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Coinsetter aims to launch its Bitcoin trading platform in July – The Next Web

Coinsetter aims to launch its Bitcoin trading platform in July
The Next Web
Editor’s Note: The following is a guest post by Emily Joyce of Fueled. Fueled is a digital product design and development incubator based in New York, Chicago and London. Emerging from the spectral edge of online financial markets comes Bitcoin


Coinsetter aims to launch its Bitcoin trading platform in July
The Next Web
Editor's Note: The following is a guest post by Emily Joyce of Fueled. Fueled is a digital product design and development incubator based in New York, Chicago and London. Emerging from the spectral edge of online financial markets comes Bitcoin...

ATO monitors Bitcoin to trap tax dodgers – BRW (subscription)


BRW (subscription)

ATO monitors Bitcoin to trap tax dodgers
BRW (subscription)
Bitcoin is no more anonymous than physical cash and the ATO has experience in working with earlier forms of anonymous electronic money systems, and with physical cash, which are relevant for responding to new and emerging systems,” ATO senior 
Bitcoin users in ATO sights as use in property transactions set to riseProperty Observer
Tax office takes aim at Bitcoin usersBusiness Spectator
PRESS DIGEST-Australian General News – June 24Reuters AlertNet (blog)

all 12 news articles »


BRW (subscription)

ATO monitors Bitcoin to trap tax dodgers
BRW (subscription)
Bitcoin is no more anonymous than physical cash and the ATO has experience in working with earlier forms of anonymous electronic money systems, and with physical cash, which are relevant for responding to new and emerging systems,” ATO senior ...
Bitcoin users in ATO sights as use in property transactions set to riseProperty Observer
Tax office takes aim at Bitcoin usersBusiness Spectator
PRESS DIGEST-Australian General News - June 24Reuters AlertNet (blog)

all 12 news articles »

Bitcoin Foundation Gets Cease-And-Desist Letter From California – Business Insider


Business Insider

Bitcoin Foundation Gets Cease-And-Desist Letter From California
Business Insider
The Bitcoin Foundation has received a cease-and-desist letter from the California Department of Financial Institutions, Forbes contributor Jon Matonis reports. Matonis’ bio says he himself is on the board of the Bitcoin foundation. The agency charges


Business Insider

Bitcoin Foundation Gets Cease-And-Desist Letter From California
Business Insider
The Bitcoin Foundation has received a cease-and-desist letter from the California Department of Financial Institutions, Forbes contributor Jon Matonis reports. Matonis' bio says he himself is on the board of the Bitcoin foundation. The agency charges ...

California tells Bitcoin Foundation to stop trading or face a fine – The Verge

California tells Bitcoin Foundation to stop trading or face a fine
The Verge
California’s Department of Financial Institutions is going after Bitcoin. Today, Forbes published a cease and desist letter sent to the Bitcoin Foundation, an organization devoted to creating best practices for the decentralized currency. Regulators


California tells Bitcoin Foundation to stop trading or face a fine
The Verge
California's Department of Financial Institutions is going after Bitcoin. Today, Forbes published a cease and desist letter sent to the Bitcoin Foundation, an organization devoted to creating best practices for the decentralized currency. Regulators ...

Bitcoin Foundation Receives Cease And Desist Order From California – Forbes


Business Insider

Bitcoin Foundation Receives Cease And Desist Order From California
Forbes
Directly following last month’s Bitcoin 2013 conference event in San Jose, CA that brought decent revenue into the state, California’s Department of Financial Institutions decided to issue a cease and desist warning to conference organizer Bitcoin
Bitcoin Foundation ordered to cease operations in CaliforniaCNET
California tells Bitcoin Foundation to stop trading or face a fineThe Verge
Bitcoin Foundation comes under fire in CaliforniaVentureBeat
Business Insider –Ars Technica –PCWorld
all 9 news articles »

Business Insider

Bitcoin Foundation Receives Cease And Desist Order From California
Forbes
Directly following last month's Bitcoin 2013 conference event in San Jose, CA that brought decent revenue into the state, California's Department of Financial Institutions decided to issue a cease and desist warning to conference organizer Bitcoin ...
Bitcoin Foundation ordered to cease operations in CaliforniaCNET
California tells Bitcoin Foundation to stop trading or face a fineThe Verge
Bitcoin Foundation comes under fire in CaliforniaVentureBeat
Business Insider -Ars Technica -PCWorld
all 9 news articles »

