US Treasury Calls For Stricter Cryptocurrency Compliance With IRS, Says They Pose Tax-Evasion Risk (cnbc.com) 125
The Treasury Department on Thursday announced that it is taking steps to crack down on cryptocurrency markets and transactions, and said it will require any transfer worth $10,000 or more to be reported to the Internal Revenue Service. From a report: "Cryptocurrency already poses a significant detection problem by facilitating illegal activity broadly including tax evasion," the Treasury Department said in a release. "This is why the President's proposal includes additional resources for the IRS to address the growth of cryptoassets," the department added.
"Within the context of the new financial account reporting regime, cryptocurrencies and cryptoasset exchange accounts and payment service accounts that accept cryptocurrencies would be covered. Further, as with cash transactions, businesses that receive cryptoassets with a fair market value of more than $10,000 would also be reported on." Bitcoin traded off its highs for the day on the Treasury headlines and was last up just 1%, according to Coin Metrics. Previously in the session, it was up more than 9%. A growing number of Wall Street analysts have over the past month sounded the alarm that regulators at Treasury and the Securities and Exchange Commission could soon take a more active role in cryptocurrency regulation.
"Within the context of the new financial account reporting regime, cryptocurrencies and cryptoasset exchange accounts and payment service accounts that accept cryptocurrencies would be covered. Further, as with cash transactions, businesses that receive cryptoassets with a fair market value of more than $10,000 would also be reported on." Bitcoin traded off its highs for the day on the Treasury headlines and was last up just 1%, according to Coin Metrics. Previously in the session, it was up more than 9%. A growing number of Wall Street analysts have over the past month sounded the alarm that regulators at Treasury and the Securities and Exchange Commission could soon take a more active role in cryptocurrency regulation.
That's actually good news for bitcoin (Score:5, Insightful)
That's actually good news for bitcoin, as it indicates the current mentality of the government is to make sure it is taxed. Which means they are not considering to ban it yet like China.
Given that bitcoin is probably better described as a crime against humanity IMHO, I find it a bit surprising that it's still going strong, but that's just me...
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greed always prevails over good
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bitcoin is probably better described as a crime against humanity IMHO
Curious about your formed opinion. Is it because of the inefficiency and design (and electrical usage for handling and mining) of bitcoin? Or do you believe digital currencies altogether are crimes against humanity?
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Digital crypto "currencies" aren't money, not even currency.
Meanwhile, the dollar has been mostly digital for decades, most money isn't physical.
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All currency is an illusion, Bitcoin doubly so
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No, the word has a definition and US dollar meets it. Bitcoin and similar do not, and they fail the tests of being money.
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Yeah, this is a domain-specific term and you're just trying to say that it doesn't fit the common usage of the word. It's not backed by any nation's government, which is pretty significant for the important uses of the term currency.
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The only thing meaningful government backing does for a currency is enable the payment of
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You've silently switched to currency,
Or maybe you did. This is what you were replying to:
and they fail the tests of being money.
That post had currency as the main subject and "money" as a side note.
And quoting a general language dictionary is only going to be common usage. I'm talking about domain-specific (see any financial dictionary). Just like many won't accept a dictionary definition of artificial intelligence on Slashdot, the word has a more precise meaning when used by people that know what they're talking about.
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I think you mean within the vernacular of some particular model, outside of which such a definition isn't knowing what you are talking about but rather is incorrect. Most people who know what they are talking about utilize the common usage which is why it is
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the EU will accept euros for taxes owed in Europe, because they're money. Canada will accept Candadian dollars for same reason. No government will accept Bitcoin for taxes.
My my you are so very confused by basic things, you cryptotards sure are morons.
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So you realized how stupid your previous statement was didn't you...
So if just one government somewhere lets you pay in crypto, then it's money to you.
No it still isn't money. Just game tokens.
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A government that issues money lets tax be paid in that money, what is your malfunction that you can't comprehend the obvious. No government accepts bitcoin, it is not money. Your incredible leaps of illogic truly are worthy only of a cryptotard shill.
