venture capital firm based in London, San Francisco and Geneva. Since 1996, Index has teamed up with exceptional entrepreneurs in more than 20 countries, who are using technology to reshape the world around us. The companies they’ve started include Adyen, ASOS, Climate Corp, Criteo, Dropbox, Etsy, Hortonworks, Just Eat, King, Moleskine, Nasty Gal, Ozon, Pure Storage, Skype, SoundCloud, Sonos, Supercell, Transferwise and Wealthfront.

www.indexventures.com

Bitcoins: Made in China

[Note: click here for a PDF version]

Abstract: The discussion over the actual costs of maintaining a decentralized seigniorage network is a new area of research. In practice it appears that the logistical cost of operating the Bitcoin network rises linearly with its total value. More efficient mining gear does not reduce energy use of the Bitcoin network. It only raises the network difficulty. The proof-of-work method used to mitigate rogue attacks must expend real work, which means it must consume energy. Consequently, the price of bitcoin reflects its demand which in turn incentivizes hardness, which reflects how much work goes into the proof-of-work scheme, which directly converts into how much energy is being expended.

Moses Lake, Northern Europe, Canada and now China. What do these geographic regions have in common? Relatively cheap electrical costs and an environment that is increasingly conducive for acting as a natural exergetic heat reservoir. In the case of China, the issue is more complex because mining is incentivized by subsidized coal power plants – that is to say, the actual costs of operating a mining pool in China are externalized by taxpayers in China.

Why are pools moving to these regions in the first place?

Mining most proof-of-work-based (PoW) cryptocurrencies (such as bitcoin and litecoin) is an increasingly energy intensive operation; the fact that all seigniorage gets burned up from hashing is the essence of crypto scarcity.[1] Nobody has an incentive to produce additional units of the token. Some commentators seem to think that it is an inherently beneficial phenomenon, that the market cap is greater than the cost of minting the coin. But the fact that MV> MC (marginal value is greater than the marginal cost) is the reason policy makers typically argue that money needs to be a state sanctioned monopoly.[2] In contrast, private seigniorage incentivizes the production of money until MV=MC (note: this is not an endorsement of either but serves as a historical explanation).[3]

Because outputs (blocks) are fixed, the amount of inputs will vary according to profitability forecasts.[4] That is to say, economically rational miners will direct their depreciating capital goods towards the most profitable activity, comparing the expected mining award to the variable operating costs (electricity, mostly).[5]

As noted in a working paper last month, the price level of tokens such as bitcoin is determined by market participants based on supply and demand.[6] The value of a token serves as a signaling mechanism for miners to either partake in the effort to hash blocks or to redirect their effort towards other more profitable tokens relative to the difficulty rating.

In addition, there is one variable cost that all large scale mining operations must take into account: electrical costs. For the same reason that cloud computing providers such as Facebook, Microsoft and Google have scoured the globe for prime locations based on reliable always-on electricity, settling down in areas like Prineville, Oregon or Quincy, Washington (whose facilities are powered by the Wanapum Dam), 98% – 99% of the operating costs for large professionally run mining pools boil down to electricity and cooling costs.[7]

Andrew Poelstra recently published a paper regarding ASICs and decentralization. In one passage he notes that:[8]

[D]edicated hardware brings us closer to the thermodynamic limit, and is therefore eventually a good thing for mining decentralization. Also, because ASIC’s produce more hashes for the same amount of energy, they produce stronger proofs-of-work with proportionally less environmental impact.

This is false as it is conflating network difficulty with probability of successful attack. Only capital burned influences the latter.[9] The only thing that would cause less environmental impact without affecting security is an increase in the price of electricity which is discussed later. Even at the thermodynamic limit, network difficulty will still fluctuate with the price of electricity and the price of bitcoin. Thus, the difficulty can change but capital spent hashing remains the same (or vice versa). Furthermore, centralization is incentivized due to network propagation constraints, an issue that Jonathan Levin dubs “Hash War 2.0” – and as a consequence peering agreements now exist among the larger pools to propagate the blocks faster by removing all of the unnecessary hops and overhead a decentralized network creates.[10][11]

China

If you have never lived or worked in China then you are likely unaware of the all-important concept of guanxi (social connections). While the PBOC has alluded to the fact that it does not want China to lead the globe in either Bitcoin volume or regulatory governance, guanxi – or lack thereof – is what likely doomed the exchanges.[12] Exchange operators did not have the right guanxi with the right government officials. Despite the seeming financial success of several exchanges, they still could not overcome the political issues as it relates to personal connections; thus the effort needed to obtain the correct guanxi for survival was apparently beyond the financial incentives of operating an exchange.[13]

In contrast, miners in China have taken a different approach and have found the right people to partner with (at least for the moment). One such team is working within the current system and has access to a double digit megawatt power facility, which when coupled together with 3rd party chips, the production costs of which are less than $2.00 / gigahash.

There are at least three other funded teams in China with 3rd party chips (e.g., nangua, “fried cat”) with access to similar energy sources. Some of these have little experience operating and optimizing their own internal networks (to efficiently propagate blocks in and out of their hashing stations). Others are more malevolent, using denial-of-service (DoS) attacks to reduce their competition.  The longer you are offline, the less time you have to hash for a target value (nonces) preventing you from receiving block rewards which currently account for roughly 99.69% of the miner’s income.[14] Yet it should be noted that since mining pools began to aggregate in late 2010 (with Slush) and early 2011, DoS attacks have occurred on a global level and are not merely a Chinese phenomenon.

Throwing a wrench into this issue is the Chinese internet itself because there are essentially just two state-owned providers, China Telecom and China Unicom and they are not exactly best friends and the Great Firewall (金盾工程) itself could potentially affect network block propagation.[15]

Despite these issues, the major draw of China continues to be the electrical costs. This has been the case for several years as the average national rates in both India and China have hovered at approximately 8 cents / kWh which is significantly lower than others such as Denmark at 41 cents / kWh.[16] While Moses Lake in Washington State has made headlines for its 1.7 cents / kWh rates which have attracted numerous pools, in China, some commercial operators can get electricity for 3 cents / kWh.[17] And if you have the right connections (guanxi), you can get it essentially for free. Now, of course it is not free. Nothing is free. Someone bears this cost and that cost is borne by Chinese taxpayers and the environment because these energy generating facilities are almost all coal-powered power plants.[18] While pollution may seem to be a non-issue to most redditors and North American bitcoin holders, these subsidies act in much of the same way as botnets did two years ago, externalizing the true costs of the network, distorting the marketplace by incentivizing activity (mining) that would not exist in an actual open market. Or in other words, ex-China, mining operations would likely still be taking place in other regions and the collective network hashrate and therefore difficulty rating would be lower enabling other marginal miners to still compete. Outside participants cannot unilaterally blame the Chinese for this as other similar distortions existed in the past, largely from botnets operated by various malware authors (especially in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union) did and continue to externalize the costs of hashing.[19]

Furthermore you do not have to be Zhang Xin (a real-estate magnate in Beijing) to necessarily benefit from this type of private-public arrangement: other less connected mining operations in China still have access to relatively cheap systems, that once tweaked can operate at less than $2 / gigahash. For these sub-10% hasher pools, because virtually all ASIC chips are now being manufactured in Taiwan, costs come down to volume size and chip cost which are concluded via negotiations.

Cloud Hashing

One particular enterprising Chinese individual has figured out how to do a shanzhai (山寨) form of cloud hashing. While specific commercial numbers are proprietary, the rate comes to less than $3 per ghash.

In terms of the global supply chain, 90% of ASIC chips are made in Taiwan (TSMC), others go through Singapore (Global Foundries), and the remaining parts (PCB, SMT, power, fans, integration) almost all go through Shenzhen,[20] or it will have to in the near future. One estimate explained to me by a mining operator in China is that allegedly more than 25% of all mining may be going on in China and likely more could come online due to these incentives.[21]

For comparison, CEX.io (which currently operates the largest mining pool, GHash.io) is around $3 per ghash and Cloudhashing (in Austin) is around $7-$8 per ghash. Even KnC, which is buildings its own 10 MW powerplant in Sweden will unlikely be able to compete long-term at these rates unless it continues its current business practice of using customer-purchased hardware first before shipping later.[22] In addition, even with Moses Lake competitive rates of 1.7 cents, operators in the US (and Sweden) have to deal with a variety of tax and environmental issues which at this time do not exist in China.

The same source estimates that all told there are at least 2 Western companies and another 5 Chinese companies developing and deploying mining pools in China. In addition, there are also cloned and counterfeit chips running in the wild which can impact the performance of pools (i.e., burn out boards due to fraud). Thus in his estimation, given sluggish prices in bitcoin and rapid growth rate of difficulty this could lead to an unsustainable situation in the medium-term. Or in his words, “irrational exuberance and excitement are being replaced by cold math and a few bankruptcies.” One such bankruptcy was Alydian.[23]

Furthermore, historically the most important factor to a miner’s profitability is fast access to the latest chips. Actually, according to professional miners, the most important factor is access to a working system with the fastest chip. Because these chips draw so much power, it is hard to produce stable, working systems. For instance, Hashfast purportedly has the best chip in the world, but has failed to ship working systems due in part to power issues.[24] A few days of hashing with the newest ASIC chips, when you were hashing at magnitudes faster than the competition, will more than cover the electricity costs for the lifetime of the chip.[25]  However most hardware becomes obsolete in a matter of months and the turnover within this segment inevitably leads to incentives to create other profitable altcoins utilizing the same hardware. In the event of a block reward halving, this could lead to an exodus of miners looking to profitably hash for more profitable rewards. This is an issue that will likely need to be researched more within the next two years.

And while capital costs still arguably play the most important role in determining whether marginal participants should choose to join the mining effort in the first place, there is a major reason why large mining facilities have not set up in Denmark or Germany. In contrast, in 2009 Google purchased an old paper mill and set up a data center facility in Hamina, Finland due in large part to its energy infrastructure which was ideal for cooling purposes.[26] Similarly, Bitfury also purchased an old bank, also in Hamina, Finland to capitalize off the geographic cooling advantages.[27]

And barring changes in the incentivization framework, China will likely be “exporting” coins very soon.

A Million Dollar Token

Of all the feedback I received from my previous paper, the one that some Bitcoin adopters have a tough time reconciling is the seigniorage of the network. That is to say, ceteris paribus, the cost of creating a new bitcoin (capital depreciation, electricity, property lease), will eventually equal its market exchange value on average.[28]

Below is a chart I used to estimate the historical lowerbound seigniorage.[29]

figure1 (1)

Pardon the pun, but rather than rehashing the explanation used in the paper, I will focus on one particular hypothetical: a million dollar bitcoin.

While there are at least five exceptions, as noted above, if a token is worth $1 then no more than $1 worth of operating costs will be used to extract that rent by an economically rational miner (homo economicus).[30] Similarly, if a token is worth $1,000, then mining pools will only operate their hashing systems at just below break-even (otherwise they could simply turn off the machines and allow other mining pools to create seigniorage). In practice, many miners do not do this as many believe that any operating loss would eventually be recouped through token appreciation. Since this is the case, Bob effectively buys future network security on that price expectation creating temporary additional hashrate overhang – additional deadweight loss which is anything above 51% of “honest” network hashrate. However unless a survey is done of miners operating at losses, the additional extra operating costs are likely difficult to estimate (hence the lowerbound estimate).

One notable comment I did receive was the following, “that power consumption is already as high as it will ever need to be that is, a million dollar bitcoin will not cost more to process and transactions add nothing to the costs the cost of transactions will go down as volume increases.”

This is false. If each token is worth a million dollars then why would not more people enter the market if you can produce one for $500? What would happen in reality is that if the token level increased to $10,000 then $100,000 and $1 million the same signaling mechanism tells miners when to operate and when to turn off their machines. If a token reached a price level of $1 million today, everyone on the planet would likely try to hash blocks with every available computing resource until that break-even equilibrium was reached (e.g., once operating costs reached token rents). Whereupon, marginal mining participants would once again become purged from the market place as professionalized datacenters capable of profitably scaling are built, merged and acquired. Being purged does not affect the price of the token but it does lead to centralization; as token prices increase only those miners capable of profitably operating at the new level will be able to compete on seigniorage.

In other words, the logistical cost of running Bitcoin rises linearly with its total value.[31] More efficient mining gear (such as ASICs) does not reduce energy use of the Bitcoin network. It only raises the network difficulty. The proof-of-work method must expend real work, which means it must consume energy. Therefore, the price of bitcoin reflects its demand which incentivizes hardness, which reflects how much work goes into the proof-of-work scheme, which directly converts into how much energy is being expended. The end result is that at this level, at $1 million per token, a mining facility would need to expend a similar amount of energy (since ~98% of operating costs are related to electricity). There are very few locations on the globe capable of generating both that kind of electrical production.[32] For instance, in 2016 when block rewards halve (which creates another serious hurdle detailed in another paper last month),[33] if token values were $1 million then mining facilities would essentially need to expend $12.5 million in electricity every 10 minutes or $1.8 billion in electricity each day.[34]

Again, the reason why is because token values signal to miners when to operate and when to shift their labor elsewhere.

This issue was discussed in a paper published in September 2013 by Michael Taylor who studied the evolution of chip designs used in bitcoin mining. He noted that:[35]

However, unlike in the “race to ASIC” days, the cost/performance difference of future generations of hardware will not be great enough to quickly obsolete the last generation. Rather, it will be energy costs that are likely to dictate which ASIC will be the most profitable. This is especially true in the case where there is a supply glut of chips of a given generation, such as is likely to happen in the next year, as the NREs have been paid, and the three groups are simply paying wafer costs now. One can imagine Bitcoin users dumping their chips, and groups with access to cheap energy buying them for almost free and putting them back to use for mining. Of course, there are two factors that dictate energy costs — the cost of energy, and the energy consumption of the part. The parties with the greatest advantage will be those that have cheaper access to large quantities of energy and already have their mining hardware paid off when returns on hashing were higher. Cheaper energy allows these parties to pay off their newly acquired hardware over longer cycles, and to continue to operate even when $ per Gh/s, as shown in Figure 3, drops precipitously low. Others may have an advantage because they have more energy efficient hardware designs.

One common conjecture is whether or not solar power or nuclear power could change this. Unfortunately, this is purely a matter of expending energy and not about what exactly is generating it. Even if you were to replace all the coal powered plants in China (or elsewhere for that matter) with renewable energy, mining facilities would still consume and expend electricity at roughly the same value as a token because MV=MC.[36]

Can distributed workloads create lower energy requirements?

No. Another interesting story in China is a Bitcoin start-up in Beijing that fleshed out a business proposal with a well-known telecommunication provider to integrate ASIC chips inside routers. At the time, the thought was this telecom company could sell the routers globally and users could receive a steady stream of income as routers are typically left on day and night. Ideally this would involve some kind of 70/30 split in which the start-up would receive 30% of the bitcoins generated and the customer would receive the other 70%. Yet the reality of developmental process illustrates how this is unprofitable. It takes between 3-9 months to design an ASIC from scratch and tape-out (3 months assumes double shifts). By the time an ASIC passes its verification process, tapes-out, goes through maskmaking, is shipped to the client, integrated into the router and shipped globally, the ASIC is no longer capable of profitably hashing. In other words, supply chain integration and logistical deployment will likely prevent the dream of everyone globally of having an ASIC processor on their smartphone profitably hashing away at block headers based on electrical consumption alone.

But what happens once the ultimate thermodynamic efficiencies of ASICs are reached, would that lead to any different geographical distribution?

No. Andrew Poelstra’s paper on this subject attempts to broach this topic and comes to the conclusion that once the thermodynamics of a chip are reached, this would lead to decentralization. For the sake of argument, assume that someone like Nvidia, BFL or KnC creates a chip at the Planck length (ℓP).[37] However even at that level, a rational actor would not set up a large pool in San Francisco because of relatively high operating costs. Or in other words, even with the most efficient chip design, the sole competitive force would be electricity. If that is the case, then the chips would simply end up wherever the cheapest energy source is, potentially leading to centralization.  While the issue as to the degree to which centralization is occurring is actively being debated will not necessarily impede the network’s current effectiveness, it could lead to social engineering challenges.

And again, over the past 24 months mining equipment typically had a profitability window of roughly 3-5 months whereupon it would become obsolete by newer and better generations, but this “race” will soon be over. As a consequence a 10% improvement alone will likely not make investing into new mining hardware profitable. More precisely, a 10% improvement in mining hardware efficiency does not provide a competitive advantage over someone who has access to energy at half the cost.

