Binance to Launch Its Own Cryptocurrency Mining Pool – CryptoGlobe

eading cryptocurrency exchange Binance is set to launch its own mining pool in the near future.

The move was first reported on by Russian news outlet Coinlife. Reacting to reports the companys CEO Changpeng Zhao ended up confirming the move in a tweet, where he added that Binance will offer users a series of financial products that will include savings, loans, staking, and ways to earn.

Coinlife reported, citing sources familiar with the matter, that Binance has already hired specialists to work on the new cryptocurrency mining pool. CoinDesk cited Jakhon Khabilov, head of the Sigmapool mining pool, saying Binance is offering generous referral bonuses while reaching out to miners in China.

Alejandro de la Torre, vice president of popular mining pool Pooling, noted that exchanges can be motivated to enter the cryptocurrency mining space as its the cheapest way for them to add liquidity to their platforms.

Binances move follows the footsteps of its competitors OKEx and Huobi, which launched their own cryptocurrency mining pools un August and September respectively. As CryptoGlboe reported, OKExs Pool has even taken a stance in EOS security and stability after topping the EOS Block Producer (BP) rankings.

Last month, Binance announced the launch of its own cryptocurrency-backed Visa debit card. The card, called Binance Card, will initially be available in Malaysia before rolling out to the rest of the world, and can be topped up with Bitcoin (BTC) or Binance Coin (BNB) that users hold in their Binance accounts.

Featured image via Pixabay.

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Binance to Launch Its Own Cryptocurrency Mining Pool - CryptoGlobe

The Coder and the Dictator – Moneycontrol

Just after midnight one Tuesday in early 2018, the vice president of Venezuela commandeered the nations TV airwaves. Looking composed despite the hour, in a blue suit and red tie, he announced that the government was about to make history by becoming the first on Earth to sell its own cryptocurrency. It would be known as the Petro.

Three blocks away, in the vice presidents sprawling offices, Gabriel Jimnez was sitting blearily at an enormous glass conference table, pounding away at a laptop. Powerful air-conditioners chilled the air to a crisp. Lanky, with big black glasses set between a scruffy beard and a receding hairline, Jimnez had spent months designing and coding every detail of the Petro. Now, alongside his lead programmer, he was racing to make it operational, despite the fact that basic decisions had still not been made.

Just after the vice president signed off the air, his chief of staff burst into the office, furious. Jimnez couldnt understand something about typos on a website, an embarrassment to the nation. The chief brought in two guards, armed with military rifles, and told Jimnez and his programmer that they were forbidden to leave. If they made any attempt to communicate with the outside world, they would be on their way to El Helicoide. It was a distinctly Venezuelan symbol of terror: a futuristic mall project, with car ramps between stores, converted into a political prison and centre of torture.

Below the table, Jimnez furtively texted his wife. Although she had recently left him, he asked her to send him a hug and to tell his father that he was in trouble.

Jimnez was finally released just before sunrise. When he made it to his apartment, he burst into sobs. Before he had time to collect himself, he got a call. The president himself, Nicols Maduro, requested his presence. Jimnez walked to the presidential palace, pushing his way through the crowds outside with a sense of exhaustion and dread.

A few months earlier, the idea that Jimnez would be called before the tyrant who ruled Venezuela would have been unimaginable. Jimnez was just 27, ran a tiny startup, and had spent years protesting the dictator. Maduro had not just mismanaged his country into a financial crisis he had detained, tortured and murdered those who challenged his power.

But whatever Jimnez felt about the regime, he felt just as strongly about the potential of cryptocurrency. When the Maduro administration approached him about creating a digital coin, Jimnez saw an opportunity to change his country from within. If a national cryptocurrency was done right, Jimnez believed, he could give the government what it wanted a way to fight hyperinflation while also stealthily introducing technology that would give Venezuelans a measure of freedom from a government that dictated every detail of daily life.