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Governments accept money, but not other kinds of money.
That was surprising to you?
Plenty of reasons to not like bitcoin. You can pick a much better one. No need to make up such idiocy.
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Governments only accept money. No government will accept gaming and gambling token. Your bitcoin sholling has addled your brain and you can't see fundamental truths. Bitcoin can never be money, it fails all the tests of money. Businesses don't take Bitcoin, they convert to money first. Bitcoin only has investors because for now Bitcoin can be converted into money... though with the plunge from $59K to 32.5K in two weeks maybe the Bitcoin casino days are limited.
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I didn't say bitcoin was money, or a good idea. No idea why you think I'm a "cryptotard shill".
Just pointing out your definitions of money aren't useful in this context.
Governments only accept money. No government will accept gaming and gambling token.
Can you pay the government in some other governments money or gold? So the other 'money' or gold are just as much 'not money' as bitcoin.
I think we mostly agree. You just aren't explaining your position very well. Maybe you need more coffee.
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Definition of money wasn't mine, it's Econ 101. Did I say gold was money here in USA? No, I didn't because it isn't.
Governments issue their money, and take taxes in that money. No government issues bitcoin nor takes bitcoin, because it isn't money anywhere.
My logic and reasons are without fallacy, you just talk in circles. Your brain misfires and is addled.
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Nonsense, most places do not accept bitcoin, not generally accepted and so fails that definition. Illiquid and not a stable store of value either. Bitcoin fails all the tests of money. It is a gambling and gaming token only.
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This is false. Visa, Mastercard, and Paypal all accept bitcoin and most places accept one or all of the above. On a person-to-person level the vast majority of people will accept a payment in bitcoin at this stage.
Re: That's actually good news for bitcoin (Score:2)
I thought it would be clear. It is the specific implementation that uses stupid amounts of energy, offering very little in return if you use it for transactions. It goes against the spirit of every climate legislation, hence why I am surprised it is still legal.
I would of course be in favor of an efficient decentralized digital transaction system.
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No, your claims seem to be FUD.
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/t... [nbcnews.com]
https://www.theguardian.com/te... [theguardian.com]
https://www.nature.com/article... [nature.com]
etc. etc.
Just type "is bitcoin carbon neutral" into google and do a little surfing, and the answer given is: no, not even close.
I mean, what in the world would be the rational behind it being carbon neutral?
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Here is the latest on actual consumption:
https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/research%3A-bitcoin-consumes-less-than-half-the-energy-of-the-banking-or-gold-industries
"I mean, what in the world would be the rational behind it being carbon neutral?"
Bitcoin is mined with electricity not carbon.
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The "money" you refer to is fiat currency. It requires the banking industry to function. You are replying to a post with a link establishing that crypto uses less than half the energy of the banking industry. That isn't orders of magnitude worse, it is substantially better. And again the consumption level doesn't matter if the energy producer is clean.
This particular claim is worse than that though. ALL fiat currency in the world requires a comm
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Not the original poster, but the extreme inefficiency is certainly reasonable to consider a crime against humanity. There's also the potential to disrupt economies. Bitcoin promoters advertise its deflationary nature as a feature, but that's not really something you want in a currency, especially not *the* currency. For all the criticism of modern economic and monetary policy, it's provided unprecedented stability and prosperity.
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Meh. Back when they still posted karma counts I had a lifetime of trolling's worth.
Replies are much better.
Re:That's actually good news for bitcoin (Score:5, Insightful)
Well the good news is that making it taxable and putting know-your-customer rules in place will basically kill the only advantage it has over any other payment systems, and thus remove any non-hobbyist incentive to use it. That would be a sane thing for a government to do, no sense having a giant spiderweb of tax laws and anti-money-laundering laws in place, and then a cryptocurrency loophole right next to it big enough to drive a North Korean ICBM launcher through sideways.
