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Why Bitcoin scares banks and governments – The Guardian


The Guardian

Why Bitcoin scares banks and governments
The Guardian
The Bitcoin phenomenon is one of the most intriguing things to have happened in cyberspace since the invention of the peer-to-peer networking that undermined the music business and enabled developments such as Wikileaks. It’s an invention of a


The Guardian

Why Bitcoin scares banks and governments
The Guardian
The Bitcoin phenomenon is one of the most intriguing things to have happened in cyberspace since the invention of the peer-to-peer networking that undermined the music business and enabled developments such as Wikileaks. It's an invention of a ...

Russians most interested in Bitcoin – Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

Russians most interested in Bitcoin
Telegraph.co.uk
Created by a developer using a psuedonym in 2009, Bitcoin was intended to offer a means of payment that cuts out the banks through a “purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash [that] would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party


Telegraph.co.uk

Russians most interested in Bitcoin
Telegraph.co.uk
Created by a developer using a psuedonym in 2009, Bitcoin was intended to offer a means of payment that cuts out the banks through a “purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash [that] would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party ...

Skype trojan turns your computer into a Bitcoin miner – SlashGear


Wired

Skype trojan turns your computer into a Bitcoin miner
SlashGear
There is a Skype trojan going around that is turning PCs into Bitcoin miners. So far, victims are mostly located in countries like Italy, Russia, Poland, Costa Rica, Spain, Germany, and a few others. Bitcoin Mining is a another way for users to acquire
Trojan Turns Your PC Into Bitcoin Mining SlaveWired
Cyber criminals look to cash in on Bitcoin’s soaring valueInfoWorld
New Skype Malware Makes Computers Mine BitcoinsGeekosystem
VentureBeat –The Next Web –RT
all 19 news articles »

Wired

Skype trojan turns your computer into a Bitcoin miner
SlashGear
There is a Skype trojan going around that is turning PCs into Bitcoin miners. So far, victims are mostly located in countries like Italy, Russia, Poland, Costa Rica, Spain, Germany, and a few others. Bitcoin Mining is a another way for users to acquire ...
Trojan Turns Your PC Into Bitcoin Mining SlaveWired
Cyber criminals look to cash in on Bitcoin's soaring valueInfoWorld
New Skype Malware Makes Computers Mine BitcoinsGeekosystem
VentureBeat -The Next Web -RT
all 19 news articles »

The Mt.Gox Verification Queue: 14,180 Users!

I just received a report from a friend that the Mt.Gox verification queue, as of eight minutes ago, is now 14,180 users long.

Fourteen thousand, one hundred and eighty users! That’s a lot of money about to flow into Bitcoin.

Six days ago the queue was reported to be over 8300, with approximately 1000 accounts being verified daily; that works out to 12,000 new accounts in the last week.

Update:

Why is there a requirement to verify an account? From Mt.Gox:

“If you plan to invest more than 50,000 USD or equivalent on the long term in bitcoins, we need to know about you. In this case please use our verification system to get your account verified first. 

Please also be advised that all deposits are subject to an ID check by our AML team and this process would take up to 1 business day.  First-timer depositors are requested to upload their copy of the official ID to facilitate this process (you will not have to be fully verified at this point if your deposit is lower than 50,000 USD).”

So, how many of these 14,180 users are planning to invest over $50,000? How much money is that in total? The implications are staggering.

I just received a report from a friend that the Mt.Gox verification queue, as of eight minutes ago, is now 14,180 users long.

Fourteen thousand, one hundred and eighty users! That’s a lot of money about to flow into Bitcoin.

Six days ago the queue was reported to be over 8300, with approximately 1000 accounts being verified daily; that works out to 12,000 new accounts in the last week.

Update:

Why is there a requirement to verify an account? From Mt.Gox:

“If you plan to invest more than 50,000 USD or equivalent on the long term in bitcoins, we need to know about you. In this case please use our verification system to get your account verified first. 

Please also be advised that all deposits are subject to an ID check by our AML team and this process would take up to 1 business day.  First-timer depositors are requested to upload their copy of the official ID to facilitate this process (you will not have to be fully verified at this point if your deposit is lower than 50,000 USD).”