His friends and family warned him that working with the regime could only end badly. The person overseeing the effort, Vice President Tareck El Aissami, had been called a drug kingpin by the US government and would soon be named to a federal Most Wanted list. Jimnez acknowledged the danger, but he talked about the Petro as a Trojan horse that would sneak in the kind of reforms that he and the opposition had been dreaming about for years.

The years 2017 and 2018 were full of drama for everyone in the crypto world, as the price of bitcoins shot up more than 1,000 percent before crashing. Billion-dollar fortunes were made and lost. But perhaps no one had as perilous a ride as Jimnez. His faith in digital currency transported him from obscurity to the centre of his countrys dark institutions of power. He found himself negotiating directly with Maduro and his top deputies, who often praised his ingenuity before escalating threats to Jimnezs life drove him into exile.

The actual goal of the project was to change the economic model of the oppressive regime, he told The Times recently. This was my mission and my gamble, in a bet that ended costing everything I had in my life: my friends, my partners, my reputation, my love, my company and my country.

Jimnez has been identified as the author of the Petro before, but he has never told his story. This account is based on hundreds of pages of confidential emails, text messages and government documents, as well as interviews with more than a dozen people who were involved with the project. Many spoke on the condition of anonymity because they still live in Venezuela, where openly criticizing the government can quickly lead to prison or death.

Jimnez was part of an educated class that was naturally drawn to the opposition. After college in Caracas, Jimnez spent a few years in the United States studying, getting married and doing what he could to oppose Chvez and his successor, Maduro. He also interned for a Republican congresswoman from Miami who regularly criticised the Venezuelan regime. When reformers won parliamentary elections in 2015, Jimnez felt compelled to return to his country to take part in the political opening.

Jimnez and his wife landed in Caracas in early 2016 and found a nation on the brink. Oil prices had plunged, sending Maduro into a money-printing frenzy. As bolvares became worthless, medicine disappeared, refugees drowned and children starved.

Jimnez was fairly insulated. He had founded a startup, The Social Us, that connected Venezuelan programmers and designers with US companies looking for cheap labour. Like many wealthier Venezuelans, Jimnez kept almost all his money in dollars, but this made transactions a headache. He had to illegally swap currency every few days, and a taxi ride would require a stack of bolvares so thick that most drivers accepted only wire transfers.

The situation rekindled Jimnezs long-running interest in cryptocurrencies. He began paying his employees in a digital coin; even with the crazy volatility of the crypto markets, it was more stable than a Venezuelan bank account, and it wasnt subject to the Maduro regimes diktats. The staff at The Social Us began touting cryptocurrency as a way for ordinary Venezuelans growing numbers of whom were buying bitcoins on the street to deal with practical problems. One project they designed was a payment terminal that bypassed government limits on spending.

Initially, the Maduro regime saw Bitcoin as a threat. The technology, after all, used a decentralised network to create and move money, and no authority was in charge. But then some members of the government noticed that this cut both ways. Cryptocurrency could also be a way for Venezuela to escape sanctions levied by the United States and international organizations.

In September 2017, an official loyal to Maduro floated the idea of a digital currency backed by Venezuelas oil reserves. This was unorthodox: One of the tenets of Bitcoin is that its value does not derive from a natural resource or government fiat, only the laws of mathematics. But the distinction faded in the face of Venezuelas desperation. The official, Carlos Vargas, read about Jimnezs crypto work in a local publication and asked for a meeting.

Soon the hulking form of Vargas arrived at the office of The Social Us. As he consumed an entire bag of potato chips, Vargas flattered the young digital workers, saying they were among the only people in Venezuela capable of creating what he had proposed. The idea was exactly what Jimnez had hoped to hear. The goal was to create a new Venezuelan currency that would move freely over an open network, like Bitcoin. The government would be unable to control or bungle it. Vargas wanted to call it the Petro Global Coin, but Jimnez suggested something simpler: the Petro.