Bitcoin as a Payment Platform

I have written on this topic several times, the latest post of which delved into this particular graph from Blockchain.info: the number of transactions excluding the 100 most popular addresses (such as gambling sites like Satoshi Dice).[38]

blockchaininfo (1)

What this means is that over the past 6 months, there has been essentially no new on-chain transactional volume.  Despite the tens of thousands of merchants that BitPay and others have on-ramped, most users (or rather holders) of bitcoin are unwilling to actually spend it.  Almost all of the additional activity occurs on the edges, in “trust-me” silos which defeats the purpose of having a blockchain. This is not to say that trusted solutions do not provide utility (in fact, they empirically do as shown by their continued popularity), however, users of those services are essentially trading IOUs of an SQL entry.

What do other more qualified people have to say about it? I reached out to Jonathan Levin, co-founder of Coinometrics and a post-graduate student at Oxford. His explanation is thus:[39]

  • Looking at some of the mining pools there are plenty of transactions that are used just to pay miners and also to conceal identities.
  • There are also transactions used by exchanges and other large corporations every day for internal settlement and security. Every transaction that gets done through BitPay and the like will inevitably trigger multiple transactions for privacy protections and security.
  • Private individuals also move coins between wallets to ensure privacy and security of funds.

His conclusion is that, “A lot of this creates price insensitive demand for transactions as it is not strictly economic activity.”

This is the Kevin Costner problem: if you build it, will they come? So far the answer has been a muted no. Perhaps this will change as security and usability improves and more merchants and users adopt the technology yet the energy limitation could become a factor.

Aside from edge case security issues, even though historically 0.7 tx are conducted on average per second, perhaps one issue preventing wider spread usage of the Bitcoin network as a payment platform is the artificial 7 tx per second limitation and subsequent confirmation delay.[40] While there are hypothetical workarounds to the transactional limit such as Sergio Lerner’s proposed DECOR protocol – which when paired with GHOST can potentially reach 2,000 transactions per second, it is doubtful that this alone will on-board real-time gross settlement (RTGS) users because any technological benefit that Bitcoin is privy to, will likely benefit the competition as well.[41] For comparison, last fall, Visa reached 47,000 tx per second at the Gaithersburg IBM testing facility. [42]

In the future, merchant processors like BitPay could on-ramp every merchant on the globe and someone else could potentially even solve some of the network delay issues in Jonathan Levin’s upcoming research through the deployment and use of neutrino detectors.[43][44] Yet this is not to say that that increased transaction volume will necessarily require more energy usage. Even though transactions are packed into a block which is then processed and paid for almost entirely by seigniorage rewards which itself changes due to the fluctuation of token prices, the relationship between mining and volume is so far, a side note.

No one has to use the actual network (very few in fact do) for value to be burnt through heat processes.[45] In fact, over the next 6 years, transaction fees could rise substantially (to offset the diminished block rewards) and as a consequence bitcoins may be solely used as a store of value, transmitted intermittently. Yet the token value and the network costs to secure that token can and will still scale linearly.

Thus the energy limits are real and will likely put an upper bound to its ultimate size as described below.

Energy Limits

The issues above are dissimilar to the claims that the internet will not be able to scale, this includes anachronistically hackneyed claims that the internet cannot do voice, quality voice, video or anything larger than a few kilobytes per second. Those were largely caused by immature software stacks and hardware constraints. In contrast, for the Bitcoin network (and other cryptocurrencies using a PoW mechanism), the built-in thermodynamic hurdle still remains. In the event that the token appreciates (which disincentivizes spending due to volatility and also incentivizes continued speculation and stockpiling), the network will cost as much as it is worth.[46]

Following the block reward halving in 2016, a million dollar token would hypothetically incentivize $656.2 billion in expended energy (exergy) per annum, or roughly the current GDP of Switzerland.[47] There is no way around the exergetic requirements (a process Fred Trotter dubs “malignant computation”), it is built into proof-of-work mechanisms and because of a type of regulatory capture (i.e., miners will only hash and protect code that is profitable to them) the PoW mechanism will likely never be switched to something less capital intensive like proof-of-stake.[48] Or in other words, while there may be a hypothetical scenario where Bitcoin could evolve to some more energy efficient block verification model, this is an unlikely possibility because the miners will never agree to it. Furthermore the price is a lowerbound estimate due to exceptions like charitable donations of hashrate. And more precisely, these funds went to utility, energy and hardware companies and not back into the Bitcoin ecosystem, to fund its development.

The end result is a joke a friend in China told me last year when I was helping build Litecoin machines: that taken to an extreme, bitcoin mining (or litecoin mining for that matter) would eventually gravitate to facilities located in the Arctic Ocean, which acts as a natural heat reservoir and dissipater.[49] Peered together with microwave towers these pools would provide the financial backbone – to a network funded primarily through gambling revenue, the networks on-chain “killer app.”[50]

Incidentally, the Hamina site used by Google purportedly features, “underground tunnels running to the Baltic sea, which Google utilized to cool the facility’s servers. The company included the tunnels in the new data center design, utilizing pumps to push cold sea water from the Gulf of Finland into the facility’s cooling system.”[51] Another report notes that Google, “uses the sea to replace the chiller in its cooling system, collecting cool water from an inlet pipe located about 7.5 meters beneath the service of the Baltic Sea. The water than travels into the facility through large tunnels carved out of granite, and is used in a water-to-water heat exchanger.”[52]

In a twist, perhaps the Arctic Ocean joke will not be too far off the mark.

Limitations

Cal Abel, a statistical modeler, suggested that future research look specifically at the time value of money by doing a conventional internal rate of return (IRR) analysis of a miner.[53] According to him, “this will give you an idea of the cost of delaying the mining rig and its future obsolescence.” This could be done by quantifying the cost expended for utilities and real-estate and converting this dollar figure into energy by using what he dubs an energy price index (EPI). This could potentially give a researcher a measure of the computational efficiency (hash/joule of primary energy). Or in his words, “There is some quantum limit to the the energy of a hash, which converts it into energy. This will give you the thermodynamic efficiency of bitcoin and allow you to measure transactions in terms of their ability to do work.”

Among the largest limitations to this approach however is creating a mean, a weighted average for an ASIC-based actor. Since the process of mining is itself decentralized, finding out the location of the miners – and thereby estimating local energy costs as well as the marginal utility of money (because exchange rates and purchasing power varies) – can be obfuscated in a number of ways.  Furthermore, not everyone is using the same set of hardware. In all likelihood, the network is being oversecured by individuals who are providing inefficient hashrate (e.g., operating at a loss) at the network with the future expectation that these token (or more precisely, UTXOs) will appreciate in value.

For instance, based on calculations provided by Dave Babbitt, if all miners were using a new “Minerscube” system, based on its theoretical hashrate, the Hoover Dam Equivalent (HDE) for wattage consumption of these would be 0.002 HDE.[54] In contrast, if miners were all using the original first batch of Avalon, based on current network hashrate this amounts to 0.133 HDE being consumed. Another way of looking at the same phenomenon are estimates by John Ratfcliff who based his on the net profit from the sale of bitcoins.[55]  According to his estimates, the lowerbound is 0.25 HDE and the upperbound is 0.5 HDE.

Thus attempting to quantify the EPI will in practice require producing a range of estimates based on confidence values.

Conclusions

In discussing this issue with Robert Sams of Kryptonomics, he noted that, “Economic logic dictates that eventually all mining will become concentrated in certain areas due to electricity arbitrage, which defeats the whole point of proof-of-work (PoW). One subsequent prediction is that the main casualty of this will be the belief that mining should be an anonymous and permissionless activity.”[56]

In practice, increased anonymity has not been the case as mining pool operators are now accessible to 3rd parties for a variety of reasons.[57] If PoW is to be workable in the long-run, miners will likely need to authenticate themselves to the network in some way – an issue actively being discussed by Mike Hearn over the past six months – with some decentralized vetting process acting as a gatekeeper and potentially denying some of these miners the right to mine.[58]

The environmental dimension and China specifically should be taken with perspective: it is (currently) not a leverage point in the global picture as the automobile itself as a class is a much larger polluter by many orders of magnitude. They were used for illustrative purposes: perhaps other regions like Mongolia or Saudi Arabia will replace China and Moses Lake in the future.[59] Furthermore, the backlash towards China in general related to bitcoin price levels is arguably unwarranted – if the purpose of a peer-to-peer decentralized electronic cash system is to enable and empower the underbanked, then developing countries like China should be embraced irrespective of token valuations.

One common hurdle due to the computational arms race that has arisen is that, proof-of-work scaling ends up moving beyond the reach of the intended hobbyist – moving away from “recreational mining.” Consequently, an unintended consequence is that capital accumulation and therefore mining operations end up in jurisdictions that have superior infrastructure and/or lower energy costs. That is to say, while the underbanked and unbanked are supposedly one of the oft cited use-cases for a decentralized electronic cash system, in practice the only way for those residents to participate today is to purchase tokens through an exchange, because they do not have access to capital for mining equipment or competitive energy sources. And in many cases, there are no reliable exchanges (or even ATMs) to buy from. But that is a topic for another paper.

Internal to cryptocurrency, mining centralization could be viewed as a negative externality and this centralization is being driven by what Sams identifies as large differentials in $/kWh.[60] From this discussion above the key takeaway is the $/ kWh factor which is the core dimension to mining concentration. Over the past two years the discussion has largely been centered on ASICs qua ASICs, which are not really an issue so long as no one entity has a monopoly on the chip design. Instead, $/kWh is the real driver of concentration and future research can be conducted to propose methods for how to deal with it.

Sams proposed the following situation in which the network would apply a different difficulty to different miners, as a function of the price they pay per kWh.[61] According to him, in their view, that would be a levelling and decentralizing force. However, in practice it can only be had by sacrificing the anonymity and permissionless properties of PoW. Even then, it is not clear how to implement this technically, but it could be an area of research because the handwriting is on the wall for the current model. What is happening – geographic arbitrage – should make that clear to other outside parties.

In terms of Andrew Poelstra’s intriguing “thermodynamic limit” to mining, it is valid regarding the physics of the computation. But the economics of mining has gone the opposite direction, a sort of antithesis of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, in the words of Sams: “control of mining operations converge to minimal entropy, a monopoly at the limit, where one party with the cheapest source of electricity ultimately controls the network. Heat spreads out, wealth concentrates.”[62]

While the amount of energy consumed mining bitcoin will always be at least equal to the value of bitcoin produced this is not to say Bitcoin will fail as an experiment or as a store of value. Energy consumption in the long run is not necessarily a condition for success. And even though a relatively large amount of energy will be consumed while bitcoin “bootstraps itself” – it could decline.  Future block halvings may actually end up reducing energy consumption rates if token prices do not rise in tandem.[63]

This topic will likely continue to fill numerous works in the future and should be looked at again in the coming months and years.

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Cal Abel, Dave Babbitt, DC, Joseph Chow, Dan Forster, Philipp Gühring, Karl Holmqvist, Petri Kajander, Jonathan Levin, Andrew Poelstra, John Ratcliff, Bryan Vu, JW and Weiwu Zhang for their feedback and constructive criticism. Special thanks to Robert Sams for his numerous contributions throughout including significant portions of the concluding remarks.

 

Notes

_____________________________

[1] In the economic sense, a more accurate term is “traded;” in the thermodynamic sense, nothing is destroyed. The exergy is more like “converted” from the thermodynamic viewpoint and the security is more like “traded” from the economic viewpoint.

[2] My thanks to Robert Sams of Cryptonomics for pointing this out.

[3] This issue dovetails into more complex discussions involving legal tender laws. Enacting monetary and fiscal policies by fiat has its own series of drawbacks (i.e., interest rates can arbitrarily be set by committee, but these can create time-preference distortions).

[4] For more about the economic inputs and outputs of mining on the Bitcoin network see, Economic Aspects of Bitcoin and Other Decentralized Public-Ledger Currency Platforms by David Evans.

[5] Amortized costs, by definition, are fixed and are therefore irrelevant to the decision to turn the machine on or off (those costs are only considered when deciding to invest in a new machine or not). Before setting up, professional miners will look at calculations for recouping their operating costs and upfront investments (such as hardware, physical plant and real estate).

[6] More specifically, bitcoin price is a function of supply, current demand in the economy, and future demand discounted to present value. See Learning from Bitcoin’s past to improve its future by Tim Swanson.

[7] Facebook Has Spent $210 Million on Oregon Data Center from Data Center Knowledge and Large Crack Found in Dam Supporting Quincy Data Center Cluster from Data Center Knowledge

[8] ASICs and Decentralization FAQ by Andrew Poelstra

[9] Or in other words, network difficulty is an arbitrary metric in and of itself. The probability of success refers to an attacker amassing more than 50% of the hashrate (e.g., 51% attack). You could burn enormous amounts of electricity with CPUs yet fail to generate any meaningful hashrate to attack the network. An ASIC may be able to generate more hashrate than a single CPU but quantity is not the same as quality. One way to measure the quality of the security for a decentralized network is whether or not there are an increasing or decreasing amount of nodes. In this case, centralization of the hashrate has taken place leading to a qualitatively less secure network (due to less decentralization).

[10] [ANN] High-speed Bitcoin Relay Network by Matt Corallo and The Future of Bitcoin: Corporate Mines and Network Peering? from Data Center Knowledge

[11] Personal correspondence, April 8, 2014. See also, Bitcoin Hurdles: the Public Goods Costs of Securing a Decentralized Seigniorage Network which Incentivizes Alternatives and Centralization and Bitcoin Block Propagation Speeds by Ittay Eyal and Emin Sirer

[12] Fairweather fans in bitcoinland disowning China

[13] Chinese Banks don’t know how to act appropriately, because Bitcoin is too tiny by Weiwu Zhang

[14] As of May 6, 2014, according to Blockchain.info, miners received 0.31% of their revenue from transactions, the remaining balance came in the form of block rewards (seigniorage).

[15] Its official name is the Golden Shield Project

[16] See Determining Electrical Cost of Bitcoin Mining by Ruben Alexander and The Average Price of Electricity, Country by Country from The Energy Collective

[17] Ignoring cooling requirements and management overhead another infrastructure issue is that this build-out needs approximately a $100,000 transformer for every 1 megawatt.  See also Bitcoin Miner Taps Dad’s Power Plant in Virtual-Money Hunt: Tech from Bloomberg and The Other Bitcoin Power Struggle from Businessweek

[18] More than two-thirds of China’s energy needs are met through coal-powered power plants. The World Coal Association estimates that 79% of China’s electrical generation capacity comes from coal.

[19] The ZeroAccess Botnet – Mining and Fraud for Massive Financial Gain by James Wyke and Botcoin: Monetizing Stolen Cycles by Huang et. al. Another paper from the same team discusses the differences between “light” and “dark” mining pools, Poster: Botcoin – Bitcoin-Mining by Botnets

[20] SMT stands for surface-mount technology.

[21] F2Pool, also known as Discus Fish, operates one of the largest known pools in China and the world.

[22] KNC attracted unwanted attention in 2014 when following the release of pictures of its mining facility, it was discovered that customer investors (“investormers”) learned how KNC was operating at their expense: KNC received funds from customers, built the systems and then used the machines first for an undisclosed amount of time, generating bitcoins and increasing the difficulty rate at the expense of the customer. This would be akin to the primary dealer in open-market operations which receive US Treasury funds first before everyone else. See Bitcoin Miners Building 10 Megawatt Data Center in Sweden from Data Center Knowledge

[23] A Non-Outsourceable Puzzle to Prevent Hosted Mining by Andrew Miller and CoinLab’s Alydian files for bankruptcy and reveals debt of over $3.6m from CoinDesk

[24] Embattled CEO of Bitcoin miner firm: “We are as poor as church mice” from ArsTechnica

[25] Those gains in magnitude no longer are occurring. Jeff Garzick was one of the first users to receive the first batch of Avalon ASICs in January 2013. He recouped the cost of the order in less than a month. Once upon a time in China, a package shipped by Jeff Garzik, The First Bitcoin ASICs are Hashing Away! from The Bitcoin Trader, AVALON ASIC has delivered first RIG (68GH/s Confirmed) 2nd out proof from Bitcoin Talk and Engineering the Bitcoin Gold Rush: An Interview with Yifu Guo, Creator of the First Purpose-Built Miner from Motherboard

[26] Google | Data Centers Finland, see also DCD industry census 2013: Data center power from Datacenter Dyanmics

[27] See BFSB Finland and Bitcoin sysselsätter i Kimito

[28] Arguably the most important tool for miners and mining operators is a mining profitability calculator which helps (accurately) estimate operating costs and revenue generation. One popular version is the Bitcoinx calculator.

