Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

India To Propose Cryptocurrency Ban, Penalizing Miners and Traders (reuters.com) 64

According to Reuters, "India will propose a law banning cryptocurrencies, fining anyone trading in the country or even holding such digital assets." From the report: The bill, one of the world's strictest policies against cryptocurrencies, would criminalize possession, issuance, mining, trading and transferring crypto-assets, said the official, who has direct knowledge of the plan. The measure is in line with a January government agenda that called for banning private virtual currencies such as bitcoin while building a framework for an official digital currency. But recent government comments had raised investors' hopes that the authorities might go easier on the booming market.

Instead, the bill would give holders of cryptocurrencies up to six months to liquidate, after which penalties will be levied, said the official, who asked not to be named as the contents of the bill are not public. Officials are confident of getting the bill enacted into law as Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government holds a comfortable majority in parliament. If the ban becomes law, India would be the first major economy to make holding cryptocurrency illegal. Even China, which has banned mining and trading, does not penalize possession.
According to the senior official, the plan is to ban private crypto-assets while promoting blockchain. "We don't have a problem with technology. There's no harm in harnessing the technology," said the official, adding the government's moves would be "calibrated" in the extent of the penalties on those who did not liquidate crypto-assets within the law's grace period.

The report notes that 8 million investors in India now hold 100 billion rupees ($1.4 billion) in crypto-investments.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

India To Propose Cryptocurrency Ban, Penalizing Miners and Traders

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward
    This has been widely debunked as FUD.
    • Re: debunked (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      Link to debunking. Bitcoin is the main channel for ransomware payments so if it's banned we may get rid of some scammers.

      • Link to debunking. Bitcoin is the main channel for ransomware payments so if it's banned we may get rid of some scammers.

        That, but we would probably have better results if we tracked a few down, dragged them through the streets, then burning them at the stake, leaving their smoldering corpse there as a warning to the rest. What? I didn't say do it. I can have dreams can't I?

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        Ransomware is a big enough business that the criminals will find other ways.

        The problem is more likely to disappear because ransom payments are going down, ransomware protection solutions are becoming more common and average revenue per victim is dropping. All three factors make the business less interesting.

      • by dstwins ( 167742 )

        Do you honestly think this has anything to do with ransomware.. In the days of yore... they used gift cards, and western union payments.. In short, when someone wants to extort funds from you, there is ALWAYS a way. Bitcoin just got them off other services like gift cards and onto a different plattform.

  • bitcoin uses to much power. Now SA needs it load shedding does not need the waste of mineing

  • Please

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Monday March 15, 2021 @07:39PM (#61162938)

    They are afraid their monopoly on curry will disappear. Anyway call me when they are going to ban curries in general. Especially spicy chicken curries. That stuff will max out your CPUs and kill ya. In a good way.

    • I once made a raita with so much garlic in it, no one came near me for a week. It was excellent. But watch out for those dodgy vindaloos. They'll have you on the bogger for hours.

      • Raita with garlic isn't a good idea. At all.

        Even though I like eating raw garlic with some things, I can't imagine it with yogurt / curds. Although, raita with Onions is common. And equally bad in terms of smell.

        Easy solution is to ensure other person also eats such smelly stuff when u do !

        Then they can't smell it on your breath due to olfactory fatigue from their own smell !

  • Good (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dicobalt ( 1536225 ) on Monday March 15, 2021 @07:41PM (#61162942)
    now other counties need to follow. Bitcoin is a waste of electricity and a massive engine for making many crimes much easier to get away with. I've had it with the get rich quick bandwagon of destruction.
    • now other counties need to follow. Bitcoin is a waste of electricity and a massive engine for making many crimes much easier to get away with. I've had it with the get rich quick bandwagon of destruction.

      I don't disagree about it being a waste of energy, but "a massive engine for making many crimes much easier to get away with"? This is a common misconception. In fact, quite the opposite is true. The way the blockchain technology works, it is possible to trace back any person who had the currency. In fact, it is much less private and anonymous than cash, so it really isn't a useful tool for crime.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        Of course it's a useful tool for crime. It's not as anonymous as cash, but it's as a lot more convenient, particularly for international computer crime. And it's a lot more anonymous than accepting the victim's credit card for payment.

        • And it's a lot more anonymous than accepting the victim's credit card for payment.

          Well, then.

    • Has anyone calculated how much energy it will take to finish mining all 21 million bitcoins using the currently best available ASIC or GPU?

      • The way the Bitcoin economy (the rules on how Bitcoin are generated and distributed and how electricity is used in mining) works the reward for mining new Bitcoin goes to 0 over time.

        What's left is transaction fees. Those are currently (during a giant run-up; current volume is high) around $7M/day. So, that's a good rough estimate of the amount of electricity the final network would be using assuming a transaction rate like we're seeing now.

      • by 1s44c ( 552956 )

        The difficulty in generating an accepted hash adjusts to the current hashrate, so anywhere between practically no energy to all the energy in the universe.

        It doesn't stop when the block reward is zero. The idea is that transaction fees will replace the block reward and the blockchain will carry on forever.

    • by Twinbee ( 767046 )
      Just use a Proof of Stake coin instead of Proof of Work. Even better, use something like Nano that is one of the lightest (if not the lightest) weighted coin of all, with feeless transactions that are usually confirmed in under one second.
    • Re:Good (Score:5, Interesting)

      by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Monday March 15, 2021 @10:18PM (#61163312) Homepage

      Actually it is silly trying to ban a computer file. What you ban is real currency financial transactions for crypto, ban financial institutions from trading real currencies for them and allow all illegal transactions to be taken back. You can no really ban crypto, want you can ban is trading in them, especially for real world assets.