The Social Us put together a short pitch deck for the Petro project. But Venezuela is filled with people proposing crazy schemes, and Jimnez didnt put too much stock in it. Then, in early December, when Jimnez was at a conference in Colombia, he got an urgent text. Maduro had just announced a national cryptocurrency called the Petro. Jimnez threw open his laptop and found a video of the president, in his usual workmans shirt, telling a whooping crowd, This is something momentous.

Jimnez dashed off a message to Vargas: Did they just steal our project?

Vargas replied, This is the project. They just approved it. Come back right away.

The vice president was friendly and curious, and suggested that this was Jimnezs project they were just there to learn from him. El Aissami wanted to know how many petros there would be and whether new ones could be mined like bitcoins. Jimnez thought that the officials didnt have a particularly clear idea of how cryptocurrencies worked.

After the call, Jimnez emailed his employees to be at the office for an early meeting. When everyone had gathered, he stood on a desk and said they should drop all other projects and focus on the Petro. People were free to leave, he said, but if they did this right, it was a once-in-a-lifetime chance to change Venezuela. We will liberate people from government controls, he said.

Jimnez opted to base the Petro on Ethereum, Bitcoins leading competitor, which would allow it to trade in the kind of free, publicly visible market that was otherwise forbidden in Venezuela. No one on the government side seemed to be worried about this or even aware of it.

As promised, Jimnez presented his plans for the Petro in late December, at a daylong conference at the central bank that included a handful of US crypto experts. When Vargas the newly appointed superintendent of Venezuelan cryptoassets got onstage, he seemed to have imbibed Jimnezs heretical views. We talk about the need to transform our system and move to a new economic system, Vargas said.

The real conversation, though, happened after the conference adjourned. Vargas told Jimnez and the Americans that the president himself wanted to meet.

It was night time, and a van took them through heavily armed roadblocks to the military base where the president kept his personal home, known as La Roca. It had a plainness that none of them had expected. An aging Chevy Camaro sat in the courtyard, next to a childs trampoline.

The air conditioner above the door was buzzing. The president asked the vice president if he would fix it. In his Adidas tracksuit, he stood on the couch and whacked the unit a few times. For Jimnez, there was a certain comfort in seeing the lack of luxury, given the privation in the rest of Venezuela.

Maduro was dressed casually, sitting on a couch with his wife, next to other top officials. He shook hands with everyone and made conversation in broken English, praising one American, Nick Spanos, for his appearance in a recent Bitcoin documentary that the dictator said he and his wife had just watched on Netflix.

Maduro told the group with a laugh that his announcement of the Petro had inspired cryptocurrency investors everywhere and helped push bitcoins to an all-time high of $20,000. It was unclear if he was joking, and everyone just chuckled.

When the president gave Jimnez the floor, he went over the basics of the Petro, including an initial issuance of $200 million. Then the finance minister spoke up, and for the first time, Jimnezs plans were challenged. The minister took out a manila folder with a map of the Orinoco Belt and said he wanted the Petro to be backed on an ongoing basis by certain oil reserves there, which were worth orders of magnitude more many billions of dollars.

Jimnez pushed back: It was one thing to tie the Petros initial price to oil, but if it couldnt trade freely after that at whatever price investors felt it was worth then it wouldnt be a revolutionary product. A Petro whose price always reflected oil reserves would essentially be a bond, and recent sanctions made it illegal for Americans to buy those.

The president didnt seem to follow the debate all that closely. As the group dispersed, Spanos did not have a good feeling about Jimnezs future. I thought he would become the scapegoat, he said later. I didnt think Id see this kid again.

Spanos remembers telling Jimnez before leaving Caracas: I wish I had a magic carpet to get you out of here.

As Jimnez watched Maduros televised talks, he was astonished by how much of what he had said at La Roca had gotten through to the president. Maduro mentioned Ethereum, white papers and transparency.