Re:That's actually good news for bitcoin (Score:4, Interesting)
Right bitcoin is a total failure once you apply ordinary banking regulations to it; which if you accept there are any validity to those they should logically apply to bitcoin as well.
So what you are left with is an alternative currency that is far slower or more expensive to transact than the existing dollar infrastructure. The dollar infrastructure is OLD and there is a lot of technical modernization that could be done to reduce costs and speed up settlements going forward; bitcoin on the other hand, nope, to many players who are not beholden to any central authority, which in this case inst a feature it means the system can't evolve.
crypto currency may or may not have a feature but bitcoin is truly a SHITcoin. The only thing it has is first mover advantage, THE ONLY THING
Re:That's actually good news for bitcoin (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yeah,but BTC has one huge advantage dollars do not... the ability to get rich quick without doing anything productive and lord it over people who work for a living. BTC gives you the emotional high of 'being right' in a way that dollars can not, and that is worth more to its proponents than anything.
I haven't noticed any lack of that behavior in people who got rich with dollars.
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Not so. They maybe just being smarter than the Chinese. Tax it, then ban it.
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That's actually good news for bitcoin, as it indicates the current mentality of the government is to make sure it is taxed. Which means they are not considering to ban it yet like China.
Given that bitcoin is probably better described as a crime against humanity IMHO, I find it a bit surprising that it's still going strong, but that's just me...
Greed, stupidity and lack of understanding. Admittedly, this Ponzi-scheme is much more sophisticated than usual, but that does not change its nature.
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Lawyers think like lawyers (Score:2, Insightful)
By what mechanism will compliance be verified and by what mechanism will it be enforced?
A law or a regulation is just words on paper without the physical force of the state to back them up and eyes on the target to direct that force.
Encrypted bits out in the aether don't lend themselves very easily to the latter.
If the penalties are more than just a slap, then all this will do is drive it more underground than it is now. Which isn't to say it's exactly on the up and up right now.
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At this point he sounds more like a CypherpunkAnarchistNutjob
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Hi... How exactly is grandparent post living up to the "right-wing nutjob" username? I'm decently left and I don't see anything controversial or false in their post.
Re: Lawyers think like lawyers (Score:1)
I can help. I'll start with an analogy:
Trump says in-person schools are good, therefore in-person schools aren't just bad, they're a form of white supremacy.
Similarly, if RightwingNutjob says cryptocurrency transactions are difficult to incorporate into a fincancial law enforcement regime that grew up around large-ish banking institutions with physical addresses and business charters, then not only is it easy to extend that enforcement regime to the new space, but blockchain cryptography systems are no bett
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At this point in politics you can’t even tell satire accounts from real ones.
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Forensic accounting is theoretically possible on cryptocurrency networks, at least with Bitcoin. But I imagine the tools and skills to actually do it will be pretty specialized and costly.
As always, the first step is to make the laws. Only then can you enforce them, let's not put the cart before the horse. Most of the time "unenforceable" laws end up in that category because of courts placing limitations on the laws rather than because investigators lack the ability to investigate.
Practically speaking I sus
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The tools are costly, but there is a high demand for them. Every LEO and government wants a way to glean insights into BTC's blockchain and be able to find the party that owns wallets. It is only a matter of time before trying to be anonymous with Bitcoin transactions is as fruitless as trying to make a bogus PayPal account to send/receive cash.
Of course, there are other cryptocurrencies out there with anonymous potential, but it is a tough battle. Ring signatures can be gotten around by finding the comm
Re:Lawyers think like lawyers (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, it will be enforced at the exchanges. Coinbase and Paypal will be required to collect tax ID information from people who buy or sell bitcoin and report it to the IRS. Companies that accept bitcoin will clear transactions through coinbase or paypal or similar, or register themselves as exchanges and collect the tax ID directly.
The black market may still transact in bitcoin without telling the IRS. But it will be very difficult to do anything legitimate without the IRS knowing about it.
Personally, I would not consider buying and selling bitcoin or another cryptocurrency without reporting it, because it is much worse for you if you don't report it and they find out.