Largest Bitcoin Exchange Halts US Dollar Withdrawals – Wall Street Journal


RT

Largest Bitcoin Exchange Halts US Dollar Withdrawals
Wall Street Journal
Mt. Gox, the world’s largest bitcoin trading exchange, said it has halted withdrawals of customer funds in U.S. dollars as it makes systems improvements. The Tokyo-based exchange posted the notice on its website. The halt comes as the exchange has seen 
World’s largest Bitcoin exchange suspends US withdrawalsRT
Bitcoin Sees the Grim ReaperNew York Magazine
Bitcoin’s Big Bank Problem: Why Did Mt. Gox Halt US Payouts?Wired
MarketWatch –NASDAQ –Business Insider
all 39 news articles »

RT

Largest Bitcoin Exchange Halts US Dollar Withdrawals
Wall Street Journal
Mt. Gox, the world's largest bitcoin trading exchange, said it has halted withdrawals of customer funds in U.S. dollars as it makes systems improvements. The Tokyo-based exchange posted the notice on its website. The halt comes as the exchange has seen ...
World's largest Bitcoin exchange suspends US withdrawalsRT
Bitcoin Sees the Grim ReaperNew York Magazine
Bitcoin's Big Bank Problem: Why Did Mt. Gox Halt US Payouts?Wired
MarketWatch -NASDAQ -Business Insider
all 39 news articles »

The Fincen Whistleblowers

By Jon Matonis
American Banker
Monday, June 17, 2013

http://www.americanbanker.com/bankthink/the-fincen-whistleblowers-1059910-1.html

Why do we never hear about whistleblowers coming from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network of the U.S. Treasury? Where are they?

Regarding surveillance, the world may never have a Fincen whistleblower in the same way that we have an NSA or CIA whistleblower. This is because the Fincen bureau conducts all of its surveillance activity out in the open and in plain sight, probably for its effect as a deterrent. Fincen even recruits banks and other agent financial institutions to participate in the direct surveillance that make serious and consequential judgment calls along the way.

Blatant and stated upfront, the unimpeded surveillance of Americans’ financial activity is Fincen’s core mission. So, nothing much to blow the whistle on there.

Since the establishment of Fincen in 1990 to act as the designated administrator of the 1970 Bank Secrecy Act, two generations of educated Americans, including some smart attorneys, have been conditioned to think of money laundering as a real and legitimate category of crime. Eradication of privacy is the goal and manipulation of the semantic crime debate is the tool.

In typical crime-speak fashion, it is therefore possible to have telephone crime and email crime, because persons committing illegal acts can use telephone and email channels to execute their deeds. Perhaps this is why the U.S. administration and the NSA don’t see much wrong with PRISM. In their minds, violating the privacy rights of the 99.99% is justified if it ultimately results in the identification of the evil 0.01%.

In true Machiavellian spirit that glorifies instrumentality in statebuilding, “the ends justify the means,” especially when it comes to using our money as an identity tracking device. In order to rule successfully, deceit and violence may be necessary for the stabilization of power, to eliminate political rivals, to coerce resistant populations, and to purge the community of other individuals with strong character.

The larger debate around privacy is not just a matter of perception. Nor is it about striking the proper balance, as many have implied. The debate is about zero privacy or zero surveillance as the default and who defines the variations from the default.

Since the available cryptography and technical tools of today permit near absolutes on each side of the privacy-surveillance spectrum, each advancement from one side elicits an equally strong reaction from the other side. More pervasive and aggressive surveillance techniques at the governmental level encourage greater general use of advanced cryptography tools among average citizens. Last week’s headlines only served to spread public awareness of these privacy tools.

It shouldn’t have to be this way. We shouldn’t always have to deploy the strongest available encryption techniques against the surveilling class. The surveilling class should simply stop watching us.

As shameful as the existence of PRISM is, and it is monumentally shameful for a free society, it doesn’t even compare to the unprecedented level of financial surveillance the world is on the verge of witnessing. With FATCA nearing its debut, the IRS goes global, and with FATF, the OECD develops policies to assist in standardizing worldwide enforcement of financial surveillance, ensuring there is nowhere left to hide. These are the agents of our “financial” PRISM.

As banks and credit card companies become more complicit in the surveillance, digital currencies with proper mixing services such as bitcoin become a viable option for preserving some transactional privacy, even if identification is required for its initial acquisition from licensed money transmitters.

At a conference last week, the U.S. Institute of Peace and the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children trotted out Bitcoin and the anonymized web browser Tor as whipping boys in a gross and misguided attempt to paint certain technologies as indirectly enabling immoral behavior. The theme of the conference was brainstorming possible ways to reconcile the opportunities of innovative financial technologies with the needs and concerns of law enforcement.