But the speeches also made it clear to Jimnez that he was no longer in control of the Petro. Maduro announced that the currency would, in fact, be tied to a specific block of the Orinoco Belt exactly what Jimnez had argued against. He complained to Vargas but was shot down: You cannot contradict the word of the president. Vargas told Jimnez to rewrite the Petros white paper to reflect Maduros decision and to do it quickly. He and the vice president were about to travel to Turkey and Qatar to begin selling the Petro to investors.

Things deteriorated rapidly. The presidents excitement turned the Petro into a project that everyone wanted to get in on, and in mid-January 2018 a series of meetings at the Ministry of Finance turned contentious. The departments top economic adviser wanted the Petro to have a stable value, controlled by the government, with an option to trade it in for actual oil. Jimnez managed to push back, winning an agreement that oil could be used to create a minimum value the state would promise to honour but that the price would also be allowed to fluctuate on open markets. He also made sure the Petro would exist on an open network of computers, tied to Ether, that would fundamentally limit the governments power to interfere.

Eventually, Jimnez became convinced that he would lose control of the project to the Finance Ministry. When he tried to resist sharing a digital copy of the white paper, he said, the minister told him by phone: You have to understand that this is now a project of the state. If you dont hand over the file, I wont be responsible for what happens to you.

Some of the staff at The Social Us worried that Jimnezs bull-headed desire to make the Petro happen put them all in danger. During another confrontation, Vargas had shown Jimnez blue folders containing intelligence dossiers compiled on the employees; after yet another dispute, triggered in part by the fact that the startup had not been paid anything, the vice president sent word to Jimnez that he now considered him a traitor.

It would have been reasonable at that point to assume that he was headed to prison and that his role in the Petro was over. And yet Jimnez was pulled back into the program in a shambolic series of events. The government told his team that they would need to compete to have a role in the Petros launch against a Russian group of murky origin. Jimnezs employees could find no evidence that they had any significant cryptocurrency experience; Time magazine later advanced a theory that they represented a Kremlin effort to control the Petro.

In any event, the Russians showed little interest in doing any work. Jimnez and his company were left to handle almost everything as the February 20, 2018, Petro launch date approached. That is how Jimnez found himself feverishly coding all night under armed guard and then summoned to the presidential palace early the next day.

I didnt know who my enemies were in there, he said later, recalling the event. I was the guy with no power.

After some chitchat, the president led everyone into a hall that had been converted to a Petro-themed television studio. With a crowd looking on, an emcee called to the stage the Russians and then Jimnez. He was presented with a pen and a contract. It was an agreement he had been refusing to sign for weeks that limited him to a role as a sales agent for the Petro a censure for his small acts of rebellion against the regime. On live television, Jimnez saw no way out. He scribbled his signature and gave a forced grin as photographers moved in.

Jimnez took a seat and wondered what he had just done. The president said that Venezuela had already collected $725 million from investors. He thanked Jimnez by name, as well as The Social Us. Its a company founded and run by young geniuses from Venezuela, the president said. You stay crazy.

The Petro never really got off the ground. On March 19, President Donald Trump signed an executive order barring Americans from using it. The same day, an Associated Press article about Jimnez noted that he had helped create the Petro for Maduro only a few years after interning for an anti-Maduro member of the House of Representatives. The congresswoman, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, immediately wrote a letter asking the Treasury Department to investigate whether Venezuelan national Gabriel Jimnez meets the criteria to be sanctioned under the appropriate authorities.

In Caracas, Jimnez was barraged by criticism from the political left and right. The Social Us found it impossible to get new business. In July, a lawyer delivered a 68-page document to the National Constituent Assembly, asking that Jimnez be investigated for treason against the homeland.

Jimnez retreated into his apartment, and then, when he could no longer pay the rent, his mothers apartment. Friends say that they rarely saw him. Ultimately, his ex-wife persuaded him to leave Venezuela before the authorities finally decided to arrest him.