[29] These are lowerbound estimates based on a weighted token over the corresponding time frame. The actual number is likely higher.

[30] These exceptions are 1) botnets, 2) hobbyists, 3) education & research, 4) political actors, 5) “honest” miners who are speculating that the price will increase whereupon their costs are paid for. Four of these are discussed in Learning from Bitcoin’s past to improve its future

[31] My thanks to David Merfield for concisely describing this phenomenon.

[32] This creates centralization issues which in turn leads to social engineering issues (such as regulations, taxes, and vulnerabilities to organized criminals).

[33] See Bitcoin Hurldes. A block reward halving creates a dilemma for miners. In a nutshell they are being asked to continue providing the same amount of labor for half the wages. As a consequence, many will leave and focus on other more profitable jobs (such as altcoins). This was illustrated best with what has happened to Dogecoin this past year.

[34] If it looked like something like that (a large jump in prices) were happening, the Bitcoin network would be dramatically “oversecured” and miners would likely switch to an altcoin with a much lower inflation rate.

[35] NRE stands for non-recurring engineering. See Bitcoin and The Age of Bespoke Silicon by Michael Taylor

[36] There is no such thing as “free” electricity, only cheaper or more abundant. Solar panels (which are also depreciating capital goods) still require upfront costs which are amortized over their lifetime (usually 10-20 years). And the (unseen) knock-on effects of pollution and emissions from the creation of those solar panels needs to be quantified – the supply chain to create these tools which tap into renewable energy needs to be accounted for in such a calculation.

[37] See Dennard scaling, Koomey’s Law and Ultimate physical limits to computation by Seth Lloyd

[38] Will Bitcoin ever be used for its intended purpose on a widespread basis?

[39] Personal correspondence, May 5, 2014. See Coinometrics

[40] I have discussed some of these educations in a presentation given on April 27, 2014 (video) (slides)

[41] Even faster block-chains with DECOR protocol and DECOR+ by Sergio Lerner

[42] Stress Test Prepares VisaNet for the Most Wonderful Time of the Year from Visa

[43] A fun thought experiment involving neutrino detector comes from Peter Todd, see The end of bitcoin is nigh! (Again)

[44] See Creating a decentralised payment network: A study of Bitcoin by Jonathan Levin (forthcoming)

[45] Transactional volume is an unnecessary illustration in this examination. It was used solely to illustrate how the cost of maintaining the network is relatively high despite relatively little transactional action. The bulk of the security is simply for the store of value function. The transactional volume could fall, yet the demand for tokens could rise. If the token value rose, the cost for securing those tokens rises proportionally with it irrespective of transactional volume. Nothing is “left over” from the burning process. Or in other words, the value of a token is function of current or eventual economic demand. Yet, the network hashrate burns the other side of that — the value of the token equals the cost (of some kind of burn) on the other side to secure it.

[46] This is not a complaint about capital savings. One argument could be made that savings creates reserve demand for a currency. Yet in practice, virtually no one spends the token treating it much like a commodity or collectible like a stamp. Thus the term “cryptocurrency” is debatable and in practice it is more akin to a commodity, see Bitcoin: a Money-like Informational Commodity by Jan Bergstra and Peter Weijland.

[47] This figure is generated by the following: 656250 bitcoins mined each year following the block halving multiplied by $1 million per token. As of 2012, the nominal GDP of Switzerland $631 billion.

[48] See Regulatory capture and Malignant computation. There are several proof-of-stake systems under development, yet thus far they have all failed key vulnerability tests leading to some kind of centralization verification process. See also What Are Bitcoin Nodes and Why Do We Need Them? by Daniel Cawrey

[49] Disclosure: I do not own any litecoins nor do I maintain or operate any mining machine of any kind today.

[50] According to one statistical analysis, from between its April 2012 announcement through August 28, 2013, Satoshi Dice-related transactions accounted for 52.3% of all bitcoin transactions. See Re: Satoshi Dice — Statistical Analysis from Bitcoin Talk and A Fistful of Bitcoins: Characterizing Payments Among Men with No Names by Meiklejohn et al.

[51] Google to Increase Finance in Finland Data Center from WiredRE

[52] Sea-Cooled Data Center Heats Homes in Helsinki from Data Center Knowledge and Helsinki data centre to heat homes from The Guardian

[53] Personal correspondence, May 9, 2014. See also, Quantifying the Value of Bitcoin by Cal Abel

[54] Personal correspondence, May 9, 2014. For Babbitt’s calculations see his spreadsheet on Bitcoin Mining

[55] Personal correspondence, May 9, 2014. This is based on a baseline electricity cost of 10 cents per kilowatt hour (kWh) which works out to 16,200,000 kilowatts per day. The Hoover Dam produces 49,920,000 kilowatts per day, so roughly 1/4 the output of the Hoover Dam. In practice, according to him it is likely double this amount as many people are mining at a loss or stealing electricity (or ignoring the electrical component entirely).

[56] Personal correspondence, May 7, 2014.

[57] Implementing sidechains and merged mining for example. See Episode #99 from Let’s Talk Bitcoin

[58] Mike Hearn has proposed using Tor as an authentication mechanism for the network. Miners currently do not know if they are connected to the “right” Bitcoin network. Their connection could be spoofed by a Sybil attack and thus Hearn’s proposal could mitigate some of those risks. See Mike Hearn on Coming Bitcoin Protocol Updates from Money & Tech and 4 New Bitcoin Features Revealed by Core Developer Mike Hearn from Cryptocoins News

[59] Depending on the time of year and quantity, rates in Saudi Arabia can run from $0.03 to as low as $0.01 (wholesale commercial) – however the hot summers make the location less ideal for mining due to the increasingly important cooling requirements. One Chinese reviewer mentioned that in 2012 a team in China conducted a cost/benefit analysis of building a mining pool in Mongolia and came to the conclusion that within 5 years it could likely become a prime location due to its cooler climate and relatively cheap access to energy resources.

[60] Thanks to Robert Sams for this keen insight; spending KhW, a scarce resource, makes a Sybil attack (among others) costly.

[61] Personal correspondence, May 7, 2014.

[62] Ibid

[63] When block rewards halve, this could create network performance issues.  If half the labor force leaves, then the network may have less security that can only be incentivized through transaction fees.  Nicolas Houy has modeled how the fee requirements would necessarily need to increase for the network to maintain the same level that existed prior to the halving, The Bitcoin mining game

A New Benchmark for Scrypt Mining

The technology of Scrypt mining ASICs has exploded in the past year and many believe that 2014 will be the year for mining scrypt based currencies like Litecoin, Dogecoin and Auroracoin. For a company like Bliss Devices, these advancements are providing individuals with innovative chips, faster hashing and lower cost of ownership. In fact, Bliss Devices has just announced what may be the highest performing Scrypt ASIC chip to date.

Bliss Devices was founded by Paul Chen and Steve Zhang, who were integral in the creation of 8 highly-complex ASICs at Fortinet, a global provider of network security appliances and unified threat management. Their background in the creation of high-tech ASICs and experience in network security and semiconductors have been pivotal to Bliss’ initial success and continued product development. Their newest endeavor is the Scryptr Mining Chip.

According to the company, initial testing has outperformed its original targets and has achieved the best power-to-performance ratio of any chip on the market, with a lower cost of acquisition per chip. For many miners in the industry, cost of ownership is most commonly the biggest barrier to entry, in addition to energy consumption. This is also one of the first times that a delivery date has been moved up rather than held back. Many Bitcoin miners experienced this in the early days of mining rigs, ordering rigs and ASICs that were either on backorder or not available until much later, which by that time ended up being obsolete.

However, it seems that Bliss Devices has come up with a product that has surpassed even their own expectations. “Our goal was to significantly improve upon the designs available today and push the limits of today’s advanced technologies, bringing the industrial mining market a solution that exceeds the expanding demands for both Scrypt-based and altcoin mining,” Co-Founder and CEO Paul Chen expressed in a recent press release.

Testing of the company’s newest scrypt ASIC chip began weeks ago and delivered very high performance metrics. Initial testing of the new Scryptr Mining Chip yielded a hash rate between 4.5 MH/s and 4.8 MH/s, while only requiring 18W of power per chip. The company will offer both a standalone Scryptr chip and Neon Mining Cards that each contain 8 Scryptr chips providing a total of 37 MH/s of hashing power. The devices have a variety of interface options including PCIe/PCI, SPI, or USB, which will be scalable to 127 cards on a single USB backplane. When mounted on a Neon Mining Card, the Scryptr consumes an industry low for power consumption of 4.5W per MH/s, giving it one of the lowest power-to-consumption ratios in the scrypt mining industry.

Today’s miners are constantly on the hunt for hashrate, but this often comes at a price. Industrial miners want the most cost effective mining equipment that has the highest ROI, and if it breaks the bank initially, they believe the performance will far outweigh the cost. Miners evaluate this ROI by taking a look at three main metrics: the price of hashing power, the cost to run it and the ship date. Abram Kottmeier, Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer of Bliss Devices said, “Miners want to know much hashing power they can buy and what the total cost of ownership will be. I think miners will be blown away when they see the results of our FPGA (field-programmable gate array) prototyping tests.”

The full test setup and report, including a video of the testing, can be found at http://blissdevices.com/key-milestone-successful-fgpa-demo/

The Neon Mining Card could be the new benchmark for Scrypt mining and by providing cards with flexible interface options, Bliss Devices is providing differentiated solutions for miners to optimize their operations. The company can also provide solutions for mining projects of all sizes, with custom system designs which include Neon Mining Cards and their hardware development kit. For the company’s newest endeavor, Bliss Devices has expedited the availability of both Neon Mining Cards and the Scryptr chip from October 2014 to August 2014. Keep on the look out for some high powered and cost-effective scrypt miners to be coming out of California in the very near future.

 

Storage Meets Usage with New Bitcoin Development

The latest Bitcoin development just might revolutionize the popular cryptocurrency, fueling the largest cryptocurrency network.

Last week, a company known for offering a secure place for customers to safely store their bitcoins has expanded into new territory.

In the past, Xapo’s objective has been to build trust in the cryptocurrency industry by providing a secure vault, a place where users can store their bitcoins and be  assured they are safe.  After assembling a team of financial services and security experts, the tech company has designed a link between storage and usage.

According to Xapo, “By offering two distinct products – a free, easy-access Wallet and a fully-insured Vault – we’re marrying the convenience bitcoin users want for everyday needs with the security they require for confident bitcoin savings.”

Xapo Vault provides customers with “fully-insured storage for long-term savings, while the Xapo Wallet provides easy, immediate access for day-to-day purchases.”

In an interview with Techcrunch, founder and CEO of Xapo, Wence Casares, said most of their customers keep 90 percent of their bitcoin in the company’s vault, and the other 10 percent in their wallets. With the new link between storage and usage, customers can now have that 10 percent instantly transferred to cash.

One of the most attractive features about the Xapo Wallet is that it’s free. Transfers in or out to other Xapo wallet holders are also free.

Instead, vendors pay transaction fees, just like they would with a credit card purchase. While many are happy to see the vendor responsible for the fees, rather than the customer, others think vendors should also benefit from accepting Xapo Wallet.

“The thing that bums me out about the Xapo Debit Card is the merchant still doesn’t reap any of the benefits, correct? They’re still paying the high Credit Card fee?” wrote Reddit user Markateer.

Despite certain limitations, Xapo Wallet is fast, and pretty convenient, considering it can be used from anywhere in the world, granted there’s an Internet connection.

Signing up is pretty easy too. Simply go to www.xapo.com and click “Debit Card.” There you can enter in your email address and pre-order your card today. Orders should begin shipping in about two months. A digital card for online purchases is free, but users are required to pay a $15 fee in order to receive a physical card. Both possess a credit card number complete with an expiration date that can be used to make purchases online.

However, as expected with the early stages of any new technology, there are still inconveniences. One major hiccup is that you still can’t withdraw money from an ATM.  Secondly, you can only use the Xapo Wallet with vendors who accept MasterCard.

In time, the new link between storage and usage is expected to become more convenient. Xapo CEO Casares says the new technology isn’t designed for bitcoin fanatics, but for average users like your grandma.

Through the combination of trust and accessibility, Xapo has built a company capable of providing a unique service of online and offline security.

Bitcoin the Environmentalist

A lot has been made of Bitcoin’s environmental impact. With the mining network now more powerful than all of the world’s top supercomputers combined, it’s understandable that some people would become concerned about power consumption and waste. Shouldn’t there be a better way to do this, and is it even worth it, at all?

First, to answer the former question. One alternative to using processing power to mint coins–known as proof-of-work–is the proof-of-stake system. In proof-of-stake, new coins are minted (and the network secured) by those holding coins in the same place for a period of time. This, however, concentrates control of the money supply directly into the hands of the wealthy, and discourages the spending and trade in the economy.

One would think that we could use all of that mining power to solve practical problems, but the reality is more complicated. A cryptocurrency must follow an algorithm that can be easily calculated one way but is immensely difficult to calculate in reverse, and few practical problems meet these conditions. Even Primecoin, which servers to calculate new prime numbers, can only calculate primes of very specific types.

So what is there to do? The reality is, we don’t need to do anything. Bitcoin miners already serve a practical purpose: they secure a free, decentralized financial system. Conversely, consider the power expenditure of many obsolete facets of the traditional financial system–armored cars, posh banking lobbies, and countless bureaucrats who spend their wealth on luxuries while contributing proportionately little to society. Combined, these things are more wasteful than cryptocurrency enthusiasts could ever be.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin will continue to improve. Mining hardware gets more efficient every day, with rising investment costs but drastically-reduced power consumption. Large mining centers can easily relocate to countries where clean electricity is in high supply, and provide heat in cold weather. The banking system, on the other hand, has no intention of reducing its unecessary fees, or lowering the salaries of bankers who can now effectively be automated. If you want to see a real example of reckless greenhouse gas emissions, look at your average corporate jet.

An Open Source World

“If you can, you should.”

Never has this phrase been more applicable than in the realm of open source technology. For those not in the know, “open source” refers to any code or blueprint that has been deliberately made available for reproduction–basically, one not subject to copyright restrictions. Bitcoin, of course, is a prime example.

It sounds simple, but the effects of open source technology are quite profound. Advocates love to talk about freedom and creativity, but the greatest aspect of the open source community is how efficient it is. Everyone can see exactly how an open source product was made; those working on similar projects can save resources by borrowing bits and pieces, while making improvements in the process. Sharing costs nothing.

Since every open source product is effectively free, people can now allocate their resources elsewhere. While that might mean more spending money for some, for others it might mean the success of their small business, or a means to pay the bills. Open source technology is essentially creative infrastructure, an asset held by and benefiting society as a whole. Coders and engineers can put their minds to use elsewhere, building off each other as more free information becomes available.

But how will great minds make a living? Not all services can be open sourced. Many require ongoing support or complex installation–labor, in other words. While holding onto a patent requires no real work, technical support certainly does, and such employees would not go unpaid. The expansion of the open source community will lead to a wider array of products and services available, so there will always be real jobs for the taking.

Of course, there will often still need to be some incentive for open source work, especially on projects that don’t directly benefit the developer (aside from credit and reputation). If you don’t mind (or have no choice but) to pay taxes, the central authority in charge of those funds come allocate them to development. Otherwise, crowdfunding solutions like CoinFunder, BitcoinStarter or Crowdtilt are rapidly becoming effective means of acquiring capital voluntarily.

So why haven’t we done this already? Most of the time, it’s because withholding a technology yields a competitive advantage. If none can develop your solution on their own, you are free to charge whatever you wish for their service. It leads to scenarios like we have in the traditional financial system, with absurd fees and and restrictions upon property (money) that is ostensibly ours. If Bitcoin can open source the financial system, then it definitely should.

What is a Bitcoin Address and How Do You Sign It?

Short Answer: A Bitcoin address is a unique number that “holds” bitcoin currency. You use the address to receive and send bitcoins.