Keep in mind that the blockchain records every transaction that has ever been made in bitcoin. It is only anonymous because there is no association between addresses and people. But over time, the identities of addresses sometimes become known. Over time, many transactions from the bitcoin blockchain will become de-anonymized. So there is no point, really, where you are safe if you are dealing in bitcoin without telling the IRS (assuming you are subject to US tax law).
I am curious about the miners, though. Since they didn't buy bitcoin, but acquired it by mining, what is their intial cost basis? Maybe the IRS will decide the cost basis is zero and the entire value is subject to capital gains tax. Or, maybe they will allow you to use equipment and electrical costs to determine the cost basis. Interesting tax question.
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what is their intial cost basis?
Their power bill? If they had the foresight to meter their mining machine and keep records.
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Yeah that is what I am thinking. But I am not a tax person. Maybe the only way to do it (or the way someone SHOULD have done it) is to start a mining business. Then power could be written off as a business expense (along with other expenses and depreciation of mining hardware, etc). Then you sell the bitcoin for a profit as soon as it is mined, and that profit would be taxed as a business profit instead of a capital gain.
If you wanted to HODL you could just have the business sell the bitcoin to yourself, th
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start a mining business
Offshore investment company. I've got dibs on Bermuda Shorts LLC.
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It is already being enforced at the exchanges. Virtually every exchange out there has KYC/AML measures in place, so adding reporting to the IRS, if it isn't there already, is just part of what a financial institution does. A cryptocurrency is worthless unless one can exchange it for material goods, and having the gateways guarded pretty much ensures the IRS will get their cut, or at least know who to slap the handcuffs on.
Having a ton of cryptocurrency is one thing. Being able to cash out and convert the
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In fact, the exchanges keep a good record of every transaction you make and you can download it in various formats (csv, excel). I don't know if they have it yet, but eventually they might join etrade and the like and have it automatically imported into turbotax and similar eventually.
And yes, every crypto account I've opened has required some form of KYC validation. I primarily use Coinbase and Binance.US and I'm perfectly fine with reporting my earnings/losses.
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Re: Miners.... Pretty simple, like any other business, the value attained from mining the coin minus the cost of mining the coin (i.e. computer equipment / asset depreciation, electricity, man hours) equals revenue, that revenue is taxable.
I agree with you, the wild west days of crypt currencies are drawing to an end. People better start playing by the rules or they can expect to be prosecuted in the future for tax evasion / money laundering.
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By what mechanism will compliance be verified and by what mechanism will it be enforced?
We're talking about the US here right?
Guns, the answer is guns.
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By what mechanism will compliance be verified and by what mechanism will it be enforced?
By this one [xkcd.com].
Those that are involved in illegal activities typically do so with the permission (and payment to) local organized crime. Eventually, if they cross the mob or just want out, they come to find that the penalty for doing so can be quite severe. The Russian mob likes to use gardening shears to cut body parts off. Eventually, those that do want out turn states evidence and go into witness protection. After they have turned their little black books over to the authorities with anonymous account numb
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There are lots of things you can do that you can get away with. A great deal of people don't do things simply because it's against the law.
I know this concept blows some peoples minds, but just because laws and regulations may not reach 100% compliance or enforced doesn't make them useless or detrimental.
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Of all the things nation-states enforce, it will be taxes. Richer people may get a finger waggle, but there will be others who get hauled off and locked up for a long time, just to be made examples of.
Enforcing taxes on Bitcoin can be done. Between info that the blockchain provides, tracing users via IPs, and other data that is given out (analytics by wallet apps), it wouldn't be hard for an enforcement agency to build a case against someone, and have pretty much 100% proof of tax evasion. Yes, BTC walle
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If it happens, it will certainly drive c
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There is always blowback. It is a good thing in some ways, but my fear is that it will drive newer advances and cryptocurrencies that can keep the IRS at bay, similar to how blacklists caused spammers to go from their own IP blocks to decentralized stuff, to going after compromised accounts, and has become a whack-a-mole effort.