In April 2019, he sold his 2007 Toyota Autana and bought a ticket to the United States. When he arrived, he moved in with his father; in a completely separate chain of events, the elder Jimnez was waiting to begin serving a three-year sentence for his role in a money-laundering scheme at a Caribbean bank.

Jimnez spent his days putting together an application for asylum. I possess particularly features, as the creator of The Petro, that make me subject to persecution because the government wants to keep me quiet, he wrote.

Improbably, several countries had begun following Venezuelas lead and talking about launching their own government-sponsored digital currencies. China took the lead, and the European Central Bank said it was moving in the same direction. Venezuela relaunched the Petro a number of times, eventually coming out with a token given to pensioners that had none of the open properties from Jimnezs original design.

In October, Jimnez heard that he got his US work papers. He wept tears of joy. Then he got started on a new project; it involves using cryptocurrencies to help Venezuelans avoid the bolvar.

Jimnez still had essentially no money, but a crypto startup in the San Francisco Bay Area allowed him to work out of its offices, eat from the fridge and stay on a couch in the chief executives apartment. Recently, we met at a restaurant nearby. He pulled out a black notebook, in which he was writing letters of apology to the friends he had lost.

I always thought that I could find a solution, to be able to compensate for my mistakes, Jimnez had written to one of his best friends. I know that some apologies are not enough. I know I even deserve some pain, but believe me that life has taken care of giving them to me.

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The Coder and the Dictator - Moneycontrol

Better Than Bitcoin? Charles Hoskinson Says Cardano Will Become Best Cryptocurrency in the World This Year – The Daily Hodl

The creator of Cardano says the smart contract platform will become technologically superior to Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP and every other blockchain in the industry this year.

In a new Periscope video on the future of Cardano, Charles Hoskinson says advancements in smart contracts and wallets in recent years have been revolutionary, and he believes Cardano is pulling all the pieces together to become the most advanced blockchain in existence.

The improvements are poised to make Cardanos native crypto asset ADA the best cryptocurrency on the planet, according to Hoskinson, who also co-created Ethereum.

These are amazing achievements in a very short period of time. They were incredibly expensive in terms of thought, time and money. But they were achievements nonetheless. And they are achievements that have moved the entire state of the industry forward.

So this year is the year you see all those components come together and this is the year you see Cardano basically ascend to the best cryptocurrency in the world. There really is going to be nothing on market thats as good as what were delivering this year. Because at the end of the day we have it all.

Well have a loading system. Well have a smart contract system. Well have a multi-asset standard. Well have an identity standard. Well have the scalability required to meet all of the growth demands that we need. We have a very clear interoperability story. We have a clear idea of how were going to communicate with other systems. We have a great way for academics to get involved. We have a great way for the community to get involved.

And no matter what group youre in, whether youre in the group of people who buy ADA or trade it, whether youre in the group of people who develop on the platform, the people who govern the platform or the people who operate the platform, were going to be best in class in all of those things. And thats what were delivering, and thats what were committed to deliver throughout 2020.

As confident as Hoskinson is in the operational superiority of Cardano, he cautions that this doesnt mean it automatically becomes the most popular or widely used platform in the industry.

That, he says, will depend on the success of the Cardano Foundation and the commercial venture incubator Emurgo.

Its an open debate about what makes us competitive and what will bring new users into the ecosystem and whats commercially critical infrastructure. And thats an ecosystem play. So it means Emurgo has to step up. It means the Foundation has to step up, and this is what they were funded for and why they exist.

Featured Image: Shutterstock/zhu difeng

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Better Than Bitcoin? Charles Hoskinson Says Cardano Will Become Best Cryptocurrency in the World This Year - The Daily Hodl

Binance Reveals the Secret Behind Its Cryptocurrency Futures Success – Cointelegraph

Aaron Gong, vice president of futures at major cryptocurrency exchange Binance, explained to Cointelegraph how the firm managed to become one of the top crypto futures trading platforms.