Some type of back door, or exception, for law enforcement must certainly be possible – to protect the children, you know. Although virtual currency exchange endpoints can be regulated, two representatives of the Bitcoin Foundation clearly stated the obvious limitations in altering the Bitcoin transaction protocol itself. Also, for the life of me, I cannot imagine how the Tor Project could compromise itself in an acceptable way. It would be like asking a toaster not to toast.

In her opening remarks at the conference, Fincen Director Jennifer Shasky Calvery cited the two wildly different lenses through which observers see the virtual currency issue. Generally, it’s thwarting financial innovation versus establishing a clear and safe regulatory environment. She happens to be correct about this framework.

However, upon leaving the director’s U.S.-centric bias, two other lenses emerge – U.S. interests versus rest-of-the-world interests. And, this is where we find our elusive whistleblower.

The Fincen whistleblower is other sovereign nations and they are starting to speak.

In April, the Dutch Minister of Finance and president of the Board of Governors of the European Stability Mechanism, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, answered questions from his country’s parliament regarding bitcoin. (His remarks were later translated by a Dutch member of the Bitcoin community.)

When asked if “the activities as performed by Bitcoin fall under the Financial Supervision Act or is this a private activity,” Minister Dijsselbloem responded, “Anyone is free to develop and/or use alternative (digital) products, as long as it does not conflict with the Dutch law, such as the law on gambling.”

He continued: “The current understanding is that Bitcoin is not electronic money as meant in the Financial Supervision Act, partly because Bitcoins are not issued in exchange for received money and they do not represent a claim on the issuer. Because of this, Bitcoin does not meet at least two of the four requirements set out in the law. Also, Bitcoin is not in any other way a financial product as meant by the law. (Mediation in) the purchase or sale of Bitcoins is not a financial service either, so the Financial Supervision Act does not apply.”

Many educated and developed countries don’t immediately see every product as something to track and don’t necessarily view financial privacy as a negative. Indeed, prior to immense and unparalleled pressure from the U.S., bank secrecy and client confidentiality had been a proud heritage in countries such as Switzerland, Austria, and Liechtenstein.

But will the world listen to the up and coming Fincen whistleblowers? They should. Either willingly or begrudgingly, the world has embarked on a path of greater and greater transparency in a bargained exchange for the warm embrace of security. But, the ends do not justify the means in that grand tradeoff. A world where privacy isn’t sacrificed and all human transactions aren’t tracked is not only possible, but imperative. The alternative will be far worse than you can imagine.

By Jon Matonis
American Banker
Monday, June 17, 2013

http://www.americanbanker.com/bankthink/the-fincen-whistleblowers-1059910-1.html

Why do we never hear about whistleblowers coming from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network of the U.S. Treasury? Where are they?

Regarding surveillance, the world may never have a Fincen whistleblower in the same way that we have an NSA or CIA whistleblower. This is because the Fincen bureau conducts all of its surveillance activity out in the open and in plain sight, probably for its effect as a deterrent. Fincen even recruits banks and other agent financial institutions to participate in the direct surveillance that make serious and consequential judgment calls along the way.

Blatant and stated upfront, the unimpeded surveillance of Americans’ financial activity is Fincen’s core mission. So, nothing much to blow the whistle on there.

Since the establishment of Fincen in 1990 to act as the designated administrator of the 1970 Bank Secrecy Act, two generations of educated Americans, including some smart attorneys, have been conditioned to think of money laundering as a real and legitimate category of crime. Eradication of privacy is the goal and manipulation of the semantic crime debate is the tool.

In typical crime-speak fashion, it is therefore possible to have telephone crime and email crime, because persons committing illegal acts can use telephone and email channels to execute their deeds. Perhaps this is why the U.S. administration and the NSA don’t see much wrong with PRISM. In their minds, violating the privacy rights of the 99.99% is justified if it ultimately results in the identification of the evil 0.01%.

In true Machiavellian spirit that glorifies instrumentality in statebuilding, “the ends justify the means,” especially when it comes to using our money as an identity tracking device. In order to rule successfully, deceit and violence may be necessary for the stabilization of power, to eliminate political rivals, to coerce resistant populations, and to purge the community of other individuals with strong character.

The larger debate around privacy is not just a matter of perception. Nor is it about striking the proper balance, as many have implied. The debate is about zero privacy or zero surveillance as the default and who defines the variations from the default.

