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According
to former Facebook executive and venture capitalist Chamath
Palihapitiya, adding identity to the pseudo-anonymous Bitcoin currency
will help legitimize it. In it’s current state, Bitcoin
transactions are anonymous to an extent. Bitcoin addresses and
transactions don’t carry any identity, and could be kept anonymous by
the owner if they wanted. But in the public Bitcoin ledger, the block
chain, all transactions can be viewed and analysed by anyone.
However, Palihapitiya thinks building a layer on top of the Bitcoin protocol using Facebook’s
Open Graph will be able to validate bitcoins anonymous transactions. By
tying user identities to Bitcoin transactions, Palihapitiya says “that’s the type of simplification that allows Bitcoin to get to the mass market.”
Introducing identity would add “tremendous value” and is something that Facebook would be able to do, he said. “I
think the only company that could legitimately do it is Facebook,” said
Palihapitiya. He also said he thinks Facebook Chief Executive Mark
Zuckerberg thinks “Bitcoin is cool.”
Ross Ulbricht, who stands accused of running the Silk Road black market under the name "Dread Pirate Roberts," says that new federal bitcoin laws
make the charges against him invalid. In a filing over the weekend,
Ulbricht's lawyers defended him against charges of hacking, narcotics
trafficking, operating a criminal conspiracy, and money laundering. The
first three charges, his lawyers argue, are "unconstitutionally broad"
and can't be applied to the normal operation of a website, even one
whose business is illegal goods. And the last charge, they say, makes no
sense if there isn't actual money involved — a possibility implied by a
recent IRS decision.
Ulbricht's defense against the
first three charges largely amounts to an abdication of responsibility
over what users did on the site: any actual drug trafficking would have
been done by users of Silk Road, not the site's operator. Using the
comparison of a landlord whose tenants operate a crack den, or a search
engine that allows users to find illegal content, they argue that only
civil penalties should apply, not the criminal ones federal prosecutors
are seeking. "At worst, Mr. Ulbricht allegedly acted as a conduit or
facilitator for those engaging in illegal activity," not as a drug
"kingpin." And a hacking conspiracy charge, they say, is based only on
the sale of malicious software through the site, not anything Ulbricht
himself did.
Recent IRS guidelines tax bitcoin as property
The fourth charge, however, is
based on interpreting what bitcoin itself is. Or, more precisely, it's
based on the most recent legal interpretation of what bitcoin is:
property, not currency. In late March, the IRS finally issued rules on
virtual currency, saying that it should be taxed as an investment rather
than money. "In some environments, virtual currency operates like
'real' currency," said a notice, "but it does not have legal tender
status in any jurisdiction." Picking this up, Ulbricht's lawyers say
it's the latest in a series of government statements that treat bitcoin
as something other than a currency. It doesn't, therefore, fit the exact
definition of "funds" or "monetary instruments" used in laws against
money laundering.
Silk Road has always occupied
an outsized role in discussion of bitcoin, and Ulbricht's arrest marked
one of the currency's biggest brushes with the law. As it proceeds,
governments are still working through how to classify bitcoin,
especially after the recent bankruptcy of prominent bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox. Friends and family of Ulbricht, meanwhile, have mounted a defense
unrelated to the vagaries of virtual currency laws: that the drug
kingpin described in the charges couldn't be the man they know.
Following rumours of China’s plans to ban bank transfers to bitcoin exchanges, the CEO of Bitcoin™ has decided to ban China.
The
decision was unanimously approved by Bitcoin’s shareholders, the
Bitcoin Board of Directors, HaCkerz4BITZ and the Bitcoin Steering Board.
As
of 8th April, bitcoin transfers to and from the Glorious People’s
Republic of China will no longer by supported by the Bitcoin Network™.
The decision will not affect the Republic of China (Taiwan) – unless it
gets invaded in the meantime. It is unclear whether or not it will apply
to Hong Kong, which is sort of part of China, but really it isn’t – you
know?
Pre-empting the PBOC ruling
The decision was
announced by Bitcoin™ CEO Warren Winkleberg via reddit on Tuesday
morning. It was made following extensive discussions with members of the
bitcoin community, Chinese exchanges and Dorian S Nakamoto himself.
Although there were a few dissenting voices, they were drowned out in a lengthy discussion thanks to Godwin’s Law – hence the decision was unanimous.
As a result, Bitcoin Inc.™ decided to pre-empt the imminent announcement of an official People’s Bank of China (PBOC) notice,
which is expected to effectively prohibit banks from doing business
with bitcoin exchanges in mainland China, which happen to be
wholly-owned subsidiaries of Bitcoin Inc.™
Warren Winkleberg stated:
“In
light of China’s imminent decision to clamp down on bitcoin exchanges,
we had no choice but to completely ban China. We are aware that the
decision will have a long-term impact on the proliferation of bitcoin
and the price, but frankly we had no alternative.”
“We had to act in the best interest of our shareholders and Bitcoin™ investors worldwide,” he added.
Reactions, backlash, counter-backlash reactions
CEO
of The Internet™ Kal-El Al-Gore told CoinDesk that while the decision
is controversial, in the grand scheme of things it will help the bitcoin
community and The Internet™ as a whole. He added:
“The
Great Firewall of China has been hampering development and eating into
our margins for more than a decade. Here at The Internet™ we know full
well that restrictive policies advocated by certain circles in the
Chinese government can have a devastating effect on growth and the
adoption of new technologies. I should know, I invented The Internet™.”
“In
addition, carbon dioxide emissions caused by the firewall are
contributing to China’s air quality problems and they have become a
public health issue. We all need to reduce our carbon footprint.”
CEO of Dogecoin™, Mr Shibah Inews said: Mr Inews modelling for Mensweardog In
addition, The Socialist Union of Bitcoin Miners warns that the decision
will not do much to help the plight of Chinese bitcoin miners, who are
often compelled to work in unregulated bitcoin mines under harsh
conditions with no union protection.
The International Labour
Organisation reports that more than a dozen canaries (bred for their
‘bitcoin’ yellow hue) died in Chinese bitcoin mines last year.
“Children
are being forced to mine for blocks to add to the master block chain.
However the difficulty is astronomical – these kids don’t even earn the
transaction fees they’re mining for,” an investigator told bitcoin’s
premier news source The Coinion last December.
Even Apple has called for a thorough investigation from the authorities.
“It
is even worse than Foxconn. We did not believe it was humanly possible,
but it is,” Apple CEO Tim Cook tweeted in response. “It is almost as
inhumane as reading the iTunes terms of service.”
Price swings gone wild
The
move is expected to cause even greater volatility on an already
volatile bitcoin market. Many Chinese investors and exchanges are
expected to start dumping their bitcoin holdings over the next week.
This could trigger a ripple effect, causing many investors to unload
their wallets before the price tanks.
However,
it is seen as an opportunity for speculators and even some governments.
Ukraine is rumoured to be planning to acquire as much as $1bn worth of
bitcoins, which it plans to use to pay off its $1.6bn gas bill and to
irk Russia in the process.
Russian President Vladimir Putin is not impressed.
“I bought into bitcoin at $14 and sold at $800. I’m all doge now,” he said, adding: “In Putin’s Russia bitcoin exchanges you.”
Analysts
expect the price to bottom out later this month, but before it does it
will spend a couple of weeks in negative territory, literally.
It
is not all bad news. Speculators can expect great returns if they pounce
at the right moment. In related news, Mt. Gox is widely expected to
miraculously “find” a few hundred thousand bitcoins once they are worth
next to nothing. Woah here, cowboy image via Shutterstock