As Cointelegraph reported earlier this week, Binance recently overtook BitMEX and became the second-largest platform in terms of 24-hour Bitcoin (BTC) futures trading volume. When asked whether he is surprised by such success, Gong said that the firm created the product with the plan of becoming the top Bitcoin futures trading platform:

We knew we would be there soon, and we made it in slightly more than 6 months time.

According to Gong, the three primary reasons behind the success of Binances futures products are the low taker fees, new features and a large amount of altcoin pairs. He said that too many exchanges offer negative maker fees:

Too many other exchanges offer negative maker fees, where most orders are just computerized market makers competing for best bid and ask with extremely limited taker interest during periods of low-volatility.

Gong also said that innovation also drives trading volumes when it comes to Binances futures. He claimed that the exchange has had a few firsts when it comes to the crypto futures market:

We are the first major crypto exchange to launch max 125X leverage for BTC contracts, and the first of its kind to launch cross collateral and smart liquidation mechanism. These features have gained tremendous popularity amongst our users.

The third reason for the success of Binances futures contracts, Gong explained, is the number of altcoin contracts. He said that the firm launched 24 futures contracts on the platform, adding:

As of today, Binance Futures houses half of the top 10 most liquid altcoin contracts, many of which are also the most traded pairs amongst all futures exchanges.

Gongs strategy to drive the volume of futures contracts on Binance is to continue bringing more functionalities and products to the industry. He said that he believes Binance has outdone its competitors, as other crypto trading platforms suffered problems such as overloads, poor risk management, and counterintuitive product designs. He explained that Binances design was largely driven by users complaints about other platforms:

We specifically aimed to address these issues and improve the users experience. As such, we put tremendous efforts to build an industry-leading matching engine that is able to process more than 100,000 orders per second. [...] Whilst there were issues of system overloads, outages, glitches, and even rollbacks elsewhere, weve proven time and again to be a safe, reliable, cheap and liquid venue for hedging.

It is worth noting that Binances trading platform ran into a number of issues in February. On Feb. 19, the exchange halted trading to resolve an unexpected technical issue with its infrastructure.

As a Feb. 25 Cointelegraph analysis illustrated, this incident took place after a week in which the platform was often unresponsive to trader input as the exchange was unable to manage a large uptick in user volume.

In early March, Binance halted trading again to fix a malfunction. The exchanges co-founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao purportedly blocked Jay Hao the CEO of competing exchange OKEx on Twitter, after he publicly offered to help fix the infrastructure.

However, Gong said that the malfunctions did not affect Binances futures trading infrastructure and that futures traders were not affected:

Our futures system has been proving to be performing well during the most volatile period since we launched. The futures market is running on a separate matching engine.

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Binance Reveals the Secret Behind Its Cryptocurrency Futures Success - Cointelegraph

Cryptocurrency Accounting Firm Launches Library of Legal and Tax Advice – Cointelegraph

Cryptocurrency accounting company, Lukka, has announced the launch of the Lukka Library an interactive collection of academic papers addressing legal, accounting, and tax questions pertaining to crypto assets.

On March 26, Cointelegraph spoke to Lukka co-CEO, Robert Materazzi, and Lukka Library creator and head of tax and regulatory affairs, Roger Brown.

Materazzi states that the company was formed under its former brand, Libra, in 2014 after the founder Googled how to pay his capital gains tax and found that there wasn't any solution that was out there.

The experience prompted the founder to rope together some developers to build what Robert claims was the first cryptocurrency tax calculator. However, the product failed to make an impact as people werent interested in paying their taxes in 2014 relating to crypto.

After the 2017 bull run pushed Bitcoin (BTC) towards the mainstream and gave rise to a proliferation in crypto hedge funds, the firm decided to shift its focus towards institutions.