Medium Sized Answer: A Bitcoin address is the public key half of the public-private key pair that enables the validation of ownership of that address. WHOAH there, what in tarnation does that mean??
Bitcoin addresses are created as part of a key generation process that creates a pair of keys. They are a matched set, where one is public and the other is private. When you “sign” a bitcoin address you are running the public and private keys through an algorithm that checks to see that those keys belong together. Usually signing is talked about in the context of a message. Someone sends you a signed message and you can verify that the message came from the genuine person. You can verify the message because it was signed with their private key and you match it to their public key. When sending bitcoins the signed message is a portion of the bitcoin transaction and you do not explicitly see the message, it is just part of the transaction. This lets you validate the ownership of the address. The transaction (the transfer of value) was signed with the owner’s private key and you check that it’s valid using their public key.

A little diversion – public key cryptography is a really cool technology developed in the mid 1970’s. The amazing thing about public-private key pairs is that everyone can know the public key and the owner of the private key can prove that he is the owner of the message sent with the associated public key. For more information on PKI (Public Key Infrastructure) upon which much of bitcoin’s security is based see Mike Hearn’s (a core bitcoin developer) great description of many issues in “Why you think the PKI sucks…but can’t do any better“.

A Longer Story: Let look at the sequence of actions to create and then use the key pairs. First we need to generate the key pair, which will result in two keys the public and private keys. The Bitcoin address is actually a form of the public key (it’s a hash of the public key). From the Bitcoin protocol specification at: https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Protocol_specification#Signatures

A bitcoin address is in fact the hash of a ECDSA public key

Since anyone can know the public key and really the Bitcoin address is the public key, it’s perfectly OK to give out the Bitcoin address. So now we have a Bitcoin address, what’s next?
Let’s say that I want to get paid for something, say writing this article! I can advertise a Bitcoin address, and since you are all so thrilled to read this, you have an overwhelming urge to send me some coins. You would open up your Bitcoin wallet, enter my address as the address to send bitcoins to; click send; and I would happily receive some bitcoins. Recall that I and only I have the private key matching the public key (address) which enables me to be the only person that could spend the bitcoins I just received.
If you wanted to double check that I was actually the owner of the address before you sent me coins you could ask that I send a signed message associated with address proving it’s mine. I could create a message and sign the address. You would then take the message I sent, and put it into your wallet along with my address to prove that I am the “owner” of the address. Bitcoin wallets usually contain this message signing and verification functionality.
An address is used to “hold” bitcoins, however the concept of an address holding bitcoins or that you are the “owner” of a Bitcoin address is a misnomer. Recall that the address is one half of a public-private key pair. The reason you “own” an address and have control over the coins associated with that address is simply that you also know the other half of the public-private key pair, the private key. If someone else learns the private key to an address then that person has just as much control and “ownership” over the address, as you. In other words that person can spend your bitcoins. The solution is quite simple, make sure you and only you control the public keys to your bitcoin addresses. From a practical point of view this means that you create a good, not easy to guess, Bitcoin wallet password, and/or keep it in a safe place. Some excellent security practices are outlined at the Bitcoin Foundation’s site at: https://bitcoin.org/en/secure-your-wallet.
Since Bitcoin addresses are one of the cornerstones to using Bitcoin, it is instructive to play around with addresses to get a better understanding of just what exactly a Bitcoin address is all about. A particularly good website to play around with is bitaddress.org. After generating a new Bitcoin address play around with the various options and observe the public and private keys it generates. Just don’t go putting real bitcoins into an address while also displaying the private key. Keep the private key private!

As always keep up with my Bitcoin musings here and at: BitcoinInPlainEnglish http://www.bitcoininplainenglish.com

Government Lists Bitcoin as Potential Terrorism Threat

The United States government just can’t quite decide whether to regulate bitcoin, or deem it a threat by declaring it a form of financial terrorism.

The digital currency regulated only by mathematics is now being seen by government officials as an emerging threat, possibly to national security.

According to IB Times, a counterterrorism program being conducted by the Combating Terrorism Technical Support Office (CTTSO), a division of the Department of Defense (DoD), is seeking help from vendors asking for information on “state-of-the-art technologies” that could potentially pose a threat to the U.S.

Listed among hundreds of possible threats were the terms “bitcoin, virtual currencies, terror finance, threat finance and Dark Web.”

The program is reportedly being used to gain knowledge on emerging threats in order to develop response tactics should an act of terrorism occur.  It is worth noting that Dollars or other reserve currencies are just as likely if not more likely to be used for terrorism than crypto-currencies.  There has been no evidence that Bitcoin is being used for or has ever be used for terrorism.  It begs the question, is the Government afraid of Bitcoin for it’s potential use for terrorism or for it’s potential to disrupt the status quo.

The government’s growing ambivalence toward bitcoin is especially hypocritical once you examine the scandals involving Big Central banks, ranging from murder to drug trafficking.

While the government says they intend to crack down on “untraceable flows of money online”, they’ve had no problem allowing banks like Wachovia to escape legal ramifications, including prison, for money laundering.

An early April report by the Guardian disclosed a summary of Wachovia’s involvement in supporting the financial transactions of drug cartels. The report uncovered billions of dollars in wire transfers through Mexican exchanges into Wachovia accounts.

Money laundered through Wachovia was used to purchase planes intended to transport large shipments of cocaine and fund weaponry.

The bank was “sanctioned for failing to apply the proper anti-laundering strictures to the transfer of $378.4 billion – a sum equivalent to one-third of Mexico’s gross national product.”

Charges were brought against the bank, but not specific individuals. The case was settled out of court with Wachovia agreeing to pay a fine of “$110m in forfeiture, for allowing transactions later proved to be connected to drug smuggling, and incurred a $50m fine for failing to monitor cash used to ship 22 tons of cocaine.”

Wachovia isn’t the only participator. Global Research reports that HSBC, Western Union, Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase&Co, Citigroup and many others have been accused of failing to comply with anti-money laundering laws.

The government listing bitcoin as a potential terror threat is an attack on digital currency freedom. Yet the same government allows government regulated entities to get away with murder.

The public responds

Posts from Reddit.com reveal what some of the public thinks about the government listing bitcoin as a potential financial terrorist threat.

Reddit user “mikeydotcomdotau” wrote:

“Allowing for alternative currencies is not terrorism. It is a path to monetary reform, merely an application of principle of free enterprise to a sector that should have never fallen so completely to government control.”

Some Redditors believe the government could blame Bitcoin for facilitating terrorist attacks.

A post by “adamsol” entitled  “Bitcoin terrorism – how to prepare for the historical defamation tactic” describes how the media could potentially demonize the digital currency by associating it with terrorist events, therefore seriously hindering its growth.

With Bitcoin undermining the status quo of centralized monetary institutions, rest assured this won’t be the last time the Government attempts to equate crypto-currency with terrorism.  Stay vigilant!

Mycelium: The Definitive Android Wallet

One of the most important strategies for the best Bitcoin adoption is smartphone wallets that give people and business the possibility of making a transaction anywhere.

You can choose between different android bitcoin wallets such as Coinbase (50-100k users) or Blockchain.info (50-100k users) which store your private keys. Or choose Bitcoin Wallet (100-500k users) or Mycelium (20k users) for local-storage of the private keys.

KnC Wallet (5-10k users), launched by the famous KnCMiner company is only a clone of Bitcoinwallet that allows you to send bitcoins to any person in your smartphone’s address book long as that person has installed this wallet. And KnCMiner is distributing bitcoin to any person that installs the app.

The most booming app at present is Mycelium, a semi-opensource android wallet that provides a powerful gateway to the bitcoin network with quick broadcasts throughout their servers. We’re speaking with Andreas Petersson, one of the two full-time developers together with Jan Moller, who has been telling us everything about the project.

According to Petersson, “our software is unique because it combines simplicity of use and speed with full power to the end user because he keeps his private keys.”

Since I bought my first bitcoin in early 2013, I was a Blockchain.info user, but after looking for more security and empowerment, I started looking for a better app. I found Mycelium, which seemed to have everything I needed. It was a simple, secure, and useful bitcoin wallet.

I can say that my experience has been positive because the app simplifies all the things that I had to do with different apps. For example, generate paper wallets with encryption or fast and secure cold-storage payments, all with syncing in a fraction of a second.

Right now a perfect and totally secure android wallet doesn’t exist, because without encryption malware with root access can read a wallet’s private keys. For this reason, secure cold-storage payments seems a good way to spend at this moment. This system can read a private key of a paper wallet being used for payment and the private key is removed after the transaction is complete.

One of the most interesting features that the Mycelium wallet has is Local Trading. With Local Trading, a user can sell and buy bitcoins inside the App with a low fee of 0.2% per trade with a system similar to Localbitcoin. The mycelium system allows contacting two people to buy and sell bitcoin with an encrypted message system.

Enabling GPS allows a Local Trading user to know who is trading bitcoins in your area and start the transaction on a secure platform.

The latest proposed feature is Bitcoin nodes that allows Mycelium users to know what businesses accept Bitcoin and know the location of ATMs nearby using an OpenStreetMap layer.

If you want try newer features you can also participate in the Mycelium Beta program in their Google+ community.

Bitcoin’s Growing Versatility Creates New Opportunities

The cryptocurrency industry is not only becoming popular for spenders, but also for those seeking an education. Gigaom reports that university students are now being given the opportunity to receive bitcoin upon enrollment, and some institutions are even accepting the alternative currency as payment for tuition.

This fall, more than 4k students enrolled at one of the world’s leading tech-focused institutions will receive $100 worth of bitcoin. Jeremy Rubin, a computer science sophomore at MIT, and Dan Elitzer, President of the MIT Bitcoin Club and a first year student in the MBA program at MIT Sloan, have successfully raised more than half a million dollars for their new project.

With help from MIT alumni and the bitcoin community, together they’ve managed to make it possible to provide 2014 fall students a chance to develop their bitcoin wallets.

According to Rubin, “Giving students access to cryptocurrencies is analogous to providing them with internet access at the dawn of the internet era.”

It seems like a clever analogy, particularly with all of the recent developments connected to bitcoin, including Xapo’s expansion into linking storage to usage through their new Xapo Wallet.

“When the distribution happens this fall, it will make the MIT campus the first place in the world where it will be possible to assume widespread access to bitcoin.”

Giving college students access to bitcoin makes sense, especially when universities have begun to accept alternative currencies as payment for tuition.

The University of Cumbria in the UK not only launched a series of curriculum aimed at examining the role of alternative currencies and how they affect economic and social systems, but it’s also become the world’s first public university to let students pay for courses in bitcoin.

Currently, the University of Cumbria is using a third party system called BitPay to process bitcoin payments. However, for now, bitcoin is only accepted for programs focused on alternative currencies.

As the five year-old alternative currency progresses, the market in which it can be used continues to expand. According to a January article by the NY Post, bitcoin will now buy you an array of things, including:

  • Lamborghini – an upscale car dealership in California is now accepting bitcoin as payment for this luxury vehicle

  • A night at the “D” in Las Vegas – a popular Vegas hotel and casino destination

  • An education – students can pay for tuition at the University of Cumbria

  • BBQ – one of America’s most popular BBQ joints located in Salt Lake City, Utah

  • A flat screen TV – multiple retailers are now accepting bitcoin, including TigerDirect.com, which is known for selling computer parts, TVs and cameras

The vendors below also accept bitcoin:

Overstock.com
Reddit
Wordpres
PayPal
eBay
Tesla
4Chan.org
OKCupid

Cryptocurrency technology continues to enter markets in which critics said it would never succeed.  As Bitcoin becomes more versatile, its user network is expected to improve and grow exponentially.

Crypto-anarchists Versus Government, Who Will Win The War to Regulate Bitcoin?

Earlier this year Benjamin Lawsky, New York’s financial services superintendent, said he intended to initiate the biggest move towards regulating bitcoin.

Lawsky told CNN Money that he planned do this by administering “BitLicenses” to companies dealing with bitcoins, allegedly to protect the public from fraud.

Without explaining how exactly, Lawsky said he’d impose regulation on Bitcoin-related businesses, similar to those that govern banks.

Given the government’s track record on managing finances, including simple tasks like balancing a checkbook, the notion the government is either trustworthy, or competent, to successfully carry out such a task is debatable; some might say laughable.

“We’ve found in other areas of the financial world that strong, clear, concise disclosures are critical to earning the long-term trust and confidence of consumers,” said Lawsky. In other words, Lawsky wants Bitcoin exchanges to disclose the risks associated with virtual transactions.

Requesting exchanges provide potential users with facts regarding risks seems reasonable, but to insinuate government regulation is necessary to gain consumer trust is reaching.

If Lawsky’s statement were true, that would mean corporate banks have been nothing but honest to their customers, therefore gaining trust.

I bet many would beg to differ.

The initial idea behind the development of bitcoin was to escape government regulated currency, and develop one that would provide financial freedom to its users.

Enter Dark Wallet

A group of coders, including Cody Wilson, the mastermind behind printing 3D weapons, and Bitcoin project developer Amir Taaki, may be just one step ahead of the government when it comes to tracking the digital currency.

The coders refer to themselves as the unSystem.

Launched on Indiegogo, unSystem developed software capable of concealing bitcoin footprints, preventing its route from being tracked when transactions are made. Engadget explains how a “one-two punch” of encryption and “CoinJoin” technology makes this possible.

“In brief, the latter code registers multiple transactions as a single movement of funds, masking transfers,” reported Engadget.

Acting out of defiance, the team admitted the main purpose of the software, cleverly named the Dark Wallet, is to carry out “illicit transactions” similar to those that previously took place on the Silk Road website.  The name itself is a play on the fear law enforcement officials once expressed that hackers and criminals would use technology to “go dark” and avoid government surveillance.

Silk Road was an underground website that supported a black market, including the sale of illegal drugs. It has since been shut down and the alleged site runner, Ross Ulbricht, is in jail awaiting his trial. Ulbricht is being federally charged with drug trafficking and money laundering.

The Dark Wallet is reportedly “…designed to protect its users’ identities far more strongly than the partial privacy protections bitcoin offers in its current form,” reported Wired.

“If the program works as promised, it could neuter impending bitcoin regulations that seek to tie individuals’ identities to bitcoin ownership.”

Law enforcement is watching

The New York Department of Financial Services, in which Lawsky is superintendent, failed to respond to requests for comment.

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, however, did respond to Wired Magazine stating they are, “well aware of the many emerging technological efforts designed to subvert financial transparency. It’s certainly our business to be interested and vigilant with respect to any activities that may assist money laundering and other financial crim

Coin Congress Digital Currency Conference to be Held in Singapore

SINGAPORE – MAY 7, 2014 – Later this month, Coin Congress will hold its first event in Singapore. The two-day Coin Congress Digital Currency Conference will take place on May 21-22 at the Shangri-La Hotel and will bring together digital currency professionals from around the world.

Coin Congress is focused on more than just Bitcoin, digital currency, monetization, integration and user acquisition; the inaugural event will bring together the culture of individuals and companies who are ready to break the mold and spark change. The conference hopes to provide the opportunity to meet and discuss the growing segment of digital currency.

“The Bitcoin platform is creating an upheaval in financial services, and we are just beginning to grasp how the world will change because of it,” Brock Pierce, a Coin Congress advisor stated. “Coin Congress brings together the industry’s top thought leaders to share their insights on the overall state of digital currencies, and provides attendees with actionable takeaways for their businesses.”

The conference will feature speakers from across the globe who are involved with some of the most innovative technologies in the digital currency space. Held in conjunction with Casual Connect Asia, Coin Congress will feature 20 speakers presenting their ideas to encourage growth within the digital currency industry. The schedule of speakers for the two-day event will include, Bitcoin Evangelist and investor Roger Ver; CEO and Co-Founder of BTC China Bobby Lee; Shawn Sloves, CEO and Co-Founder of Atlas ATS; David Johnston, Managing Director of the BitAngels Fund; CTO of the Mastercoin Foundation Craig Sellars; Steve Beauregard of GoCoin and many more.

Registration for Coin Congress Digital Currency Conference is still open, with tickets and sponsorships available at http://asia.coincongress.org/logistics. For more information about the event, how to attend, in addition to its schedule and speakers, visit http://asia.coincongress.org.

Bitcoin at Vancouver Car Free Day

Car Free Day Vancouver is taking place in mid-June on Main Street. The event occurs on Father’s Day each year (June 15), and is entirely volunteer organized and for years has been promoting car free transportation in Vancouver. The event has a history of community involvement, moving the city into the future and inspiring others to think beyond car culture, all of which lead up to the 10th anniversary of Car Free Day Vancouver.

This monumental event is likely to have over 250,000 in attendance, and will also include a passionate community of Bitcoiners and cryptocurrency enthusiasts. Organizers associated with the Vancouver-based Bitcoin Cooperative (Bitcoin Co-op) are planning on holding a Crypto Block Party along the most trafficked route along Main Street, which holds one of the non-profits Bitcoin merchants Vera’s Burger Shack. The Bitcoin Co-op will use Car Free Day Vancouver to spread knowledge of crypto-based currencies throughout the community.

