Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard
The 10,000 bitcoins that seven years ago famously paid for the delivery of two Papa John's pizzas would be worth more than $74 million today.
The exploding value of the cryptocurrency since its first real-world transaction in 2010 is one reason the U.S. Internal Revenue Service is pushing to see records on thousands of users of Coinbase Inc., one of the biggest U.S. online exchanges. The company's digital currency platform allows gains to be converted into old-fashioned dollars in transactions that the IRS alleges are going unreported.
Coinbase and industry trade groups are fighting back in court, claiming the government's concerns about tax fraud are unfounded and that its sweeping demand for information is a threat to privacy.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Sunday November 12 2017, @04:51PM
Yes. It's built into the model and you'll probably pay fees to have it converted to dollars as well. Even if it were some huge fraction of the bitcoin value, you'll probably be better off than holding on to it (even before the observation that we're in a bubble market).