Since the available cryptography and technical tools of today permit near absolutes on each side of the privacy-surveillance spectrum, each advancement from one side elicits an equally strong reaction from the other side. More pervasive and aggressive surveillance techniques at the governmental level encourage greater general use of advanced cryptography tools among average citizens. Last week’s headlines only served to spread public awareness of these privacy tools.

It shouldn’t have to be this way. We shouldn’t always have to deploy the strongest available encryption techniques against the surveilling class. The surveilling class should simply stop watching us.

As shameful as the existence of PRISM is, and it is monumentally shameful for a free society, it doesn’t even compare to the unprecedented level of financial surveillance the world is on the verge of witnessing. With FATCA nearing its debut, the IRS goes global, and with FATF, the OECD develops policies to assist in standardizing worldwide enforcement of financial surveillance, ensuring there is nowhere left to hide. These are the agents of our “financial” PRISM.

As banks and credit card companies become more complicit in the surveillance, digital currencies with proper mixing services such as bitcoin become a viable option for preserving some transactional privacy, even if identification is required for its initial acquisition from licensed money transmitters.

At a conference last week, the U.S. Institute of Peace and the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children trotted out Bitcoin and the anonymized web browser Tor as whipping boys in a gross and misguided attempt to paint certain technologies as indirectly enabling immoral behavior. The theme of the conference was brainstorming possible ways to reconcile the opportunities of innovative financial technologies with the needs and concerns of law enforcement.

Some type of back door, or exception, for law enforcement must certainly be possible – to protect the children, you know. Although virtual currency exchange endpoints can be regulated, two representatives of the Bitcoin Foundation clearly stated the obvious limitations in altering the Bitcoin transaction protocol itself. Also, for the life of me, I cannot imagine how the Tor Project could compromise itself in an acceptable way. It would be like asking a toaster not to toast.

In her opening remarks at the conference, Fincen Director Jennifer Shasky Calvery cited the two wildly different lenses through which observers see the virtual currency issue. Generally, it’s thwarting financial innovation versus establishing a clear and safe regulatory environment. She happens to be correct about this framework.

However, upon leaving the director’s U.S.-centric bias, two other lenses emerge – U.S. interests versus rest-of-the-world interests. And, this is where we find our elusive whistleblower.

The Fincen whistleblower is other sovereign nations and they are starting to speak.

In April, the Dutch Minister of Finance and president of the Board of Governors of the European Stability Mechanism, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, answered questions from his country’s parliament regarding bitcoin. (His remarks were later translated by a Dutch member of the Bitcoin community.)

When asked if “the activities as performed by Bitcoin fall under the Financial Supervision Act or is this a private activity,” Minister Dijsselbloem responded, “Anyone is free to develop and/or use alternative (digital) products, as long as it does not conflict with the Dutch law, such as the law on gambling.”

He continued: “The current understanding is that Bitcoin is not electronic money as meant in the Financial Supervision Act, partly because Bitcoins are not issued in exchange for received money and they do not represent a claim on the issuer. Because of this, Bitcoin does not meet at least two of the four requirements set out in the law. Also, Bitcoin is not in any other way a financial product as meant by the law. (Mediation in) the purchase or sale of Bitcoins is not a financial service either, so the Financial Supervision Act does not apply.”

Many educated and developed countries don’t immediately see every product as something to track and don’t necessarily view financial privacy as a negative. Indeed, prior to immense and unparalleled pressure from the U.S., bank secrecy and client confidentiality had been a proud heritage in countries such as Switzerland, Austria, and Liechtenstein.

But will the world listen to the up and coming Fincen whistleblowers? They should. Either willingly or begrudgingly, the world has embarked on a path of greater and greater transparency in a bargained exchange for the warm embrace of security. But, the ends do not justify the means in that grand tradeoff. A world where privacy isn’t sacrificed and all human transactions aren’t tracked is not only possible, but imperative. The alternative will be far worse than you can imagine.

Iranian Rial Currency Targeted For Destruction

By Jon Matonis
Forbes
Monday, June 17, 2013

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmatonis/2013/06/17/government-of-worlds-reserve-currency-targets-iranian-rial/

Effective July 1st, the United States has authorized new sanctions directly targeting the already-devalued Iranian rial with penalties for transacting or holding the currency outside of Iran. This represents the first time that the U.S. has focused specifically on the Iranian monetary unit itself and the ninth set of sanctions President Barack Obama has imposed against Iran.