Brown states that they then set about drafting a list of 170 issues relating to crypto tax for which they state there was either no IRS guidance, or the IRS guidance on the topic was overly broad and missed the nuances in their facts.

Roger asserts that more than 75 topics are currently covered in the Lukka Library, including a wide array of taxation strategies for crypto traders, and suggestions on how to value digital assets that experience high volatility for institutions.

The resource currently contains articles written by more than two dozen authors, including the University of Pennsylvania, in addition to legal firms McDermott Will & Emery, Steptoe & Johnson, Mayer Brown, and Baker & Hostetler.

Lukkas users can also request articles addressing desired topics and can access the authors featured in the librarys collection.

Annual access to the Lukka Library is currently priced at $99.95 per year.

Roger adds that the platform is soliciting content internationally, starting with an emphasis on the U.K.

Looking forward, Materazzi asserts that Lukka believes crypto assets and digital assets are the future, adding: finally all the regulators and governments are catching up to this right now.

Brown agrees, contending that the said future may be arriving sooner than previously anticipated, citing recent proposals for a U.S.-government backed digital dollar.

The US has two bills in Congress and one in the House, one in the Senate that talk about digitizing the dollar and the digitization not only just at the institutional level [...] but they're also going to creating a digital wallet for each U.S. person to, in effect, no longer have to deal with currency. And that's incredibly important. Not only for technology, the savings around sending it, the security also associated with it[...] but digital assets are more traceable than cash. So that could be part of the reason why Congress is enacting it.

He adds: People say you could get the coronavirus from touching money in coins, you can't do that by touching digital assets.

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Cryptocurrency Accounting Firm Launches Library of Legal and Tax Advice - Cointelegraph

Alipays Progress in Developing the Official Chinese Cryptocurrency Amidst the Global Chaos – TWJ News

If/when cryptocurrencies based on official legal tenders become the new banter of the financial market, China has the potential to top the list by being one of the early adopters.

China introducing its own cryptocurrency based on its legal tender Yuan is one of the much-anticipated news of the cryptospace. Nevertheless, things have slowed down due to numerous reasons such as the Bitcoin crash, the current pandemic Coronavirus and much more.

While companies are laying off employees, and people are reporting bankruptcy, Alibabas Alipay has been registering several patents for Chinas own cryptocurrency.

Recently, a Chinese local blog reported that Alipay has been making preparations for the central banks cryptocurrency.

From February 21st to March 17th, 2020, Alipay has disclosed five patents related to the digital currency of the central bank. [You can find all the patents here]

On 21st, Method and device for executing transactions with digital currencies and electronic devices was registered followed by A method and device for managing accounts in digital currency on the 25th.

On 28th they published, a method and device for opening a wallet in digital currency and electronic device and recently on March 17, Alipay issued a patent on a digital currency-based anonymous transaction method and system.

The Chinese central banks digital currency DCEP adopts a two-tiered structure and requires operating institutions to participate in the secondary issuance of digital currency. This patent revealed in the background introduction that Alipay is likely to participate in secondary issuance, which is on an equal footing with commercial banks.

The decision-makers have also stated that the cryptocurrency may not have a blockchain necessarily but will comply with the traceability requirements of the digital asset. That said, the registered patents most important invention is how digital currencies can be traced.

Alipay decided to split the digital currency transactions into two; transaction execution instructions corresponding to each participant, and priority-based execution instruction. By sorting the results of transaction execution instructions, digital currency transactions can be traced back to the entire life cycle of digital currency circulation, while concurrent processing can be satisfied, which facilitates the controlled and anonymous circulation of cryptocurrencies.

Not just this, the second patent introduces a specific form of front-end encryption machine.

It can be a hardware device equipped with a secure computing environment. In the secure computing environment equipped with this hardware device, the public and private key equivalent data of the central bank can be maintained. This secure computing The environment can take on some of the cryptographic operations involved in the DC / EP distribution process.