So, how many of these 14,180 users are planning to invest over $50,000? How much money is that in total? The implications are staggering.

TorBroker – The Silk Road of Stock Brokers

A daring new service, “TorBroker,” was quietly announced in the gambling (how ironic) sub-forum of bitcointalk.org last week.

TorBroker does for securities trading what Silk Road did for the drug trade, allowing users to buy and sell any of nearly 1000 stocks and ETFs anonymously and under the cover of the Tor network. Users fund their accounts with Bitcoin and pay a 1% fee to buy and sell securities.

The main selling points of the service are that users can access publicly traded securities without providing any identifying information, not even an email address, while masking their IP addresses through the Tor network, and of course, dodging capital gains taxes. Trades can only be executed at the opening bell, so day traders won’t find this service overly useful.

Can you trust TorBroker to not run away with your Bitcoins? Well, there’s an interesting answer, with a dramatic Bitcoin twist. Roger Ver, a.k.a. “Bitcoin Jesus,” was contacted by the creators of TorBroker and was asked if he’d be willing to hold 1000 BTC as a security bond that could be used to pay back users in the event that TorBroker disappeared. Here’s the full quote:

“I don’t know TorBroker or any of the people behind it, but about a month and a half ago they contacted me, and at least one other well known member of the Bitcoin community, and asked us to publicly hold 1,000 BTC as a security bond that would be used to refund customers if TorBroker ever disappeared with their customers money.

While I fully support TorBroker’s efforts to bring additional economic freedom to traditional financial markets, legally it didn’t seem safe for me to be the front man for this.

The fact that they were looking for someone to hold this bond seems to be a strong indication that they are in this for the long term, and do not intend to disappear with everyone’s money.

If the regulators are able to uncover the true identities of the TorBroker accounts, I am sure that they (the regulators) will steal everyone’s money though.

I wish TorBroker the best of luck,  and financial tyrants the worst.”

No doubt, if the Silk Road has pissed off the FBI, TorBroker is really going to get the SEC’s skivvies in a knot!

TorBroker can be accessed with the Tor Browser at http://torbrokerge7zxgq.onion.

A daring new service, “TorBroker,” was quietly announced in the gambling (how ironic) sub-forum of bitcointalk.org last week.

TorBroker does for securities trading what Silk Road did for the drug trade, allowing users to buy and sell any of nearly 1000 stocks and ETFs anonymously and under the cover of the Tor network. Users fund their accounts with Bitcoin and pay a 1% fee to buy and sell securities.

The main selling points of the service are that users can access publicly traded securities without providing any identifying information, not even an email address, while masking their IP addresses through the Tor network, and of course, dodging capital gains taxes. Trades can only be executed at the opening bell, so day traders won’t find this service overly useful.

Can you trust TorBroker to not run away with your Bitcoins? Well, there’s an interesting answer, with a dramatic Bitcoin twist. Roger Ver, a.k.a. “Bitcoin Jesus,” was contacted by the creators of TorBroker and was asked if he’d be willing to hold 1000 BTC as a security bond that could be used to pay back users in the event that TorBroker disappeared. Here’s the full quote:

“I don’t know TorBroker or any of the people behind it, but about a month and a half ago they contacted me, and at least one other well known member of the Bitcoin community, and asked us to publicly hold 1,000 BTC as a security bond that would be used to refund customers if TorBroker ever disappeared with their customers money.

While I fully support TorBroker’s efforts to bring additional economic freedom to traditional financial markets, legally it didn’t seem safe for me to be the front man for this.

The fact that they were looking for someone to hold this bond seems to be a strong indication that they are in this for the long term, and do not intend to disappear with everyone’s money.

If the regulators are able to uncover the true identities of the TorBroker accounts, I am sure that they (the regulators) will steal everyone’s money though.

I wish TorBroker the best of luck,  and financial tyrants the worst.”

No doubt, if the Silk Road has pissed off the FBI, TorBroker is really going to get the SEC’s skivvies in a knot!