Right now, we have cryptocurrencies mainly designed for pump and dump, perhaps with some anonymous features thrown in. If people started really worrying about governments, I wouldn
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Pretty much the adage, "there is no honor among thieves" comes into play here.
You have me wondering about a cryptocurrency, with multiple anonymous mechanisms, and perhaps multiple ways to mine it, be it proof of storage (like Chia), proof of network (like Helium), or proof of work (like most everything out there.) Call it CrimeCoin. Of course, no official place would accept it, but if people think it is cool enough to mine, then it will end up with some value, even if the only exchanges into and out of i
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I'm over my
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Just like any other money laundering operation, they get you when you convert to cash or buy something with it
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> Just like any other money laundering operation, they get you when you convert to cash or buy something with it
Reminds me of that old meme...
Neo: Are you telling me that when it's ready I'll be able to cash in my bitcoin for a fortune?
Morpheus: No, Neo, I'm telling you that when it's ready you won't have to.
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In The Great Simoleon Caper. Stephenson uses "distributed republics" to get around local taxation issues, as a prequel of sorts to the mostly dissolved US government of Snow Crash
Morpheus would be pleased
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Nobody ever thought of using it to cheat taxes. If your bank account suddenly sees $20k deposited the bank will helpfully alert the IRS to that fact. That was true long before bitcoin. The Sopranos even made fun of it when Tony's wife was skimming $9k a week into her own hidden account.
About the only way you could keep uncle sam away is buy lots of hardware from Newegg and resell it for straight cash locally. Of course now your free time is spent running a flea market so is it worth the hassle?
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You're funny, people can easily avoid that by buying and selling without the step of cash, maybe even illegal goods and services. But of course the hammer is dropping in many ways, governments want their piece of the action and much organized crime competes with them.
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bout the only way you could keep uncle sam away is buy lots of hardware from Newegg and resell it for straight cash locally. Of course now your free time is spent running a flea market so is it worth the hassle?
Its almost as if there are not entire criminal outfits dedicated to fencing and money laundering. The carding guys have members of street gangs basically dedicated to this, they will take a large cut usually but they have armies of gophers ready to fence merch that is either stolen or bought launder funds. Its actually bread and butter of low level gang activity second probably to drug pushing a distant second but still a big part of what they do
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There is always the classic way to move money. Start a pub, restaurant, or other venue that is mainly cash only.
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There is always the classic way to move money. Start a pub, restaurant, or other venue that is mainly cash only.
Or buy golf courses and lose money every year [businessinsider.com] yet oddly have an unending well of money to draw from even when heavily in debt.
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The last time I re-visited the crypto issue, I thought the one legit use would be for an easy to use "tip jar" function. Bitcoin and other crypto are not particularly good at that due to high network fees, slow transactions, and the deflationary nature of the currency encouraging people to hold rather than spend.
I took a look at NanoCoin. It's still deflationary, but has free transactions that are also lightning fast. That should make it ideal for micro-transactions, and it was the only crypto I found th
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Nope. The way it will work will be that you need to report when you SELL. Holding an asset does not generally incur taxes. For traders/investors, you pay a capital gains tax when you sell. If you trade bitcoin for something, as far as the IRS is concerned, you sold the bitcoin. The tax is assessed against the profit which is the selling price minus the buying price. You can include fees in the buying price. If you are unable to establish when you acquired the bitcoin and how much you paid for it, the worst
Mandatory Reading... (Score:3)
The Great Simoleon Caper [electricinca.com]
Easy to track (Score:5, Insightful)
I boggles the mind that so many people considered BitCoin difficult to track back in the early days. The database is completely public, unlike retailers' receipts, brokerage transaction histories, or consulting accounts. It's not fragmented like real estate and automobile transactions.
Sure a wallet is initially just a number, but its interactions with other wallets, and their historical and future interactions with other parts of the economy, make it quite identifiable. Certainly so when an entity with subpoena power bothers to make an effort.
