US Department of Homeland Security Seizes Bitcoin Operator Accounts
Bitcoin is a database called the "Blockchain" that is shared among users via P2P in place a central authority like a bank. When making a purchase you receive a payment address an amount. Put that information into your wallet and click "send." A miner then records the transaction and adds it to the Blockchain database so everyone can see the transaction.
US
authorities have frozen the account of the world's largest Bitcoin
exchange, which helps move the customers' cash online. The booming
digital currency has hit bureaucratic blocks ever since its rapid growth
came to the attention of government.
The US Department of
Homeland Security seized a payment processing account Tuesday belonging
to Mt. Gox, the largest international Bitcoin trader, claiming the
monetary exchange service falsified financial documents.
The
American government has previously made it clear that officials are
watching Bitcoin, a decentralized economic currency that international
regulators have not yet been able to control. Many of those who favor
Bitcoin use Dwolla, an Iowa-based startup that allows customers to
transfer their dollars into Bitcoins.
Unfortunately for those
consumers, the Department of Homeland Security issued a warrant Tuesday
effectively shutting down Dwolla's ability to process Bitcoin payments,
as reported by CNET. Whether because of the DHS' charge of operating an
"unlicensed money transmitting business," the sudden timing of the
allegations, or another reason, Dwolla and Mt. Gox officials have been
reluctant to comment.
"In order not to compromise this ongoing
investigation being conducted by ICE Homeland Security Investigations
Baltimore, we cannot comment beyond the information in warrant, which
was filed in the District of Maryland [Tuesday]," said Nicole Navas, a
representative for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The
warrant claims Mt. Gox CEO Mark Karpeles did not disclose he operated a
financial transfer site when he opened a new bank account for the
business. Money transmitting services, according to Gawker, are required
to register with the Department of Treasury's Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network (FinCen). Mt. Gox, which is involved in roughly 63
per cent of all Bitcoin purchases, has not done so.
Despite the
technicalities skeptics are wondering if Bitcoin's friction with the
Treasury department is the cause of this recent scrutiny. Senator Chuck
Schumer (D-New York) said the anonymity afforded by the service provided
an "online form of money laundering" and campaigned for its downfall.
"Literally,
it allows buyers and users to sell illegal drugs online, including
heroin, cocaine, and meth, and users do sell by hiding their identity
through a program that makes them virtually untraceable," Schumer said
during a 2011 news conference. "It's a certifiable one-stop shop for
illegal drugs that represents the most brazen attempt to peddle drugs
online that we have ever seen. It's more brazen than anything else by
light years."
Most notably, proponents have asserted that
Bitcoin would be impermeable in instances where WikiLeaks, for example,
saw its funding evaporate as the federal government pressured PayPal to
cut off the whistleblower site's support network. Bitcoin would be more
resistant to a crackdown of that nature.
Jerry Brito, a scholar
at the libertarian Mercatus Center at George Mason University, told the
Washington Post Bitcoin could reduce the cost of financial services by
pioneering new business formats.
"Bitcoin has the potential to
be a boon to the economy and a boon to merchants," he said, adding that
it could "disrupt traditional payment networks that have not been
innovative for a very long time."
A blind governmental crackdown would only serve to push Bitcoin further underground, Brito argued.
"You
can't put the genie back into the bottle," he continued. "I hate to say
it, but the Bitcoin community needs to start lobbying. It needs to
start educating policymakers, lobbyists and influencers about the pros
of Bitcoin and the impossibility or the difficulty in getting rid of all
the bad uses."
I'm sorry, but to quote Steve Quayle-"If you can't hold it, you don't own it."
ReplyDeleteI propose to Bitcoin a way out and a way in, THE BREN 25% silver, why silver because we the are on the metal markets, we got gold reserve to purchase the silver and mind the currency when anyone decides they want a tangible product, on the other hand they could use Bitcoin as an free exchange net-currency. any questions ask, the noblot bank will back you up, there was a noblot bank in France 1852 but Anthony Rothschild put it out of business or something like it, as i am ,not certain. however it does not matter the fact is bitcoin has a legal historical as well material tangible realm, as we blend Bitcoin and the BREN 25% silver. open for autosuggestion I provide the Brand name, (BREN)
ReplyDeleteIf the 'Bankster Elites' are behind the Bitcoin thesis, then it would only make Hegelian sense they would attack it, just as they did with the founding of the Fed Reserve in 1913!
ReplyDelete