      • "There's Bitcoin and Then There's Shitcoin" - Congress hearing

        A lot of people are failing to understand that the only innovation is the decentralization.

        The decentralization is not software related. The decentralization is a consequence of incentives. If you fail the decentralization, the project is pointless.

        Altcoins have leaders, premine, paid shills, perpetual software updates... everything leads to more centralization. In other words, Altcoins are not designed to be decentralized.
      • by ytene ( 4376651 )
        I think there might be a possible gap in your logic, which is basically the criminal underground/black market...

        An awful lot of business gets transacted in the black economy. Prior to cryptocurrency, the mechanism of choice was paper money - cash - because it was difficult to trace. Switching to BTC just enabled a more global approach.

        So a nation like India basically has a couple of choices - they could ban all cryptocurrency outright [which has lots of tempting benefits], or they could permit it, but
    • now other counties need to follow. Bitcoin is a waste of electricity and a massive engine for making many crimes much easier to get away with. I've had it with the get rich quick bandwagon of destruction.

      And there it is. The argument waiting just offstage for its call from the lords at the top, ready for echo chamber cogs to start barfing it once the Word is given.

  • Why are shithole countries shithole? This kind of shit.

    Not pro or con bitcoin myself, but opposed to the Leviathan taking away your choices.

    • by kvutza ( 893474 )
      Shithole countries? TFA is not about USA.
    • .... shithole country? India has the world's second largest population, is the worlds 6th largest economy (3rd largest when you factor via PPP). It has a young and growing population which gives it very long-term economic prospects, a growing and effective biotech sector, a rapidly growing healthcare sector growing in both innovation and size, a strong IT segment, etc. Despite some stumbles during the colonial area, the area now covered by India was the world's largest economy for the last two thousand y
      • The US did not "control" its currency until Nixon took the dollar off the gold standard. The Fed was not created until 1913 and the Accord of 1951. The US has prospered because its currency and economy is (relatively) uncontrolled.

        When India was the world's largest economy, was the currency under government control? I grant that India is improving, because the dead hand of the State has lifted a little. But Indian government control has resulted in its economy declining from first to sixth. It's like b

  • make cryptocurrencies _more_ valuable? Everything costs more in a black market.
    • Goods and services cost more on the black market. That means the money being used on the black market is worth less.

      This makes sense. Money's value comes from the ability to exchange it for goods and services. Difficulties exchanging a currency should generally drop its value.

      • So money (ie $ or Rs) will be worth less when we buy BTC on the black market.

        Even now it's more expensive if you want to buy BTC with cash, instead of say bank transfer /IMPS /Swift /GPay.

        Cash remains the safest for criminals umm.. privacy minded people, BTC is just easier to store, doesn't lose value so quickly every year as cash - infact appreciates most years and easier/ safer to send receive large amounts across the world.

        Even "political donations" and bribes to govt officers have shifted to BTCs in a

        • by Tom ( 822 )

          Cash remains the safest for criminals umm.. privacy minded people,

          Cash is getting a bad reputation for entirely selfish reasons, the main one not being privacy, but the fact that nobody takes a cut when you pay with cash.

          If you can take even the smallest sliver from every transaction, you have a license to print money. Doesn't matter if the medium is credit cards, Apple/Google/whatever/ Pay, or crypto currencies. Transaction fees are a billion-dollar market, globally possibly a trillion-dollar market.

  • "The report notes that 8 million investors in India now hold 100 billion rupees ($1.4 billion) in crypto-investments."

    This strikes me as a ridiculous statement.

    • Your statement strikes me as more ridiculous than the statement to which it is referring. What's ridiculous about 8M Indians with $1.4B in Bitcoin?

      • This is what is ridiculous: $1,400,000,000 is shared between 8,000,000 people. That's an average of $175 each. That's not news. That's like saying 1% of the population owns a cheap suit.
        • It's more like 100K people own $1.4Bn of BTC while the rest have a web wallet they created at some point if time.
  • It seems to me that it looks like a person opens an umbrella so as not to get wet after he fell into the ocean. Cryptocurrency and blockchain are our near future. It seems silly to me that many governments do not understand that blockchain can make many industries more transparent. For example, there are fairspin [fairspin.io] that show that even the entertainment industry can become transparent and accessible to users. Given that India's economic potential is immense, it would be foolish not to take advantage of such op
  • So-called 'cryptocurrency' is just more cancerous bullshit that's been inflicted on us and does no one any good whatsoever. It's wasteful of energy, wasteful of expensive hardware, and the primary purpose of it is to fuel criminal activities, and these facts have been and always will be 100% true.
    • Gotta agree. Cryptocurrency has no intrinsic value. It cannot be used to make valuables or create high end electronics like Gold. This whole idea of rarity is ridiculous. There is no shortage of ephemeral ones and zeros as evidenced by the dozens of "major" cryptocurrencies. The idea that governments cannot ban cryptocurrency is laughable. They don't have to do that, they can simply making redeeming cryptocurrency for cash, goods, or services illegal. Now, I don't know about you, but if I cannot exchange my

"...a most excellent barbarian ... Genghis Kahn!" -- _Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure_

Working...