TorBroker can be accessed with the Tor Browser at http://torbrokerge7zxgq.onion.

Mt. Gox DDoS and the Panic-Sell Price Drop

Distributed Denial-of-Services (DDOS) attacks conducted against Mt. Gox over the last few days were responsible …

Distributed Denial-of-Services (DDOS) attacks conducted against Mt. Gox over the last few days were responsible for server lag and downtime which lead to a ripple of panic-selling and, ultimately, a brief non-sustained drop in the trading price on Mt. Gox and other online exchanges subsequently. The event found mainstream media coverage, with unusual haste, including on CNBC’s website featuring a sensationalized and misleading headline, “Bitcoin Hacked: Price Stumbles After Buying Frenzy.” The day ended with the price on a steady recovery and Bitcoin itself remained unscathed.

On the morning of April third, the USD trading price at Mt. Gox started at about $115 and rapidly rose above $145 before dropping just as quickly to $127 (bitcoincharts). After a brief recovery, it dropped again to just below $115, floundered for a short time and now appears to steadily rising just over $143, for the moment at least. Other major Bitcoin exchanges saw similar price instability, although to a lesser degree, which can likely be attributed to Mt. Gox’s trading volume. The company claims to serve the vast majority of Bitcoin currency trades, so what happens there is bound to have some effect on overall confidence and speculation. Meanwhile, in-person trade prices held strong.

In a press release that was issued on Thursday, following the blitz, Mt. Gox outlined a specific way that DDoS can be used for monetary gain in the market: “Attackers wait until the price of Bitcoins reaches a certain value, sell, destabilize the exchange, wait for everybody to panic-sell their Bitcoins, wait for the price to drop to a certain amount, then stop the attack and start buying as much as they can. Repeat this two or three times like we saw over the past few days and they profit.“

The use of DDoS is notorious for shutting down websites, often with large numbers of individuals playing a part. These attacks are very common throughout the world wide web, nearly every large website has been forced to confront this problem and, especially when there’s the possibility of financial gain, they should be expected. It would be folly to presume that DDoS assaults will ever cease. In actuality, they will probably increase in magnitude and frequency until a more effective tool is created to cripple websites. Things can be done to mitigate the downtime and server instability but, in the end, no real damage has been done to Bitcoin or the blockchain and the people who did not panic and did not sell, did not actually lose anything.

The reactions to the Mt. Gox website instability illustrate several facets of recent market activities and represents increasingly urgent challenges to the community. First, and perhaps most obvious, is the need for diversification in the exchange space to reduce dependence on a single entity for weighing the value of the currency. If Mt. Gox was not the leading exchange with such a large percentage of currency trades then this would not be as big of an issue and the panic that drove the price down would have been contained to a smaller group of people.

The single most important thing for all Bitcoin users to keep in mind when dealing with scenarios like these is, as Mt. Gox states in the press release, “Don’t Panic! … Bitcoin, despite being designed to have its value increase over time, will always be the victim of people trying to abuse the system, or even the value of Bitcoin decreasing occasionally. These are not new phenomena and have been present since the beginning of time when humans first started trading.”

The recent surge in price, over the last few months, is surely feeding a bit of market anxiety in Bitcoin users, old and new, who may be weary of a possible sudden devaluation as seen in June 2011. A quick enough price drop in a large exchange could, potentially, trigger a very serious panic-induced sell-off, thus flooding the market with cheap coins. Now, things are much different than they were in June 2011, though. The resilience of Bitcoin’s technology, economy and community have been tested many times, in many ways, since its inception and have prevailed, in nearly all instances, with notable grace under fire. The DDoS attack this week now stands as another example of that fortitude.

Mt. Gox deserves some praise for handling the server defence and customer support as well as they did. Without due diligence on the part of the staff there and the support systems of DDoS protection companies like Prolexic the exchange could have suffered much worse, which would, at this particular point in time, almost certainly drag overall Bitcoin confidence down with it.

