UK Setting Itself Up To Be More Friendly To Bitcoin Startups 43
An anonymous reader writes While various states in the U.S. (most notably: New York) are trying to regulate every last aspect of Bitcoin, making it very difficult to innovate there, the UK appears to be going in the opposite direction. It's been setting up much more open regulations that would allow for greater freedom for Bitcoin startups to innovate without first having to ask for permission. In fact, the British government decided that what is most appropriate is to work with the digital currency community to develop a set of best practices for consumer protection and create a voluntary, opt-in regime. Hopefully other governments take note.
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There is no way the UK is so... (Score:4, Interesting)
...insecure as to back an unproven currency! OP most be a just another cad trying to suck real value into something of no value.
GCHQ has realized they can track Bitcoin, I bet (Score:5, Interesting)
And hence, Bitcoin actually makes it easier to monitor money-flows, as they already have all Internet traffic. Getting the data from Banks, especially foreign ones, may be a tad more effort and the Bank knows.
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The transactions are public. But that has nothing to do with anonymity of the
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When Mt Gox folded, Bitcoin got REAL anonymous.
Bitcoin's use (Score:2, Redundant)
I'm still struggling to see what the benefit for me would be? I have little need for making anonymous payments,
Anonymity isn't what crypto currencies provide. In fact, far from the opposite: Their whole structure is based on publicly broadcasting every transaction, that then everyone in the network store in its local copy of the common ledger (= into the blockchain). At best your can call it "pseudonymous" (wallets are identified by a base32 hash. it's not obvious at first look which real person is behind a wallet, just like the username on a forum doesn't immediately looks tied to an identity).
The main argument for
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Anonymity isn't what crypto currencies provide.
Whew!
Thanks for the schooling. I thought sure Bitcoin would be used in the sex slave and drug markets.
Best target (Score:2)
I thought sure Bitcoin would be used in the sex slave and drug markets.
These two (and assassins-for-hire) are probably the use case where the governments would be accepting to throw the necessary resources to do the kind of big-data analysis necessary to track down the culprits.
(Follow the money trail. i.e.: follow the life of bitcoins along transactions, until a real-life event can be mapped to a transaction [e.g.: bitcoins were used to order some product online which was delivered at an adress. Or bitcoins were exchanged for cash at an exchange and were wired to a bank acou
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Actually iDeal is exceptionally good in comparison to a whole lot of other countries.
Innovate ? (Score:2)
Well in the U.S. context that would mean being able to operate outside the existing laws for banking and electronic funds transfer
https://www.fdic.gov/regulatio... [fdic.gov]
Personally I am a little leery of bankers innovating after 2008
Bank Of England looking at this for a while (Score:3)
This makes sense due to Bitstamp (Score:1)
This move makes sense for the UK. AFAIK Bitstamp, which is the largest EU based BTC exchange, is headquartered there.
They have A LOT of traffic.
Making UK btc friendly also means that they can tax some of that revenue in exchange for the "easiness" to operate under UK law.
Hence more money for government.
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Because those are bullet proof.
Makes Sense (Score:1)
Trust Us! (Score:3)
In fact, the British government decided that what is most appropriate is to work with the digital currency community to develop a set of best practices for consumer protection and create a voluntary, opt-in regime.
Because self-regulation has always worked so well in the banking sector.
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Why?
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"Hopefully other governments take note." (Score:2)
Why "hopefully?"
Is this a biased story?
Bitcoin startups (Score:2)
Here's my startup: please click the links in my signature and get free bitcoins and dogecoins for yourself!