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posted by Fnord666 on Monday December 19 2016, @10:11PM   Printer-friendly
from the so-right-now-it's-virtually-disruptive? dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

The ora, paper money pegged to the South African rand, is one of hundreds of alternative currencies issued for mainly political reasons, but many of the newer currencies are increasingly virtual—digital representations of money consisting of nothing more than computer code. Most prominent among them: bitcoin, which, like conventional currency, can be traded online, transferred, stored or exchanged for cash. But, unlike conventional currency, it lives primarily on the internet, secured by layers of computer code.

This suits bitcoin users just fine. They want a secure way to exchange money by laptop, mobile phone or email. Yet so do terrorists and criminals, whom the U.S. government worries might develop and deploy their own uncrackable virtual currencies. Newsweek has learned hundreds of experts inside the nation's defense and intelligence agencies, as well as private-sector researchers in finance, technology and various think tanks across the country—some of them under contract with the U.S. government—are now investigating how virtual currencies could undermine America's long-standing ability to disrupt the financial networks of its foes and even permanently upend parts of the global financial system.

"There is a real danger and a challenge here with respect to virtual currencies," says Juan Zarate, a senior adviser at Washington think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies and on the board of advisers for San Francisco's Coinbase, one of the most popular virtual currency exchanges in the world. "And it runs contrary to the very fundamentals of the transparency and accountability that we've tried to build for the last three decades to tackle terrorism, human trafficking, money-laundering and many other types of criminal activity."

[...] The biggest concern the U.S. has about virtual currencies, Zarate says, is that terrorists and other enemies might create one so powerful and so untrackable, that they'll no longer need the global banking system, which the U.S. uses to financially starve them. This has yet to happen, but America's defense and intelligence agencies are already trying to figure out how they might infiltrate or block such a malicious financial network.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:54AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:54AM (#443634)

    I think the only way forward is to make Bitcoin some (or multiple?) nations official currency.

    The politicians are corrupt sure, but they also have screwed up a lot of countries currencies.
    Bitcoin developers should approach some badly run nations central bank. I think they would be happy to cooperate.

    If Bitcoin is somewhere 'official', then they don't have any reason to ban it.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:29AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:29AM (#443692)

    Bitcoin developers should approach some badly run nations central bank. I think they would be happy to cooperate.

    In badly run nations, the bank is usually controlled by the government and used to print lots of money for the government. The government won't be too cooperative in taking away their endless stream of money.

    • (Score: 1) by DmT on Tuesday December 20 2016, @12:32PM

      by DmT (6439) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @12:32PM (#443719)

      Maybe they would be more cooperative, if things start to really collapse. Then a virtual currency might be the only way out?