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said, “This new action targets Iran’s currency, the rial, by authorizing the imposition of sanctions on foreign financial institutions that knowingly conduct or facilitate significant transactions for the purchase or sale of the Iranian rial, or that maintain significant accounts outside Iran denominated in the Iranian rial.”

The tough sanctions are intended to increase the financial pressure on the Islamic republic to abandon its nuclear program. However, Iran maintains that its nuclear energy program is for peaceful purposes only and has refused to back down arguing that it has this right.

Carney explained how the sanctions also target the foreign assets of Iran’s leaders, “Further increasing the pressure on the Iranian government, the Executive Order authorizes the imposition of additional sanctions on persons who provide material support to Iranian persons and certain other persons designated pursuant to Iran sanctions authorities that are included on the list of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (SDN List) maintained by the Department of the Treasury.”

The Government of Iran’s leadership controls a vast overseas network of 37 private businesses for the purpose of managing off-the-books investments that are shielded from the view of international regulators.

This month in exchange for pledges to reduce oil purchases from Iran, the U.S. State Department renewed six-month waivers on Iran sanctions for nine countries in total, including China, India, South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Turkey and Taiwan.

In early 2012, the U.S. and the European Union imposed payment sanctions on Iran’s oil and financial sectors with the goal of weakening Iranian oil exports and blockading transactions with the Central Bank of Iran via Swift. However, a European Union court in February ruled against the EU banking sanctions imposed on one of Iran’s largest banks, which extends to the payment sanctions imposed by Swift in March of last year.

The Iranian currency has already been suffering from record inflation losing more than two-thirds of its value in the past two years, trading at 36,000 per U.S. dollar as of April 30th, compared with 16,000 at the beginning of 2012.

“The idea is to cause depreciation of the rial and make it unusable in international commerce,” according to David Cohen, the Treasury Department’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.

President Obama issued this latest Executive Order on June 3rd and during an interview Cohen said, “the purpose of the one-month phase-in period is to give financial institutions currently holding rials the opportunity to dump them.”

By Jon Matonis
Forbes
Monday, June 17, 2013

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmatonis/2013/06/17/government-of-worlds-reserve-currency-targets-iranian-rial/

Effective July 1st, the United States has authorized new sanctions directly targeting the already-devalued Iranian rial with penalties for transacting or holding the currency outside of Iran. This represents the first time that the U.S. has focused specifically on the Iranian monetary unit itself and the ninth set of sanctions President Barack Obama has imposed against Iran.

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said, “This new action targets Iran’s currency, the rial, by authorizing the imposition of sanctions on foreign financial institutions that knowingly conduct or facilitate significant transactions for the purchase or sale of the Iranian rial, or that maintain significant accounts outside Iran denominated in the Iranian rial.”

The tough sanctions are intended to increase the financial pressure on the Islamic republic to abandon its nuclear program. However, Iran maintains that its nuclear energy program is for peaceful purposes only and has refused to back down arguing that it has this right.

Carney explained how the sanctions also target the foreign assets of Iran’s leaders, “Further increasing the pressure on the Iranian government, the Executive Order authorizes the imposition of additional sanctions on persons who provide material support to Iranian persons and certain other persons designated pursuant to Iran sanctions authorities that are included on the list of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (SDN List) maintained by the Department of the Treasury.”

The Government of Iran’s leadership controls a vast overseas network of 37 private businesses for the purpose of managing off-the-books investments that are shielded from the view of international regulators.

This month in exchange for pledges to reduce oil purchases from Iran, the U.S. State Department renewed six-month waivers on Iran sanctions for nine countries in total, including China, India, South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Turkey and Taiwan.

In early 2012, the U.S. and the European Union imposed payment sanctions on Iran’s oil and financial sectors with the goal of weakening Iranian oil exports and blockading transactions with the Central Bank of Iran via Swift. However, a European Union court in February ruled against the EU banking sanctions imposed on one of Iran’s largest banks, which extends to the payment sanctions imposed by Swift in March of last year.

The Iranian currency has already been suffering from record inflation losing more than two-thirds of its value in the past two years, trading at 36,000 per U.S. dollar as of April 30th, compared with 16,000 at the beginning of 2012.

“The idea is to cause depreciation of the rial and make it unusable in international commerce,” according to David Cohen, the Treasury Department’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.

President Obama issued this latest Executive Order on June 3rd and during an interview Cohen said, “the purpose of the one-month phase-in period is to give financial institutions currently holding rials the opportunity to dump them.”