From my point of view, that is all to the good. I hate the waste in mining and really want to see a US FedCoin take off. I also want my fellow citizens to pay their damn taxes -- if they want to save money on taxes they are welcome to write letters to their representatives, and hope legislation goes their way.
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If you're buying something in Russia, that's less of a concern... as long as you pay your Russian taxes, you're probably fine.
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I am sure there will continue to be black market bitcoin transactions, even in the US. But keep in mind that the blackmailers may not be subject to US jurisdiction. So they may be able to spend the coin or exchange it for some non US currency in some fashion and never get caught. Or, maybe, as I suspect, they have already been contacted by persons affiliated with the US government, in an unofficial way. That will never be reported in the news. Anyway, there are things people can do to make bitcoin difficult
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You can "launder" your crypto currency by transferring it to a cryto-exchange "hot-wallet", then to another wallet. From the outside, all you see is wallet1 to cryto-exchange-wallet. then crypto-exchange-wallet to wallet2. But since all the crypto is fungible, there is no way to prove or track the coins from wallet1 made to wallet2.
It could be anyone who has an account with the crypto-exchange transferring coins to wallet2, there is no way to find out unless you can peer inside the crypto-exchange internal
and if they find out it's FPMITAP time (Score:2)
and if they find out it's FPMITAP time
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Uh, you're a little late.
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It just means more coins are tainted, and there are a number of exchanges with KYT which will refuse to touch tainted coins.
So says (Score:2)
misplaced priorities, IRS (Score:1, Offtopic)
I think the IRS is barking up the wrong tree with this one. There are thousands of perfectly legal (and not quite legal) tax dodges being used right now, as detailed in the Panama Papers. In the amounts of trillions.
The only reason why these moves are legal is because the legislature is bought and paid for by those who are using these methods. IOW the game is rigged from top to bottom.
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as detailed in the Panama Papers
That is the operative thing there.
Tax doges that are 'perfectly legal' are not the IRS problem, they are CONgress's problem to fix.
Which brings us to the 'not quite legal' those are used be monies interests who happen to also usually be major political contributors. We can have a whole separate discussion as to if on balance the IRS favors the DNC or the GOP but one thing is for sure they are not a-political. They don't really want to create problems for any 'personal friends' of any powerful Congress Critt
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There is some good news on that front with Biden announcing today a plan to double the IRS workforce and focus on tax dodging.
Biden proposes doubling IRS workforce as part of plan to snag tax cheats [politico.com]
At the same time, the administration wants to require financial institutions and other businesses to report a lot more information about the money coursing through their customers’ accounts — a proposal designed to put the fear of the IRS in the hearts of tax scofflaws.
It’s part of a concerted e
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That's right. They should also be making $500, $1000, $5000 notes. $100 is ludicrous this day in age. They need to do away with civil asset forfeiture. Where you're caught traveling with money. No connection whatsoever to drugs. So the police are modern day pirates.
avoid tax? (Score:1)
Tax Evasion risk? (Score:2)
For the top 1% of the top 1% maybe. For everyone else? Those at the top think the rest of us are suckers. Investing ins something as volatile as Crypto's is for most of us, a mug's game. AFAIK, it is just the most recent Ponzi scheme intended to make the rich richer.
Government? Count me out! (Score:2)
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Cryptocurrency's only purposes? (Score:2)
Tax evasion, money laundering, and sale of illegal goods (i.e., paying off extortionists). Oh, and scams^X investments that cause lots of unsophisticated people to lose what little they already have.
Considering how much energy it wastes? (Score:2)
I'm expecting a energy use tax for each new Bitcoin.
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Wrong interpretation. The IRS wants their cut - in *dollars*. They don't care if your assets are a bazillion dollar yacht, 3 shares of GameStop, or a pattern of bits. If you sell an asset for a profit, they want their cut - in *dollars*.
So no, Bitcoin hasn't succeeded as money or currency. It might have succeeded about as well as tulips did in the 1600s, though.
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When times got desperate you could always eat tulip bulbs.