Additionally, many notable players in the crypto community will be participating in the festivities, with booths for the Dogecoin community, Feathercoin, the Bitcoin Cooperative, Quadriga CX, Crypt0Minors and many ATM operators. This list of organizations will likely grow as the event gets closer. Because the event is well-known in mainstream media and has the backing of many organizations throughout the community, Car Free Day Vancouver will help expand the knowledge of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency in the city.

Car Free Day has even worked to crowdfund several spaces along Main Street that support non-automotive transportation, such as parklets and even a bike bar. For those unfamiliar with this event, a Car Free Day Vancouver Society board member stated:

lesscars

The Bitcoin Cooperative will increase adoption throughout Vancouver by bringing Bitcoin companies and organizations together, in order to educate people about the technology behind cryptocurrencies while also working with merchants to help them accept these types of payments for their customers.

For more information visit http://www.bitcoincoop.org/ and http://www.carfreevancouver.org/

The red bike image used in the quote graphic is from Jacek Chabraszewski @ shutterstock.

You Say Bitcoin Has No Intrinsic Value? Twenty-two Reasons to Think Again.

Intrinsic Value Defined:

Let’s agree what the term “Intrinsic Value” means. For this article we will use the common Wikipedia entry for the intrinsic theory of value. This is found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intrinsic_theory_of_value

An intrinsic theory of value (also called theory of objective value) is any theory of value in economics which holds that the value of an object, good or service, is intrinsic or contained in the item itself. Most such theories look to the process of producing an item, and the costs involved in that process, as a measure of the item’s intrinsic value.

 

What are some properties contained in the bitcoin itself?  What are the properties that make it valuable?  Some pundits like Warren Buffett seem to remain stuck in the belief that only things you can touch, feel, and see can be intrinsically valuable. One might wonder how these pundits would explain unseen forces of DNA, radio spectrum, viruses, bacteria, or even recent technological advances such as software or internet bandwidth.

Some say that gold and silver are the main standard bearer of intrinsic value mainly because of its perception and history of value. But to a starving person, a loaf of bread holds much more intrinsic value in that it might keep you alive. It doesn’t really matter to a starving person that gold has been used for 6,000 years, or that the loaf of bread might not be worth anything in a month from now.

Two valid points come from the precious metals arguments: Perception of value, and actual usefulness. For the most part, gold isn’t all that useful; based on that aspect alone, silver is much more valuable. Perception of value in gold these days is mainly propagated by those few who own it and have a vested interested in making the rest of the world continue to believe that it still does. This appears to be becoming less important as it seems to be slowly disappearing from the consciousness of the youth of the world.  The only gold coins seen by much of today’s young people exist in games like Clash of Clans.

So now let’s talk about the properties that are found in bitcoin that are unique or ground-breaking. These properties did not exist before bitcoin. Some people would rightly point out that many of these properties can be duplicated. There is, however, one extremely important factor that separates bitcoin from any other digital coins on the horizon: the protective shell created by the network that prevents it from being hacked or commandeered. Keep that critical piece of knowledge in the back of your mind as we review this list. That is a titanic gulf separating bitcoin from the crowd. Bitcoin snuck up on an unsuspecting world; bitcoin 2.0, whatever that may be, will have a target on its back.

Bitcoin intrinsic value properties:

  1. It transcends nations, politics, religions, cultures and regulations. These vary from country to country in ways that may seem bizarre to populations out of its own borders. While one may believe that governments always have their best interests at heart, it may be wise to see that knife cuts both ways. Some drugs are banned in certain states or countries that are allowed in others. Bibles are banned from purchase is some countries. Religion, custom, dogma, superstitions prevent various purchases based on man-made borders that continually shift over time. These policies tend to be created by limited segments of populations that can be self-serving.  If one happens to be included in the “correct” political party, race, religion, items can be purchased or outlawed. It’s all opinion.

The US government bans online gambling. Is this a moral decision? Many of the same governments think it morally acceptable to hold their own state-lotteries. The lotteries hold significantly worse odds and tends to target those in the community that are the least educated and most susceptible to poverty, alcohol abuse, and have a generally poor understanding of mathematical probability. Many have gone on to say that lotteries are simply “a tax on people bad at math”. Many argue that this is a double standard of governments which prevents them from taking the moral high ground.

2.    It requires no trust. (in the short term). It can’t be counterfeit. There is a record of who owns it (by wallet id) and its validity is publicly known. It requires no central clearing house. With any other currency, one must trust the government from which it is issued will continue to maintain its value by not “overprinting” to pay for its own mismanagement. You can send it globally without having to trust anybody. This is not true with any state issued country, bank, credit card company, or anybody else. Volatility and long-term trust is still building, but when one transacts in bitcoin, nobody gets in-between sender and receiver unless agreed beforehand. It’s permission-less.

3.    It can be transparent. By making wallet IDs public, one can track the flow of money through other transparent wallets. You cannot do that with any other currency. You can use this feature to do things like monitor your children’s use. This can make obsolete entire industries that are built solely on the fact that money can be hidden, disguised, cheated, etc. These can also happen to bitcoin, but pressure can be applied by the people to make it transparent and accountable when needed. Auditors may insist on it for compliance.  The list of possibilities of this intrinsically valuable feature can scarcely be imagined.

4.    It can be programmable. Plans for product layers on top of bitcoin to further its use to become spendable based on contracts that can be programmed to complete with built in variables, or be valid to purchase only certain items.  Insist your college bound kid buys books and not beer for example. Or based on GPS in a cell phone,  you could send your kids off shopping and it could be programmed to be spendable only in certain stores.

5.    It can require multi-signatures. Wallets containing the currency can be set to only unlock with more than one signing key. This will leave hackers and thieves frustrated. Try doing that with your grandpa’s money. It is an intrinsic piece of bitcoin technology.

6.    It can be spent over the internet without a bank account, credit report, identification, and pre-permissions. Prepaid credit cards can do some of these functions, but only to locations and countries that accept credit cards. This list of locations in countries outside of the US is actually decreasing with the amount of fraud in the networks. Technically, the only item limiting of bitcoin is the merchant’s acceptance of it. Given the natural law of least resistance, these limitations could erode as more merchants around the world realize the potential savings. The network effect will continue to work its magic.

7.    It can store irrevocable and time stamped records of transactions.  Absolute clarity of events and their corresponding order is available in the block chain. Proof of ownership and purchase can be established without a third party. The trusted and reliable distributed ledger cannot reasonably be altered (barring a massive scale network attack which becomes less likely as the network grows).

8.    It allows you to keep your identity from being stolen.  Bitcoin is nobody’s debt. Paying with bitcoin isn’t a “promise to pay”. It is payment in full. This could potentially reduces fraud related expenses on massive scale. http://www.statisticbrain.com/credit-card-fraud-statistics/ There is no need for a merchant to get bank information or any other kind of personal information that can be later used in identity theft.

9.    It allows movement across borders. It can defeat government issued capital controls. The same governments try to hold their own citizens “hostage” monetarily by outlawing movement of money outside its own borders. Ask any citizen from any country ravaged by hyperinflation if this is important. Could it be possible that it might ever become important in the USA? If you can foresee the day people will be clamoring to get out of the US dollar, where do you think they are going to go? Ask Argentina.

10.     The same wallet can be used anywhere in the world with a connection to the internet. As the money exists on the global ledger, all you need is the key. This can be memorized, or written on any piece of paper – even confined inside a microdot the size of the period that ends this sentence. Some old time gold bugs say you can’t bribe the border guards with bitcoin like you can gold. In the future, border guards will have cellphones and internet access too. We aren’t living in the 1960s Vietnam or before any longer.

11.    It can move independently of banking rules, laws, and restrictions. The people in the USA may think this unimportant in their bubble view of the world, but is this also true of the 150 or so currencies and countries with terrible track records? Which other currency enjoys this property? Will enough of the world outside of the US believe it to be so? Is it hard to imagine the properties of bitcoin being intrinsically valued by populations subjected to terrible economic policies?  It only takes a billion people in India fed up with corruption to want an escape mechanism out of the control of the system. At that point, they won’t give a hoot about what some American pundit said on “bubble vision” about intrinsic value.

12.    It can be used to resist corruption. If the citizens stand up united and demand a transparent government, they can use bitcoin to follow the money in the same way governments use powers at their disposal for surveillance on their own populations. In today’s world money corrupts. In tomorrow’s maybe it will become vice-versa. Let’s see if 86% of the world agrees that any tool that makes less opportunity for corruption is valuable.

13.    It can be made to settle contracts without other parties. You can program it to settle contracts based on certain events such as date, proof of ownership, death, or a host of other factors that can be validated programmatically without a third party to validate if the conditions were met. It can be used as a record keeping asset tag, and proof of ownership. Ownership of the private key to the bitcoin is by definition, the owner. In addition, it can be the source record of ownership for property title, copyrights, and intellectual property that transcends borders and locally interpreted laws.  In effect, the records become the de-facto “single source of truth”. The currency itself is globally accessible proof of ownership. Can these functions and properties be reasonably argued to be valuable beyond the currency itself?

14.    There are no age requirements. Paying for items in a global world requires bank accounts. Bank accounts are legal properties that can only be established with those of legal age (18 in most locations). There is no minimum age requirement to pay for items globally using bitcoin. How many people under 18 have cell phones, AND need to spend money with no credit card. Smart businesses have started to recognize this intrinsically valuable potential.

15.    It is more difficult to be used as surveillance. The main attributes of money are often quoted these days, but one attribute is rarely mentioned. Money has become surveillance. As people continue to learn of the horrors of the NSA and other government efforts to spy on every aspect of their lives, it only takes one person drunk with power to make all the well-intention sounding policies reverse into shocking horror. One government required Jews to register themselves for easy identification, which was then used to “dispose” of them.

Now one’s religion, race, gender, national origin, political party, age, place of work, address, and much more can be determined by how and where one spends their money. To those who think they have nothing to worry about because they are not doing anything wrong, might ask themselves, what did the Jews have to fear during the time they were self-registering?  They also were not (generally) doing anything wrong. That’s only one example in a history littered with them. Is the ability to obscure one’s spending habits intrinsically valuable? Is it possible to imagine how much of the population of the world would think it is?

16.    Bitcoin as money bandwidth. If one were to transfer value between large companies or nations, much of the world has discovered bitcoin to be a very efficient payment network to do this. If bitcoin was thought of as envelopes to be stuffed with dollars or other currencies for transport, only the size of the envelope itself that contains the dollars inside would be the limiting factor. To increase the ability and usefulness of this feature, the envelopes represented in bitcoin price will have to inflate enormously to take on that load. The Federal Reserve and former Vice Presidents have caught on.  So has smart Venture Capitalist firms that have a knack for being one step ahead of everybody else.

17.    It can be the basis of a new eco system. Right now entire new ecosystems are being built up around the new currency (in use, if not government recognition).  Gold towns sprang up into eco-systems but crashed when the gold veins ran dry. We know exactly how deep the bitcoin well can go and the rate at which it will be found. What other modern day ecosystems are being built because of the intrinsic values of a currency?

18.    It can upend centuries-old money monopolies.  The strangleholds on monetary policy continue to be held by relatively few extremely wealthy families for centuries.  Bitcoin has the possibility to change the paradigm completely. These banks will likely find ways to maintain their power and wealth and there is nothing preventing them from moving into digital currencies to maintain it.  However, which other currency has the possibility to change the dynamic? Many in the world will likely place much value in the paradigm shift that is possible. When was the last time a monetary unit threatened to rewrite the rules from the ground up?

19.    Democratization of money. An explosive report from a whistleblower from the World Bank reports that all networked banking infrastructure throughout the entire world can be traced back to 12 people who make decisions at the privately controlled US Federal Reserve bank.  Consensus driven, public records, and democratization of money made possible by bitcoin, might change the rules.

20.    Gives the unbanked population access to banking features they might not otherwise enjoy. As the much smaller digital currency M-Pesa proved, the poverty riddled villages with no access to banking were able to lift themselves out of poverty with simple abilities to pay suppliers and start businesses. With the cross border scale and usability of bitcoin, imagine the same results x 1,000. Are there any national currencies up to this task?

21.    It can be extremely hard to steal. Muggers of the future will be at a loss for what to do with the bitcoin they can’t take from your wallet or purse.  That money will be no good to them without the private keys to spend it. There likely will no longer be credit cards there was well. Could robbery itself become obsolete? Hackers will soon have a difficult time stealing money from multi-signature wallets.

22.    It represents economic freedom. Because of all of the reasons stated above, it might as well be called the currency of freedom. Dictators will hate it. Totalitarian governments will hate it in proportion equal to the amount of corruption the government enjoys. The worst countries for freedom believe that  money exist primarily to serve the country and personal ownership of it is just an illusion they can confiscate at will. Banks technically own it as soon it’s deposited. Through court order, government taxation, or inflation, they always get it back. Bitcoin offers some protection. We become our own bank.

Many people will likely debate this list.  Others might be open to the suggestion that if just ONE of these factors is agreeable to most reasonable people, the description used by Wikipedia might also be applied to bitcoin.  A year from now, there might be another list compiled that is just as long as this one – of things that can’t possibly be imagined today.

Let the debates begin.

CryptoCurrency Castle Consummated

Grand Castle Malla Becomes the Bitcoin Supernode Perpetual Conference Center

Manor House of Bitcoin Baron, Risto Pietila
Manor House of Bitcoin Baron, Risto Pietila

One thing we can do to beautify this planet, is preserve our valuable heritage, at times enabling it to shine even brighter. Whether it’s centuries-old buildings or natural landscapes, they can definitely provide some of the most conducive environments for great minds to connect over joy, wonder, play and rich array of experiences.

This week, February 28, 2014 marks the culmination of a momentous and historic transaction, a castle bought with Bitcoin earnings and dedicated to the support of Bitcoin innovation.  Located in Estonia near the Baltic Sea the site is easily found by plugging Malla, Estonia into Google Maps and zooming in on the largest building you find, and there it is

This Manor House was built in the 1600 and has been updated many times through the centuries, most recently to remove all the old soviet era accouterments, reinforcing all the structures and updating the electricity and plumbing.  The grounds include forests, gardens, and a number of support buildings which were formerly servant quarters, barns, stables and such.

While there are other budding centres of Bitcoin activity, and embassies in each of the great cities of the planet, this grand edifice stands unique as a philosophical philanthropic institution removed from the busy business of city commerce and provides a gathering nexus for the Bitcoin community to indulge in a more organic lifestyle.  These accommodations are planned for Bitcoin dignitaries to engage each other in luxurious surrounds conducive to respite and retreat, contemplation, and the more strategic thinking such environs are destined to inspire.

The new Baltic Bitcoin Baron is none other than the prestigious Risto Pietila.  This new nobleman successfully navigated the treacherous business of precious metal investing through his innovative start-up SilverBank.net, and thrived.  He then catapulted his fortunes through rigorous mathematical analysis and sagacious trading of Bitcoin.  This magnanimous endeavor was enabled through the profits that ensued. Risto’s own rag to riches progression is appropriate to the enterprise of castellan restoration and he also personifies the progression of private currencies through the ages and into the future.  It is right and proper that he be the man to cement this Bitcoin Supernode foundation in the ancient stones of Estonia.

The selection of location, Estonia, is the EU country with probably the most freedom.  According to the CIA’s world fact book, its small public sector and vibrant private sector boasts one of the highest per-capita incomes and GDP growth of Europe. Their hands-off approach to Bitcoin presents not only a magnetic attraction for monetary innovation, but also an expansive outer wall outside the formidable walls of this financial fortress. There is no doubt that these halls will host the most illuminated thinkers of our collective crypto-currency future for many decades to come and “Make Money, Do Good, and Have Fun”.

 

Bitcoin Exchange Self-Regulation: What the MPAA Can Teach us

Bitcoin Exchange Self-Regulation: What the MPAA Can Teach us

Act 1, clean up our act.

Let’s face it: When people tell us bitcoin is a scam we come to its defense. Critics often point to the explosion of alternative (alt) coins as proof that anybody can make one and there is no barrier to entry. True, no problem so far. But then the on-line exchanges will be happy to advertise and market the coin. Some might argue that this is an example of “pump and dump” schemes as it benefits them as well. I think it’s not unreasonable to see their point. On the other side, those that run these exchanges might argue that they are just giving the people what they want. It is true; I know of nobody that is being forced to buy anything they don’t want. But what is important here is perception is the truth. We can truthfully admit that bitcoin and digital currencies have an image problem.