When it comes to individual self-control and maintaining some level of sanity in an historically volatile market, timid Bitcoiners might consider taking slow, small steps at first and keep some of your bitcoins moving by spending or selling periodically instead of betting your life savings in hopes of turning a quick profit. For price-junkies who follow the market constantly and in several ways, it might be advisable to watch multiple exchanges and, for the sake of your blood pressure, mostly pay attention to the weighted average price rather than the often excessively-hyperactive latest.

With the Bitcoin, is money real anymore? – Rocky Mountain Collegian

With the Bitcoin, is money real anymore?Rocky Mountain CollegianI claimed that the deep web and Silk Road would be revolutionary, but I overlooked something entirely: the bitcoin. Bitcoins are a relatively new digital crypto-currency, created by the my…


With the Bitcoin, is money real anymore?
Rocky Mountain Collegian
I claimed that the deep web and Silk Road would be revolutionary, but I overlooked something entirely: the bitcoin. Bitcoins are a relatively new digital crypto-currency, created by the mysterious Satoshi Nakamoto in 2009. They hold the potential to ...

Paying your bar tab with Bitcoins? – MarketWatch


MarketWatch

Paying your bar tab with Bitcoins?
MarketWatch
With the bank bailout in Cyprus rattling European stock markets, there’s been renewed interest in the country-less virtual currency Bitcoin, which soared in value in recent weeks. But lost in all the talk of a Bitcoin bubble is whether the digital
Bitcoin: The Internet’s secret currency makes its first public appearancesNBCNews.com (blog)
Bitcoins are a bubbleCNNMoney
Could bitcoins crash in a cyberversion of financial bubble?The Seattle Times
NPR –Washington Post
all 206 news articles »

MarketWatch

Paying your bar tab with Bitcoins?
MarketWatch
With the bank bailout in Cyprus rattling European stock markets, there's been renewed interest in the country-less virtual currency Bitcoin, which soared in value in recent weeks. But lost in all the talk of a Bitcoin bubble is whether the digital ...
Bitcoin: The Internet's secret currency makes its first public appearancesNBCNews.com (blog)
Bitcoins are a bubbleCNNMoney
Could bitcoins crash in a cyberversion of financial bubble?The Seattle Times
NPR -Washington Post
all 206 news articles »

Soaring value of bitcoins raises fears of potential financial ‘cyberbubble’ – The Japan Times

Soaring value of bitcoins raises fears of potential financial ‘cyberbubble’
The Japan Times
The currency is bitcoin, a kind of cybermoney initially traded among hackers and cryptologists, and increasingly traded on websites and exchanged for goods and services. Two years ago, one bitcoin was worth less than $1. Two months ago, the price for a


Soaring value of bitcoins raises fears of potential financial 'cyberbubble'
The Japan Times
The currency is bitcoin, a kind of cybermoney initially traded among hackers and cryptologists, and increasingly traded on websites and exchanged for goods and services. Two years ago, one bitcoin was worth less than $1. Two months ago, the price for a ...

Bitcoin: the new gold or a giant bubble? – Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

Bitcoin: the new gold or a giant bubble?
Telegraph.co.uk
Are we witnessing the first cyber-bubble? A new online-only “currency” called Bitcoin has seen its value soar recently – but many people have probably never heard of it. Here we explain what it is and whether wise investors should give it a wide berth.


Telegraph.co.uk

Bitcoin: the new gold or a giant bubble?
Telegraph.co.uk
Are we witnessing the first cyber-bubble? A new online-only "currency" called Bitcoin has seen its value soar recently – but many people have probably never heard of it. Here we explain what it is and whether wise investors should give it a wide berth.