Blueseed’s ‘pirate’ incubator gets $100K from bitcoin angels – Silicon Valley Business Journal

Blueseed’s ‘pirate’ incubator gets $100K from bitcoin angels
Silicon Valley Business Journal
Pieces of bitcoin! Pieces of bitcoin! OK, that’s as close to pirate talk as we’re going to get in this story about how Blueseed, the proposed floating incubator outside of U.S. territorial near Half Moon Bay, has received $100,000 in funding from a


Blueseed's 'pirate' incubator gets $100K from bitcoin angels
Silicon Valley Business Journal
Pieces of bitcoin! Pieces of bitcoin! OK, that's as close to pirate talk as we're going to get in this story about how Blueseed, the proposed floating incubator outside of U.S. territorial near Half Moon Bay, has received $100,000 in funding from a ...

World’s largest Bitcoin exchange suspends US withdrawals – RT


RT

World’s largest Bitcoin exchange suspends US withdrawals
RT
For the next two weeks Bitcoin users in the US will be unable to withdraw the virtual currency in dollars. Major exchange Mt. Gox cited an unusually high demand as the reason for the suspension, while customers worried the company has run out of cash.


RT

World's largest Bitcoin exchange suspends US withdrawals
RT
For the next two weeks Bitcoin users in the US will be unable to withdraw the virtual currency in dollars. Major exchange Mt. Gox cited an unusually high demand as the reason for the suspension, while customers worried the company has run out of cash.

Bitcoin 2013 Videos Now Live

All videos from Bitcoin 2013: The Future of Payments are now uploaded and available on our YouTube channel. Here’s the link. A huge thank you to all of our moderators, panelists, presenters, and volunteers for their contributions!  Bitcoin 2013 was a huge success.  Hoping to announce details about future conferences soon – stay tuned!

All videos from Bitcoin 2013: The Future of Payments are now uploaded and available on our YouTube channel. Here’s the link.

A huge thank you to all of our moderators, panelists, presenters, and volunteers for their contributions!  Bitcoin 2013 was a huge success.  Hoping to announce details about future conferences soon – stay tuned!

The Bitcoin ATM – Reason

The Bitcoin ATM
Reason
In the wake of the banking crisis in Cyprus—which at one point prompted the government to shut down all the country’s ATMs—Bitcoin boomed, hitting a high of $266 in April, more than 10 times its value a month before. Berwick announced plans to place


The Bitcoin ATM
Reason
In the wake of the banking crisis in Cyprus—which at one point prompted the government to shut down all the country's ATMs—Bitcoin boomed, hitting a high of $266 in April, more than 10 times its value a month before. Berwick announced plans to place ...

Does Google Wallet’s slow adoption bode badly for bitcoin? – CoinDesk


CoinDesk

Does Google Wallet’s slow adoption bode badly for bitcoin?
CoinDesk
In May, Google announced to its merchant partners that it would be retiring Checkout. Google Checkout was designed as a platform for online payments, but as a competitor to PayPal it wasn’t getting enough traction. The company’s plan is to merge


CoinDesk

Does Google Wallet's slow adoption bode badly for bitcoin?
CoinDesk
In May, Google announced to its merchant partners that it would be retiring Checkout. Google Checkout was designed as a platform for online payments, but as a competitor to PayPal it wasn't getting enough traction. The company's plan is to merge ...

Mt. Gox Announces Temporary Hiatus on U.S. Dollar Withdrawals

Yesterday, Mt. Gox released the following notice from Tokyo, Japan: Statement Regarding Temporary Hiatus on …The post Mt. Gox Announces Temporary Hiatus on U.S. Dollar Withdrawals appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

Yesterday, Mt. Gox released the following notice from Tokyo, Japan: Statement Regarding Temporary Hiatus on …

The post Mt. Gox Announces Temporary Hiatus on U.S. Dollar Withdrawals appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

Snap up a pint in Britain’s first Bitcoin pub – The Guardian


The Guardian

Snap up a pint in Britain’s first Bitcoin pub
The Guardian
The customer opens their digital Bitcoin wallet, takes a snap of the screen and confirms the payment. The staff press one more button and the transaction is complete. Snapping the QR code in a crowded bar could be a challenge but in a quiet pub it is


The Guardian

Snap up a pint in Britain's first Bitcoin pub
The Guardian
The customer opens their digital Bitcoin wallet, takes a snap of the screen and confirms the payment. The staff press one more button and the transaction is complete. Snapping the QR code in a crowded bar could be a challenge but in a quiet pub it is ...