There are a few people making a lot of money and a lot of people being suckered by their own greed trying to be the next bitcoin millionaire. But just because you can, doesn’t mean you should. Perhaps it is time to ask an important question: What is it about the world of digital currencies that separates the “bitcoiner” crowd from those big banks everybody likes to compare themselves to? The big banks seem to be only looking out for their own interests without regard for the regular person. Could you say the same thing about the exchange operators? They are the ones that largely control the flow of money taking in a bit for every coin that passes through their system.

Perhaps several of the governments have looked at this behavior and not having any regulations or laws in place to stop it, simply warn their citizens to not participate. This is the kind of action their populations elect them to perform. Rather than rush to judgment as even reasonable people tend to do, it might be well to consider that they might actually be attempting to perform a service to protect or at least inform their countrymen that there are some people trying to scam their money. It is out of their hands so people take on the risk themselves.  If you were to tell a family member to just start buying digital currency – how long of list would you make of what they have to avoid because of all the scams?  Perhaps having regulators being involved to protect the newbies might actually seems prudent, if you take a look back and study the quickly emerging trends.

Although many feel that the heart of digital currencies remains true, we probably can admit there are unscrupulous shams and hucksters entering the realm. This is to be expected as the world of digital currency won’t be any more immune than regular currencies – they’re ready to fleece the newcomers. The difference this time is that the currency itself gets blamed. The media, government, lawyers, and uneducated population blame the entire group, as they don’t understand the nuances of the complex environment. It’s much easier to stereotype the entire community. As such, I submit the idea that it’s in the best interest of the entire digital currency community to show responsible behavior and clean up our own backyard. If we don’t, there will be little sympathy from the other 99% of the world who have no understanding of the world of digital currencies. They might care very little about this nascent technology if it were shunted and banned. Although the technology would be difficult to stop outright, the ”image problem” would persist. It’s not hard to imagine it having to stay in the realm of shadow alleyways and back rooms when it can be so much more than that.

There are very interesting and exciting possibilities with alternative coins. There are a handful of great ideas and grand experiments in coins in the market. Unfortunately, for every innovative coin there are ten or twenty copycat, or over-hyped coin-of-the-week versions that drown them out. The truly unique and promising coins could just get lumped together with the also-ran coins and branded as nothing more than a cheap knock-off. Would it be a disservice for those to be stereotyped with those that are pre-mined or do nothing notable to forward the cause? We likely would all understand that the terms “notable” and “legitimate” are subjective. However, suppose a group of experts could be assembled for the explicit task of reviewing alternative options and coming to an agreement together. They could weed out the “scamcoins” and in effect do the community itself a service.

Enter the idea of an association of digital currency exchanges. By organizing together to support this cause and demonstrate that they recognize the need to clean up the image of digital currencies, the responsible exchanges would agree to limit the currencies they allow to hold position on their sites. Those exchanges that show common sense and care for the technology rather than just making a quick buck, would be seen as responsible stewards for the emergence. The entries being the most responsible would soon be recognized as most trusted and would hold a valuable position as the “go to” exchanges people use. They will earn the respect of governments that hold suspicion. Trust and money would flow their way.

It confuses people when they see new coins enter the world every day. And people often ask why? And I think I speak for a lot of us when we actually wonder the same things ourselves. What is the benefit? It might benefit the makers of those coins get rich-quickly. It’s already been shown that they only need modify a few bits here and there, often without even knowing programing, and call in a few favors to get some momentum and buzz behind it. They design an icon, get on the forums to spur a bunch of miners (if they even bother with that part) and *poof*– new alt coin.  It’s the dirty little secret that many abandon the coin after they’ve made their money and offer no ongoing development or support. Some even direct questions to the creators of the coin they just copied, if you can still reach them at all.

Act 2. What we can learn from history:

Before 1922, movies were coming out from anybody with a camera. They were being sold and distributed from town to town and being the novelty, people lined up to see them. But most were considered garbage. Some began to break social norms and “taboos” that were generally accepted at the time. Although we can argue it was “free speech” and anybody should have had the right to film whatever they like, it caused harm to the reputation of the entire industry. The films were beginning to include nudity and bad language and excessive violence  that were intolerable to the people of that era compared to the population today. The government began to take a strong look and was being pressured to do something about it for the general well-being of the public. There of course were “legitimate” film makers that sought to put quality films out before the public that actually contained a script, story, or some other note-worthy benefit that progressed the new art form. Before they were forced to act by the government and have to accept regulation that would harm their own ability to be creative, they formed an organization to police themselves before the government would force their own standards.

The film producers formed themselves into an “alliance” and created a code of self-censorship. They called this the “Production Code” aka “Hays Code”. They held enough political power within the world of movie making that they soon were recognized as “the authority” that became respected by government, which eventually held sway with all of the major movie studios that recognized the need. The various heads of the movie studios found a trusted person whom they could all agree on who would act on behalf of all of them. They organized a group of anonymous but trusted volunteers to review the films that were increasingly being submitted voluntarily by the various legitimate film makers and the group went through a vetted list of qualifications they used as a filtering process and gave their own “seal of approval” for the films that passed their scrutiny. It wasn’t long before the public and government leaders recognized the work that they were doing and became trusted authority for the industry. This organization changed its name in 1945 to the Motion Picture Association of America, now recognized by their acronym “MPAA”.

In 1968 they instituted the now familiar rating service that grants the audience a general guide for family acceptance for G, PG, PG13, R, and NC-17 film ratings as a guide. Today they’ve added the responsibility for copyright protection and promotion of intellectual rights to protect the filmmakers to receive proceeds to continue to keep the medium profitable enough to continue making more movies. This of course has proven controversial and Digital Rights Management is mostly a fiasco.  We all might have various opinions of their effectiveness in modern times, but it is clear that while the technology was nanciant, their actions to clean up their own backyard allowed the industry to grow eventually entertain billions of people and changed the world.

 Could that example work for digital currencies? Could we find common ground between the major exchanges to have them self-censor or show a medium of concern for the populations they serve for the good of digital currencies? Could they be powerful enough to earn the respect and continued neutrality of governmental influence and make a mission to first serve the populations/the people first and foremost and charter an agreement that no nation would be preferred over another? Would it gain enough respect that all actions and recommendations they perform will be for the good of mankind first? Swearing no allegiance to any country would make the cause as truly neutral as the currency itself. Governments and politics come and go. Borders are redrawn all of the time if you study a map through one hundred or five hundred years. If we can all see that in the proper perspective we might agree that a neutral currency can transcend that.

Could they make some basic agreements to limit the amount of new currencies to perhaps only 4 per year- thus creating a competition for the alternative coin makers to actually be inventive and move the expectations forward? If they could come up with a general guideline for digital currency creators that they have to show five qualities that make their idea stand out and be unique before it would be allowed to exchange on the most powerful exchanges…that might allow developments that can implement safeguards and show efforts made to thwart money laundering and nefarious purposes. Working with governments instead of against them would help bridge the differences and mistrust and eventually unite the populations, governments, and the best currencies.

Perhaps if an organization can be assembled it would provide an opportunity to prove to the world that the digital currency community takes the role of self-regulation seriously. It could demonstrate the discipline to keep our own backyard clean. Ultimately, just like the movie industry, they might earn the respect from the people they serve and the governments that must be shown that digital currencies can be trusted. What better group than ourselves would know how better to protect the ideals of creativity and onto worlds yet beyond imagination. Having over-burdensome regulations could douse the fire of genius.

Act 3 is up to you.

Funding Software with Bitcoin and Bountysource

This week the popular funding platform Bountysource announced that it will accept Bitcoin for developer and software funding efforts. Bountysource is a funding platform for open-source software, and is a place where users can improve the projects they are passionate about by creating or collecting bounties and pledging to fundraisers. By using the platform, developers can earn money from fundraisers, project donations and bounties for closing issues in open-source software.

Many Bountysource users have been requesting Bitcoin support for funding endeavors, and it has finally become a reality. By providing Bitcoin support, users can now pay and earn with BTC for all types of payments, while also having the ability to cash out in Bitcoin. In addition, users will also be able to select which currency they would like to view on the platform’s homepage. Bountysource will likely unveil further support of other cryptocurrencies in the future, which may have a large impact on their funding campaigns and user-base.

Many developers and users in the open-source and free software markets have a deep interest in the role that cryptocurrencies play in promoting the use of open-source technologies. Much like the various “bug” programs that many Bitcoin companies currently have, the “bounty” system on Bountysource allows users to collect a specific reward for spotting a bug or requesting a feature that is further developed. Users can create bounties on any open issue within any open-source project, and whichever developer solves the issue will be awarded the bounty.

Bountysource allows any type of open-source or free software projects, basically any projects approved by the Open Source Initiative or the Free Software Foundation. Open-source and free software are very similar and began within the same community. Free software is computer software that is distributed with its source code, which gives users the permission to change, study, adapt and re-distribute. The term “free” is based on free speech and giving users the freedom to run the software for any purposes, including distribution. Although many of these types of software are open-source, the software license differs from that of open-source software.

Open-source software was a part of the same free software movement, but split off to appeal to business executives by pointing out the software’s benefits, while not raising issues of right and wrong. The term is associated with ideas based on practical values, like creating powerful and reliable software. Although these two terms describe nearly the same type of software, they are based on different fundamental values. Free software is based on complete respect of the user’s freedom, while open-source pays most attention to popularity and success of the software. However, each of these are working toward the same goal of providing quality software to the end-user.

Bountysource supports these movements by creating two major funding methods: bounties and fundraisers. Fundraisers work to raise money for new projects, large updates to existing projects, or to raise money for bounties. The creator of the fundraiser spreads the word to the appropriate communities and anyone can come to Bountysource to make a pledge. Both fundraising and bounties help the open-source and free software movements to increase development, close issues faster and earn money by creating solutions to issues and honing their craft.

The addition of Bitcoin is a large step for Bountysource, and both open-source and free software. These developers and users of these types of software are incredibly passionate, much like the Bitcoin and cryptocurrency communities. It makes sense to fund these projects with BTC, simply because Bitcoin is open-source and a great example of what can be achieved through community collaboration.

 

Cinco de Bitcoin

Cinco de Mayo 1862 – Mexico’s army came to an unlikely victory over the French at the Battle of Pueblo. Today, Mexico’s army of Bitcoiners are fighting to revolutionize the financial system.

Mexico is a key market for Bitcoin because Mexico is the fourth largest destination for remittance payments, totaling about 22 billion USD in 2013 according to the World Bank. Currently remittance payments are packed with fees in all parts of the process; using Bitcoin can drastically reduce these fees. Remittance payment fees from the US to Mexico are some of the lowest in the world. Fees of payments going to Africa can reach over 10% but fees of money sent to Mexico can be lower than 2%, although this can be misleading, because companies can then use a lower than market exchange rate.

Not only can Bitcoin reduce the fees in remittance payments, but Bitcoin is also faster than the traditional system. A person in the US can go to a Bitcoin ATM, convert their cash to BTC, send it and the receiver can then go to a Bitcoin ATM in Mexico and convert their BTC to pesos, while ACH transfers can take over three days. People going to remittance service providers can face a higher risk of robbery since they are carrying large amounts of money, while people going to Bitcoin ATMs can choose to withdraw only necessary amounts of cash.

I talked to Jose Rodriguez, CEO of ALTIS: Altcoins Investment Services, and Gabriel Miron, CEO of MexBT, both of whom are members of Mexico’s Bitcoin community, to find out Bitcoin in Mexico.

Jose has over ten years in the financial industry with experience ranging from FX treasury trading, international arbitrage of securities and international brokerage services. In addition to ALTIS, Jose is a partner at Argentina’s Bitcoin exchange UNISEND.

MexBT was started in September with funding from Seedcoin when Miron saw the need for such services in Mexico and Latin America. MexBT has also been backed by Andrés Bzurovski, the founder of AstroPay, which is the biggest payment processor in Latin America for online merchants.

MexBT has partnered with AlphaPoint, which provides the technology for asset trading platforms and fully supports many of the popular cryptocurrencies and FX trading. MexBT has been in private beta since mid-April and hopes to launch by the end of May. MexBT is focusing on the security and transparency of the platform, calling it a top priority. MexBT is one of Mexico’s Bitcoin trading platforms, and MexBT plans to expand throughout Latin America.

When I asked Jose and Gabriel about the regulations in Mexico regarding Bitcoin, I was surprised about their response. The Bank of Mexico issued a statement that placed restrictions on banking institutions from dealing with Bitcoins and gave a warning to the public of possible losses, similar to other countries. Mexico is regulating the parts of Bitcoin businesses that require businesses to use KYC (know your customer) and AML (anti-money laundering) practices. In the meantime, Mexico isn’t even taxing Bitcoin, this is actually the first year Mexico is implementing capital gains taxes from earnings in Mexico’s stock market.

Rodriguez and Miron sat down with some of the Bank of Mexico’s officials and claimed that the environment was in fact, very friendly, and that the government intends to wait before implementing more regulations so as to not stifle any innovation.

According to the two, merchant adoption in Mexico has been slow but they are working to change that by having events, meetups and talks. Gabriel and Jose have hosted talks at the Instituto Politécnico Nacional and Tecnológico de Monterrey and have seen the most interest from young entrepreneurs. Jose and Gabriel said that the Bitcoin community, even among competing businesses, is quite friendly and collaborative.

Jose and Gabriel think that Bitcoin and fiat will coexist, using both traditional and Bitcoin ledgers. The two see the world moving away from hard fiat with most payments and transactions taking place online and additionally as trade becomes more globalized with more companies going global, that’s why they think Bitcoin will become more commonplace.

Bitcoin Magazine SALE!

Bitcoin Magazine is now offering a reduced price per magazine on Amazon USA, Amazon Germany, and Amazon UK.

We are now only charging 5 USD, 3.11 GPG and 3,65 Euros per magazine when purchasing directly through Amazon.com. As we are currently printing our 20th Issue, Issues 1 through 20 are available on Amazon for you to enjoy.

Since we first released our first print magazine issue, the Bitcoin currency has grown to a significant level of prominence. We encourage you to purchase back issues on Amazon.com and then in turn sign up for a subscription to regularly receive copies of our newest issues! We encourage you to renew your subscription in full for another year OR start up a subscription TODAY!

As the Bitcoin currency continues to flourish and as digital currencies become the norm, you will want to regularly receive your copy of Bitcoin Magazine and also back copies of the magazine for a full history of this decentralized movement.

As we continue into Bitcoin Magazine’s second year, we have expanded to now have a digital edition and have welcomed and continue to welcome some new writers to the team.

We plan to keep you informed on the latest news in the Bitcoin community and provide more in depth articles on this fascinating digital, decentralized cryptocurrency through a monthly tangible copy of Bitcoin Magazine!

If you have any questions about the current status of your subscription, please contact us at [email protected].

Please visit Amazon USA, Amazon Germany, and Amazon UK and enjoy the wide selection of magazines for only 5 USD!

Do Not Let Bad Businesses Hijack Your Bitcoin

Before one is to get involved in Bitcoin, it is imperative to understand what makes Bitcoin unique. Bitcoin is a decentralized peer-to-peer currency that does not rely on a central government, central company, central bank, and doesn’t have a central point of failure. Bitcoin is also a trustless system where individuals involved in the ecosystem take their own precautions to protect their bitcoin without placing trust in a centralized entity to do so. Along those lines, Bitcoin, in its purest form, does not look like the traditional payment structures that are used most today.

So, why do I bring up these traits of what makes Bitcoin unique? Unfortunately, as with most innovative and unique systems, humans tend to want to make these structures look like something they are familiar with but at the same time end up detract from the great potential of the structure. We need to be vigilant against the threat of centralization to Bitcoin. Common excuses are making Bitcoin look more like the current system to spark mass adoption, or making it more “common sense”, but that doesn’t work in the end.

What prompted me to state this? Recently, I read a news report on a new development in the Bitcoin space that certainly would generate excitement but also generated concern on my end. Why is it that we would like to make Bitcoin look like something we are used to? In the process of doing so, it is easy to get muddled up with banks, credit card companies, high transaction feels and most dangerously, centralized structures. Not good in my book, and I believe many who truly believe in the revolution sparked by Bitcoin to decentralize all things would feel the same.