Why VCs Love The Bitcoin Market – TechCrunch

TechCrunchWhy VCs Love The Bitcoin MarketTechCrunchIt is free to get your own Bitcoin wallet, a piece of software on your computer that you can use to send or receive Bitcoins. However, this entails storing your Bitcoin private key on your computer, wh…


TechCrunch

Why VCs Love The Bitcoin Market
TechCrunch
It is free to get your own Bitcoin wallet, a piece of software on your computer that you can use to send or receive Bitcoins. However, this entails storing your Bitcoin private key on your computer, which risks loss or theft. Increasingly many Bitcoin ...
Why I Take Bitcoin Seriously as a Venture CapitalistAmerican Banker (subscription)

all 2 news articles »

Bitcoin: The Internet’s secret currency makes its first public appearances – NBCNews.com (blog)


MarketWatch

Bitcoin: The Internet’s secret currency makes its first public appearances
NBCNews.com (blog)
Casascius, a bitcoin enthusiast based in Utah, created these “physical bitcoins” as a proof of concept. Each has a unique code that can be used to retrieve a number of bitcoins online. Financial brinksmanship in the Eastern Mediterranean seems an
Soaring value of bitcoins raises fears of potential financial ‘cyberbubble’The Japan Times
Paying your bar tab with Bitcoins?MarketWatch
Bitcoin: the new gold or a giant bubble?Telegraph.co.uk
Washington Post –CNNMoney
all 206 news articles »

MarketWatch

Bitcoin: The Internet's secret currency makes its first public appearances
NBCNews.com (blog)
Casascius, a bitcoin enthusiast based in Utah, created these "physical bitcoins" as a proof of concept. Each has a unique code that can be used to retrieve a number of bitcoins online. Financial brinksmanship in the Eastern Mediterranean seems an ...
Soaring value of bitcoins raises fears of potential financial 'cyberbubble'The Japan Times
Paying your bar tab with Bitcoins?MarketWatch
Bitcoin: the new gold or a giant bubble?Telegraph.co.uk
Washington Post -CNNMoney
all 206 news articles »

Trojan Turns Your PC Into Bitcoin Mining Slave – Wired


Wired

Trojan Turns Your PC Into Bitcoin Mining Slave
Wired
The Bitcoin digital currency system rewards miners (in Bitcoins, natch) for their number-crunching work, which is essential to keeping the anonymous Bitcoin currency system working. With the Trojan, hackers are forcing others’ machines to earn them
New trojan hijacks your PC for Bitcoin miningCNET Australia
Bitcoin mining malware hits usersBusiness Spectator
New Skype Malware Uses Victims’ Machines to Mine BitcoinsThe Next Web
InfoWorld –SlashGear –VentureBeat
all 24 news articles »

Wired

Trojan Turns Your PC Into Bitcoin Mining Slave
Wired
The Bitcoin digital currency system rewards miners (in Bitcoins, natch) for their number-crunching work, which is essential to keeping the anonymous Bitcoin currency system working. With the Trojan, hackers are forcing others' machines to earn them ...
New trojan hijacks your PC for Bitcoin miningCNET Australia
Bitcoin mining malware hits usersBusiness Spectator
New Skype Malware Uses Victims' Machines to Mine BitcoinsThe Next Web
InfoWorld -SlashGear -VentureBeat
all 24 news articles »

Ecologists should embrace Bitcoin – RT


RT

Ecologists should embrace Bitcoin
RT
So let me do their work for them, as I have done many times in the past; in explaining why the organic, tree hugging, morally superior ‘Friends of the Earth’ should get past their self actualization for a minute and take a closer look at Bitcoin


RT

Ecologists should embrace Bitcoin
RT
So let me do their work for them, as I have done many times in the past; in explaining why the organic, tree hugging, morally superior 'Friends of the Earth' should get past their self actualization for a minute and take a closer look at Bitcoin ...

Geeks Love The Bitcoin Phenomenon Like They Loved The Internet In 1995 – Business Insider


Business Insider

Geeks Love The Bitcoin Phenomenon Like They Loved The Internet In 1995
Business Insider
Bitcoins are a bit like the Internet. Or, rather, the Internet as it was in the mid ’90s: something strange, coming out of geekdom into mainstream perception, greeted by puzzlement over how it works, why it works and why anyone would think it’s useful.


Business Insider

Geeks Love The Bitcoin Phenomenon Like They Loved The Internet In 1995
Business Insider
Bitcoins are a bit like the Internet. Or, rather, the Internet as it was in the mid '90s: something strange, coming out of geekdom into mainstream perception, greeted by puzzlement over how it works, why it works and why anyone would think it's useful.