So, what is the big deal about Bitcoin related companies that are more centralized in nature? Unfortunately, no company is perfect and all companies can fail. Some certainly do and specifically some exchanges and companies in the Bitcoin space have failed to meet the needs of consumers. What is a common trait in some of the most recent Bitcoin related business flops: centralization and too much consumer trust in a company. Owners of Mt.Gox committed some grave errors, coupled by the fact that there were some single points of failure within Mt. Gox’s structure. Additionally, some lost entire Bitcoin savings accounts in Mt.Gox as they had not learned or neglected to implement more secure storage of coins off of an exchange. Gox serves as a wake-up call to Bitcoin users to not only diversify where Bitcoins are held and stored but additionally to not place much trust in a centralized exchange where very few are keepers of the keys. Its imperative that we recognize that Mt.Gox is NOT Bitcoin and Mt.Gox was not too big to fail. What if Mt.Gox was more transparent and decentralized? What if the majority of individuals who left all coins in Gox actually diversified and decentralized coins to different wallets instead of trusting in one exchange? These are questions we need to consider when moving forward following the closure of Mt.Gox.

Why now would it be beneficial to place trust in a Bitcoin company holding all consumer coins in one place (single point of failure)? In the end, the community has the ability to decide on which businesses to support, but one should be mindful of the true unique nature of Bitcoin before supporting a centralized structure that simply might taint Bitcoin. My question for you, which exchanges are you using? What type of wallets do you have? If a particular exchange or brokerage is closed down right now, would you lose all of your coins? Are you diversifying and decentralizing your financial portfolio? Why trust in one centralized structure when Bitcoin enables us to make choices to guard ourselves against a single point of failure?

BitPay at the Bitcoin Job Fair, Working for Bitcoin

The first ever Bitcoin Job Fair was held at the Plug and Play Tech Center in Sunnyvale, CA. This landmark event symbolizes the growing job market surrounding the Bitcoin ecosystem.  For individuals looking to start a career in the alternative currency space, this job fair presents massive opportunity with a diverse set of Bitcoin businesses.

To get the scoop on what it’s like to work in the Bitcoin world and to find out what it takes to get the job, I decided to reach out to one of the first and most established businesses in the Bitcoin world, BitPay. With over 30 employees and several years under their belt, I felt that BitPay would provide excellent insight for individuals that show up to the fair to seek employment.

Name: BitPay

Website: https://bitpay.com/

Location: Atlanta, GA

Founded on: May 2011

Founded by: Tony Gallippi and Stephen Pair

How many current employees: 34

Do you pay in BTC? Yes, we offer the option to our employees

What positions are you hiring for? BitPay is correctly hiring for R&D, Compliance and Marketing.

Can people apply online? They can send a resume to [email protected]

What is a day in the BitPay office like? Right now, BitPay is at the Atlanta Tech Village and we all work in one big room. Schedules vary depending on the position and many have the ability to work from home. We do serve lunch daily. In May, we will be moving into a larger office space.

Do you offer benefits? We offer the typical benefits to employees including healthcare, dental and vision, along with stock options.  To see complete list click https://bitpay.com/team.

How did you hear about the job fair? Representatives from Coinality contacted BitPay.

Why did you decide to get involved? It looks like a great way to meet prospective new talent.

Why would a potential employee choose you? We are the oldest bitcoin company in the space and are currently expanding rapidly. Our headquarters is in Atlanta, but we have offices in San Francisco, New York, Amsterdam and Buenos Aires. We have over 30,000 merchants and process about $1 million a day in bitcoin transactions.

What characteristics do you generally look for in an employee or contractor? We are small and want a team player, someone who brings new ideas and experiences to the table and is passionate about bitcoin.

Do you have any advice for job seekers? Be yourself – we don’t expect them to know everything bitcoins but have a willingness to learn.

Do you post your open jobs on any Bitcoin job boards or forums? If so, which ones? No, they can be found on our site: bitpay.com/careers

Why is Bitcoin so important anyway? Bitcoin is the future of financial technology. We expect to see wider acceptance and an increasing amount of businesses both large and small accepting Bitcoin as payment as Bitcoin will be widely accepted globally so that no matter where a person goes, bitcoin will be accepted alongside cash and credit cards.

BitPay is is setting the bar for employers in the Bitcoin world. They offer benefits, a flexible work schedule, and several locations to choose from. With incentives like these, it’s easy to see how this Bitcoin business competes for top notch employees. As the Bitcoin ecosystem launches into the mainstream pocketbook, Bitcoin and other crypto currency businesses will become a greater forces on the job market.

To participate in the job fair or get more information, visit http://bitcoinjobfair.com.

Bitcoin ATM Launches In Saskatoon

Bitcoin Solutions Launches Bitcoin ATM in Saskatoon

Saskatoon, SK – Owner operated Bitcoin Solutions announced on May 3rd that it has launched Canada’s latest bitcoin ATM in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.  Bitcoin Solutions is  based in Edmonton, AB, and is following their expansion plan to bring Bitcoin ATM’s  across Western Canada. Their machine, manufactured by Ottawa-based BitAccess, is  installed at Calories Restaurant, located at 721 Broadway Avenue.  It is available to the  public after 11 a.m.during the week and 10 a.m. on weekends.

adam

 About Bitcoin Solutions

Bitcoin Solutions is owned and operated by  Adam O’Brien. The company aims to make  Bitcoin as understood and accessible as traditional cash.  To fulfill this mission, his    company partners with plenty of retailers in Edmonton and now Saskatoon to establish  Bitcoin as a method of payment.  Bitcoin Solutions operates a Lamassu Bitcoin ATM in  Edmonton, Alberta inside the Rose and Crown Pub at 10235 101st. The company’s launch of  the Bitcoin ATMs both compels and facilitates the public to try the new, safe and convenient  platform and use it in their everyday lives.

 

About BitAccess

BitAccess, founded in 2013, is an Ottawa-based start-up with local manufacturing facilities. The company currently employs 10 individuals and is growing quickly. BitAccess manufactures digital kiosks capable of converting fiat currencies, such as the Canadian Dollar, into digital currencies, and back into fiat currencies. Their latest model features the most advanced ID verification technology on the market, and it is the most physically secure model produced by BitAccess to date. The machine installed in Calories Restaurant is among the world’s first ATMs with a cash-recycler, and reduces the operational cost for the operator. Their innovations make the purchase of bitcoin instant, seamless and pain-free. The company has a customer base in 10 different countries across 4 continents. For more information on BitAccess, please visit www.bitaccess.co

Contact

To learn more about these developments or if you would like to accept Bitcoin or would like to host an ATM operated by Bitcoin Solutions, please contact:

Adam O’Brien | President
Bitcoin Solutions
(780) 257 6243 | [email protected]
@EDMbtcsolutions |www.btcsolutions.ca

IRS Tax Rulling May Have Just Killed Alt-Coin Mining

Presenting the IRS a Real Use-Case Scenario to Teach Them About the Possible Unintended Consequence the Alt-Coin Mining Taxes

I just finished my taxes.

I  feel like I was just punished for being on the cutting edge of computer and monetary science. That will teach me – why would I want to be part of an innovative technology in the USA?

 How dare I?

Before I relate my experience and interpretations, know up front, I’m not a tax expert. I’m only indicating how I interpreted the rulings. Your professional tax person might advise differently so don’t use this story as any kind of tax advice.

I doubt any IRS researcher actually took time to sit down with an actual alt-coin miner to study the effects of how their ruling  that, in effect, double or triple taxes alt-coin mining.  I suspect they never sat down with somebody in the trenches and asked some very simple “What if” questions.  The unexpected consequences of making broad decisions  over complex systems might kill the innovation from ever developing.  I would be interested to see proof of any actual real-life use-case study that was used by the IRS to predict the results their ruling. I’ve taken it upon myself to take create one case study by examining one day of the life and times of a digital currency miner (me). Hopefully this will enlighten somebody to actually understand how the ruling could affect us. Perhaps it will become obvious that nasty and probably unexpected consequences might follow these actions.

They declared that alt-coin miners must pay income tax, and well as capital gains tax as soon as they’ve swapped them for another digital currency such as bitcoin.  I believe they treated alt-coins as if you could also sell them directly for fiat which is incorrect almost all of the time. In addition- when those bitcoins you’ve traded them for then are sold for dollars, or used to purchase something – you’ve just been triple taxed it before it has become useful for anything in the real world.

First  tax=  income at coin creation.

Second tax = Capital gains tax when selling the coin for a dollar-exchangeable coin. Higher short-term capital asset tax.

Third tax =  Capital gains tax again when selling your converted bitcoin it to fiat, or simply buying something. Heaven forbid if you buy something with it before it exists for one year as you will get taxed at an even higher rate. Again.

The way I see it, there might be two directions this ruling may lead:

  1. IRS efforts appear to be trying to kill digital mining in the USA through regulation.

    • The rules of tracking, accounting, and reporting are so complicated that the effort required to even begin to keep up will cause such a loss that there will be no will to go on. Any invention, research – experimentation or good that would have come out of amazing potential of digital currencies – will have to come from other countries. Technology follows the path of least resistance. If you put up dams, the flow of technology will find somewhere else to flow and thrive.

 

  1. IRS efforts may create a new army of tax dodgers and rogues that go deeper underground  to continue with the efforts of science and innovation outside of the prying eyes of the government. Thanks to our government in the US, we can now get a taste of what it feels like to live in communist countries.

    • We can thank the efforts of the governments around the world to regulate Napster out of existence, then just about any other centralized company that tried to allow for file-sharing. Because of this, we now have bittorrent, port hopping decentralized DNS and TOR.  Our nature as humans is to follow the path of least resistance. Consider any ruling that you have: if it is seen as unreasonable or a blockage for technology, it will simply be bypassed and made irrelevant.   The law of unintended consequences could develop around the revolutionary technology in ways you can’t possibly imagine.  Did the record industry or the movie industry predict bittorrent would be developed when they simply tried to stop file sharing?

Let me shine a light into the world of a “stay-at-home” digital currency miner so the IRS might actually have an example of a case-study.

I heard about digital currencies last spring and thought that was a cool idea and I ought to look into it.  I’ve been a computer junkie for 20 years and figured it would be something I could master. After spending a week trying to mine bitcoin with my computer CPU last spring, it became obvious that bitcoin was already too hard to mine without purposely built ASICs computer chips that were just then coming to market.  Chasing a tiny bit of profit would have to come through “Scrypt Mining” beginning with litecoin. I know how to build computers and can install software so I figured I would experiment and dabble.

My research into digital currency mining stretched from a few days to weeks and eventually  months.  I read, tweaked, fiddled, readjusted, stayed awake all night, tweaked again, rebooted, bought new hardware, rebuilt, tested, rebuilt and rebooted…a lot.  Running video cards at the peak performance is like rocking back in a rocking chair and getting all the way back to the point you almost tip backwards…and then hold it there. It seems only a slight gust of wind would be enough to push the system over the edge and crash. You are literally pushing the boundaries of your hardware way past the point the manufacturer intended. Needless to say, I don’t expect the hardware to live long enough to make it past the  warranty period.  I calculated that if I added my time together doing all of this research, trial and error and various mining activities I’ve spent close to working a full time job for four months just through experimenting on it.  I was often still going past 2 am before I could drag myself to bed.

The IRS probably doesn’t understand that the difficulty just keeps rising as you go so you have to keep buying better hardware just to stay in place in receiving coins. Once you’ve purchased the hardware – you are committed. You can’t expect any kind of return on your investment if it just sits there doing nothing. A crashed system doesn’t pay for itself. Up-time is everything. You have just a fairly short window of opportunity to make the money back before the hardware is obsolete in the digital arms race. Even then we are speculating the price will continue to rise. If not, we’ve just got really expensive toasters.

Then there are all kinds of unexpected challenges for which you must contend. It is not profitable to mine by yourself as the odds of you solving the puzzles to be awarded the new currency are extremely low. We join mining pools. The problem with the early mining pools  are that they are largly run by armature geeks with no proven reliability. Pools would go down often, sometimes for days, or weeks. They were always being hacked, and on many occasions, my lite-coins were stolen before I could withdraw them.

Too many times to count, the pool just went dark. No explanation, just… gone. And my coins with it. That, I suppose, is the price you pay for being on the bleeding edge. It cost me electricity, time, and hardware only to see coins vanish. The media covers the bitcoin exchanges going out, but I haven’t read anything about mining pools doing the same thing. But with the new IRS ruling, technically – as soon as those coins were mined into existence, that was supposedly income for me to report. Unfortunately, there is no record of those coins because those pools took any record of the activity down with them. Hopefully this doesn’t make me an outlaw on somebody’s ‘list’. Those were expensive lessons. Not only did I lose out on the coin, but the electrical costs made my electricity bill double, and I also had the ‘opportunity loss’ where I might have been mining coins at a reliable pool. Losing them hurts triple when you count  the two that were stolen, the electricity it took to create them that might have made you whole,  and the two that you could have earned had you been on a more trustworthy pool to begin with.

But even when it is running perfectly, based on the market – many days were at a loss to even recover the price of electricity. But some of us do it for the pioneering effort to perhaps change the world. It isn’t all just about money. This is a new science and could go in endless directions. Mining is absolutely necessary for the effort to sprout and the destinies someday reached.  To place burdens such as the enormous amount of tracking and paperwork added to the complexity and time involved in just performing this service will kill it, at least in the USA.

To explain this, I will use my mining efforts from yesterday to illustrate.

Bitcoins are too difficult to mine from home on “regular” PC hardware, so unless one is a dedicated business with a lot of money and space to dedicate to this function, regular people are priced out. We’ve had to set our sights on more attainable goals and coins using the “Scrypt” function is about all we have left for the digital currency scraps.

Because of the enormous amount of alt-coins available to mine and new versions seemingly pop up daily, many now use one of the various “multi-coin” pools. The logic running these pools programmatically check the real time value of the various coins will switch all process power to that coin on an hourly basis. This now creates a problem. We must declare income as soon as a coin is mined into existence for each coin not knowing which coin we will be mining from one hour to the next.

For example, dogecoin’s  value is currently so low it takes roughly 100 of them to equal the price a nickel. We are now supposed to recognize that and pay income tax on each one. Using yesterday for an example, the pool automatically switched between feathercoin where I made a total of 41 cents to dogecoin, as the profitability peak changed throughout the day. I made a gross income of $4.33.

But according the calculations on Coinwarz.com – I used $5.28 in electricity for the three machines to pull in the “mother-load”. So my net income for yesterday was negative 94 cents.   I only know this price because that’s what the pool indicated when they were sent the proceeds to my account.  According the the IRS ruling, I have to track that amount each day and report it. Also, I have to keep track of every one of the 10,000 or so dogecoins I helped “birth” yesterday. If I trade in 500 dogecoins someday so I can have a “whole” quarter, I’m supposed to know which daily batch of 10,000 they might have come from, so I can figure the capital gains tax on the 25 cent piece. This only happened once they meet the minimum threshold that the pool considers it worthwhile to even send them as some coins are worth seven numbers right of the decimal point. That means it might take a million to make a dime. Technically, I’m supposed to report a millionth of a dollar? How much paperwork and calculations go into figuring that and reporting it?  Can we agree this is unreasonable? Didn’t somebody at the IRS talk to an actual alt-coin miner to see the burden and understand this will kill any innovation?  As I hope to show –  many will find this is beyond ridiculous.

 

Because it’s unlikely that many alt-coins will ever be worth much in my opinion, it’s safer to convert them into bitcoin or some other digital currency as soon as they’ve been awarded to you. Bitcoin has  proven itself to be more trustworthy over the long term for holding some value- comparatively speaking. But as soon as you convert the tiny bits of any coin, that becomes the basis of a capital gains transaction. And because you held it less than a year, it is taxed at the higher rate. What is the tax on ten thousandth of a dollar? Worse, I have to actually track that? The cost of tracking a single dogecoin is perhaps a thousand times more expensive than the actual transaction itself. Yet, this is how it appears to be written. They treat a $600 bitcoin and a $.0004 coin the same. And by the time I buy a meat thermometer at Overstock.com I’ve paid tax on it three times.

So I’m done. Why go through all of this?  They’ve just killed my interest as it’s too expensive to comply. Somebody outside of the US will have to do it. Any innovation that might have come from this science will have to be done in a friendlier nation. There doesn’t seem to be any talk of “safe harbor” for miners to let the science expand  – before taxing it into oblivion with socialist abandon. Without miners to process these transactions and run the networks, they will fail. It appears that the IRS has just done their best to make sure alt-coins fail. To me, it doesn’t really matter if this was unintentional or not. The end result is the same – I’m done. As far as you know.

The US has stifled innovation.

The other option is for miners to go further underground. But what could be the unintended consequences of that?  Is it possible that once somebody has gone underground and found themselves on the wrong side of the law, that other more serious crimes may follow? Is tax evasion, even on a micro-scale, a gateway that may lead down a darker paths and more mistrust of government?  What are the possible ramifications of that?  Do we want to be that country that compels its own people to fear it? It’s not hard to see where the entire anarchist movement comes from.

Perhaps this may be just as well. It was bad government policy that was at least part responsible to spur the innovation that created the doorway to this entire new realm of digital currencies. Some might argue that getting around the rules without first asking for permission is what this community does best. The harder government becomes to work with, the more innovative the solutions to just go around them and completely change the paradigm that gave them the power they now have.  By issuing these tax rulings without understanding the ramifications – who can guess what might result from the unintended consequences? Perhaps this ruling will spur even more innovations that make the IRS themselves increasingly irrelevant.  The block-chain already allows for such transparency and with programmable money, perhaps taxes  collection will be programmed in as well.  Perhaps there will no longer be a need for the IRS.

Perhaps these IRS rulings themselves will be the cause their own extinction.

Think of the irony.

Announcing World’s First Bitcoin Job Fair

The world’s first ever Bitcoin job fair is set to launch in Silicon Valley on May 3, 2014, featuring numerous employers and sponsors, both eager to spread the word on the increasingly popular cryptocurrency.

The event is scheduled from 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. (PST) at 440 N. Wolfe Rd. in Sunnyvale, Calif., and will provide an opportunity for job seekers to enter one of the most progressive fields of technology in the twenty-first century.

Employers will be given the chance to choose from a pool containing some of the world’s top talent in the digital currency community, looking to employ Bitcoin developers, altcoin creators and blockchain experts.

Analysts describe Bitcoin as representing “…the voluntary and spontaneous organization of an economy. A fresh new kind of social contract based on cooperation, not force. We’re hoping to help foster this new digital economy.”

Popular for its lack of regulation by large banks and significantly lower transaction fees, the fair is expected to draw thousands of interested spectators, employers, and job seekers alike.

Some of the positions employers are looking to fill include:

  • BitPay – hiring Software Engineers, Front-End Engineers, and Sales & Implementation Engineers.

  • CryptoTrustPoint.com is seeking a CTO.

  • HolyTransaction.com is looking to hire some Programmers and Developers.

  • PrivateInternetAccess.com is hiring DevOps and Software Engineers.

  • Counterparty.co wants to add a full-time programmer to its core team.

  • Purse.io was accepted to the inaugural Plug And Play Bitcoin Accelerator and is looking to build their team.

  • Kraken – looking for front-end developers, software developers, DevOps and support specialists.

The world’s first ever Bitcoin job fair will also provide opportunities to interact with serial tech-entrepreneurs like Andreas Antonopoulos, whose expertise ranges from Bitcoin, to crypto-currencies, to information security and even robotics software development.

Antonopoulos has founded three bitcoin businesses and launched several community open-source projects. He’s also a talented writer currently working on a bitcoin book designed for developers.

Plug and Play Tech Center, a global accelerator that specializes in growing tech startups, will also be in attendance, along with Coinality, the field’s leading job/resume board.

Coinality, which launched in Sept. 2013, provides opportunities for those seeking jobs that pay exclusively in digital currency. They’re currently serving more than 2,000 registered users and have received over 600 job submissions. They are also host to hundreds of resumes and have served over 1,800 job applications.

The excitement surrounding the new digital currency is expected to flourish as the numbers grow of those interested in an alternative currency that’s “decentralized, convenient and transparent.”

Forbes reports that, “Over the past year, they have transformed from black market currencies to viable alternatives for traditional investments and existing currencies.”

What makes the currency particularly unique is its ability to function both as a currency and as an investment. Today there are an estimated two to three million Bitcoin users holding the currency as an investment.

If you’re a job seeker, employer, or someone simply interested in the development of a currency not regulated by an overly inflated federal government, don’t miss the chance to be part of something truly revolutionary.

If you’re interested in being a sponsor at the event, you can sign up for one of their great packages here.

Dark Wallet Alpha Released

This article originally appeared on http://newsbtc.com/2014/05/01/dark-wallet/

May Day, May Day, it’s about to get dark.

Dark Wallet (Alpha), the bitcoin wallet software that uses the power of encryption and technology of CoinJoin, has been released.

The legality of coin mixing services is still unclear, and the fact that some coin mixing services go by names like ‘The Bitcoin Laundry’ and ‘BitLaundry’ does not bode well in the regulatory spotlight. Although, one can argue the right to financial privacy because bitcoin is only pseudo-anonymous.

I took my questions to computer security expert, Kristov Atlas, author of Anonymous Bitcoin, to see what he thought.

“You’ve got to admire Cody and Amir for their candor concerning their goals for financial privacy.” – Kristov Atlas

How do you feel about Dark Wallet?

Dark Wallet looks like an excellent tool for improving Bitcoin privacy. It should make privacy much more accessible to the common Bitcoin user. Bitcoin isn’t very private for the average user because of the ways they are using it and the software they’re using. One of the reasons I wrote a book about how to achieve Bitcoin privacy was because the tools that you need are all over the place, and deciding between competing options is beyond the savvy of the average Bitcoin enthusiast. Dark Wallet should help to consolidate many of those tools into one, easy-to-use software package.”

People will view this as a way to more easily launder bitcoins to facilitate trade in online black markets, funding of radical groups or other nefarious activities, what would you say to this argument?

“It will be a long while still before bitcoin is used for more criminal activity than the legacy banking system, so for now that’s a red herring. Also, I think many liberty proponents have made a strong argument that the worst human crimes are being done openly by people in power. Compared to those moral crimes, bitcoin and dark wallet actually can *never* be used for criminal activities on the same scale because of the inherent limitations programmed into Bitcoin.”

This is really what crypto-anarchy comes down to, can the government regulate this?

“As long as the code is open source and anyone can run it, I think they will have a very difficult time attempting to regulate it. Ever since the crypto wars of the late 20th century, cryptographers have maintained their legal right to release code as a freedom of speech. If they attempt to block or identify traffic from Dark Wallet, they will likely only drive the developers to make it darker. It’s a cat and mouse game, and the mice have been winning for the last decade.

Satoshi also has proved that, regardless of our legal freedoms, it’s still possible to unleash technology pseudonymously and without asking for permission from anyone else.”

So do you think Dark Wallet is good for Bitcoin?

Dark Wallet will still be a little rough around the edges when it first launches — Amir has talked publicly about how they still have plans to improve Dark Wallet by increasing the number of people you can simultaneously mix your coins with, integrating access to privacy networks like Tor… but this is helping Bitcoin catch up. Lately altcoins like Darkcoin have been the leaders in improving crypto-currency privacy, and Dark Wallet potentially stands to put Bitcoin back in the lead.”

Dark Wallet Alpha is available for download at darkwallet.is/download.

[textmarker color=”C24000″]Source[/textmarker] Wired [textmarker color=”C24000″]Image[/textmarker] Andy Greenberg / Wired

Bitcoin ATM Pops Up in Amsterdam

Located in a coffee shop in the city of Mokum, a short walk from the Amsterdam Centraal railway station is a brand new Bitcoin ATM. This new addition has sparked the attention of many crypto enthusiasts, and put Mokum on the map as a city that promotes the use of Bitcoin in Amsterdam. The coffee shop Courtyard of Wise will house the machine, which will officially begin operating on April 30 during the Dutch Ethereum and Bitcoin Meetup.

The machine itself is manufactured by BTC-O-MATIC which provides delivery all across Europe. With a base price of $3,000USD, the company will deliver the machine to your door and provide set up, which is included in the price. According to the company, the machine takes only five minutes to set up. All the merchant must do is control the operator balance and complete cash collection. Furthermore, all status data is attainable from any location as long as there is a 3G and WiFi signal.

BTC-O-MATIC currently carries one model, the “BTC-001,” but will soon begin manufacturing other units of varied sizes and with additional functionality. For example, their “FlyMaster” model will be priced around $7,500USD and will have 2-way technology, meaning it can conduct both withdrawal and deposit operations. In the future they will provide machines that are adjusted for specific locations and their conditions.

Although it is not official, a few forums have stated that the ATM will be based on BitStamp’s rate and will charge a fee of 2 to 5%. Some have also shared that the machine will not require identification, unlike Bitcoin ATM’s in the United States and abroad.

BTC-O-MATIC hopes to position itself as an easy way for individuals to start a business in the large payment acceptance industry. The company provides a way for operators and their users to expand the Bitcoin marketplace. Whether you are looking to start a family business in combination with your main job or wish to increase your location revenue, a Bitcoin ATM could be a easy and low-maintenance option. The company also allows users to service their chain of machines and collect stats via the Control System. For operators on the go, the machine’s status can be monitored from the Internet and the system can also send text alerts when the ATM runs out of funds or encounters an error.

The number of ATM manufacturers has grown in the past year and many share the belief that these machines will play a large role in mainstream adoption of Bitcoin and other digital currencies. Giving users a convenient way to attain Bitcoin can drive new entrants into the market, at both the merchant and consumer level.

The BTC-O-MATIC will also be blocks away from the Bitcoin Conference 2014, to begin on May 15th at the Movenpick Hotel. Those attending the conference can meet up at Courtyard of Wise and top up their Bitcoin wallet.

 

CeBIT Australia – Accepting Bitcoin

CeBIT Australia, the country’s largest business technology event, is now accepting Bitcoin as payment using Australia’s leading merchant services provider BitPOS from 5-7 May at Sydney Olympic Park.

Gilad Greenbaum, Business and Technology strategist for CeBIT Australia, says:

“Bitcoin is an innovative technology that offers a fast, secure and cost effective form of online payment,” 

Bitcoin won a Linux award at CeBIT 2014, held earlier this year. Bitcoin was named the ‘most innovative open-source project’. This is quite an accomplishment and shows the respect for Bitcoin, as an open-source project, by developer communities around the world. Votes were taken from thousands of enthusiasts and members of the Linux community.

This is a community driven by principles of encryption, anonymity and privacy, first and foremost. This was evidenced by the fact that the other awards went to GnuPG, Tor project and Git.

The Bitcoin awarded was accepted by representatives of bitcoin.de, a Geman company and exchange provider. Representatives from the company compared Bitcoin to other disruptive technologies, implying that Bitcoin would have a similar disruptive effect on the Financial industry.

Jason Williams, founder of BitPOS says:

“BitPOS assists visual as well as technical integration to ensure a smooth and seamless experience for the customer. CeBIT is an icon in the tech scene, and we’re really excited for such a well-known brand to embrace bitcoin in the way Hannover Fairs has.”

BitPOS is Australia’s first bitcoin merchant services provider. Founded in 2013 by Jason Williams, BitPOS concentrates only on merchant services, bringing the online payments to bricks and mortar businesses. Their transaction authorisation and verification system provides a secure way for online merchants and brick and mortar shops to accept bitcoin payments.

They have been signing up merchants quite rapidly of late. They are pleased to work with BitPOS as their first online venture. CeBIT is endorsed by State and Federal Governments in Australia. It is the largest and among the most renowned business technology event in the Asia-Pacific Region with regular attendance by more high profile business and government decision makers than any other event in the region.

In 2014, CeBIT Australia will attract over 35,000 people to their seven specialised conferences and three-day exhibition from Monday 5th to Wednesday 7th May at Sydney Olympic Park.

CeBIT’s impressive lineup of national and international speakers will share the latest industry knowledge of Cloud, Cyber Security, e-Health, WebForward, Enterprise Mobility, Datacon and e-Government.

In addition, over 500 national and international exhibitors, from local startups to global companies, will showcase their innovations and technologies on the CeBIT Exhibition Show Floor.

A presence at CeBIT is understood to be one of the most productive ways to find the business technology that can make a real difference to their business.

The event will start with an all-star Opening Ceremony followed by the Plenary Session. This will brings together the leading figures from industry, government and the media for the launch of CeBIT with key State and Federal representatives and speakers. This will also be an opportunity for attendees to network.

MIT’s Bitcoin Expo and the Students Behind It

MIT’s students have made the news again. Dan Elitzer, president and founder of MIT’s Bitcoin Club, and Jeremy Rubin, a sophomore in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, have organized the MIT Bitcoin Expo, which will be held this Saturday, May 3rd at MIT’s Compton Laboratories Building 26-100. The talks start at 12:00pm and will feature Gavin Andresen, a core developer of the Bitcoin protocol; James D’Angelo, founder and host of the World Bitcoin Network; and Alan Reiner, founder and CEO of Armory Technologies, among others.

According to Dan and Jeremy, Bitcoin has not gotten the attention it deserves on campus; despite the Bitcoin Club having to deny entry into their filled meetings, most people only know the basics.

I had the privilege to talk to the two, so I asked them what we were all wondering.

What is your goal for the Bitcoin Expo?

Dan: “We want to begin educating students and the community about what Bitcoin is and why it’s so exciting, beyond the fact that they’re going to be getting $100 worth of bitcoin. We also want to start equipping students with the knowledge and tools to begin working on projects that utilize Bitcoin. That’s why we’ve got some very senior software developers from Armory Technologies and BitPay leading workshops about transaction scripting and open-source libraries for Bitcoin.”

You might have heard about Jeremy back in December, when he and the co-founders of Tidbit were subpoenaed by New Jersey’s Division of Consumer Affairs and Office of Consumer Protection. Tidbit’s focus was to help websites gain revenue by having visiting users mine bitcoins while on the site instead of using advertising. The start-up took top honors for innovation at MIT’s Node Knockout programming competition in November.

Now Jeremy is working on a different project, this time with Dan: The Bitcoin Project.

Alumni, the bitcoin community and other donors raised close to $500,000 for the Bitcoin Project. The Bitcoin Project is an experiment where about $100 will be distributed in bitcoin to MIT’s roughly 4,500 undergraduates. The experiment will help see what people do with their bitcoin in a bitcoin community.

Through the MIT Bitcoin Project, Rubin and Elitzer aim “to help MIT continue its long tradition as the preeminent educational institution at the forefront of emerging technologies, and establish MIT as a global hub where Bitcoin-related research, ideas, and ventures are studied, discussed, and developed,” the pair explained.

Currently there are seven businesses that already accept bitcoin in Cambridge, including a few restaurants, an art gallery and even a laser cutting, engraving & 3D printing service according to SpendBitcoins.com

How have local merchants responded to the project?

Dan: “We haven’t heard reactions from local merchants yet, but we’ll be organizing outreach efforts in partnership with the MIT Bitcoin Club and others to get as many as possible on board by the fall.”

Jeremy: “I expect for startups in the Bitcoin Space to be highly motivated to put roots down in Cambridge.”

Did you ever consider making an AltCoin for MIT?

Dan: “No. As one online commenter pointed out, this is MIT; we build for the real world. There’s an existing ecosystem outside of MIT for Bitcoin that doesn’t exist for any AltCoins or anything that we would create specifically for this initiative. We want to both leverage that ecosystem and get students contributing back to it.”

What is the interest of bitcoin like at MIT? Are hardware engineers making miners; are software engineers making forks of cgminer; are the English and economic students writing articles on Bitcoin?

Dan: “There are a few students working on Bitcoin-related ventures and doing research into cryptocurrencies, but overall there hasn’t been nearly as much activity as we think is warranted. There is a LOT of interest in learning though. The MIT Bitcoin Club had almost 200 students jammed into a classroom to hear Jeremy Allaire give a presentation on Bitcoin back in February. We had to turn people away 15 minutes before the event was scheduled to start because we didn’t have room for them to get in. That’s the kind of interest we were seeing on campus to learn more about Bitcoin, even before we announced the bitcoin distribution.”

If the price of BTC rises by fall, will the students get more than $100?

Dan: “No, we raised the funds in USD and will convert it close to the distribution date. We think the $100USD amount is a powerful psychological threshold, where students will really take it seriously, so we wanted to make sure it would be there.”

Jeremy: “We’re calling this threshold the ‘Goldilocks Number’, the amount which is just right. To scale this project does not mean giving larger amounts, but expanding to more people.”

Do you have room for more than 200 people?

Jeremy: “At the expo, yes. 550 is the room capacity, I believe. We’ll be live streaming too, so who knows what the total viewership will be world wide!”

The link for the live stream is available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqlvk51uS1M