Additionally, the patent released on 25th Feb provides a solution for the lack of supervision on crypto accounts. The patent introduces a method/device for controlling a digital currency account. Certain account restrictions will be deployed between each supervisor and the operating agency on the wallet server. This will help regulators to keep an account of the transactions.

Lastly, the most recent patent released on 17th March is about making transactions anonymous and how the cryptocurrency would be separate from cash money. The patent describes that digital currency is different from the electronic amount in the existing electronic account, but is the digitization of cash banknotes, which has the characteristics of a virtual entity.

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Alipays Progress in Developing the Official Chinese Cryptocurrency Amidst the Global Chaos - TWJ News

What Happened In Cryptocurrency Tax Space In Q1 2020 – Forbes

A woman wearing a protective face mask is seen in Krakow, Poland on March 25, 2020. Poland's ... [+] government decided that due to the spread of the coronavirus epidemic, new limitations will be introduced across the country, such as rules preventing leaving home unless justified. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The first quarter of 2020 has been one-of-a-kind. What started as business as usual morphed into unprecedented times with the growth of corona virus. Despite the distraction caused by the virus, there were some noteworthy events occurred in this quarter in the cryptocurrency tax space.

The Virtual Currency Fairness Act was introduced to the House on January 6, 2020. This bill includes a de minimis exemption of up to $200 of capital gains for personal cryptocurrency transactions. Essentially, this would allow cryptocurrency users to buy the proverbial cup of coffee without having to calculate their taxes on the transaction. This was well received among crypto enthusiasts. Making small personal cryptocurrency transactions nontaxable is a great initiative to promote cryptocurrency usage as a medium of exchange for every day use as opposed to a speculative asset.

Its hotly debated how to report staking income for tax purposes. Experts take different positions as to the type and timing of income. In the absence of any tax guidance, it could be argued that staking rewards are taxed similar to rental income, at the time of the receipt. Meanwhile, some experts argue that staking rewards should NOT be taxed at the time of receipt; rather they should be taxed only when they are disposed of. The controversy in this area seems to be an ongoing discussion in the crypto tax community.

We also saw several comment letters being addressed to the IRS and other regulators by various organizations such as AICPA, NY State Bar Association, and the Wall Street Blockchain Alliance.

These letters demanded more clarity on tax treatment for various types of cryptocurrency transactions such as airdrops, forks, as well as timing of income recognition and valuation challenges.

On February 12, 2020, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) published the Virtual Currencies: Additional Information Reporting and Clarified Guidance Could Improve Tax Compliance (GAO-20-188) report after analyzing IRSs efforts in the crypto tax compliance space. The GAO reviewed IRS forms and interviewed various stakeholders such as IRS officials, FinCEN, other federal agencies, tax practitioners, and crypto exchanges to produce this report. The GAO pointed out that 2019 FAQs issued by the IRS may not be binding and demanded the service to strengthen information reporting standards and provide more clarity on Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) reporting. This report also asked FinCEN to provide clear guidance on FBAR filing requirements for cryptocurrency users.

Until early February, gaming tokens such as Robux and V-bucks were also considered to be virtual currencies per the IRS website What is Virtual Currency section. The IRS added and suddenly deleted this guidance from their website raising many eyebrows in the tax space. If it had stood, this guidance would have subjected millions of parents to calculate taxes on their childrens online video gaming habits to the same degree of detail that American taxpayers have to take with their cryptocurrency tax reporting. After many legitimate questions were raised by the public and the media on this matter, the service removed gaming tokens from the definition of virtual currency on the IRS website.

For the first time ever, millions of US taxpayers had to start answering the crypto question on the IRS Schedule 1. The question asks At any time during 2019, did you receive, sell, send, exchange, or otherwise acquire any financial interest in any virtual currency?

On March 3, 2020, the IRS held an invite-only Virtual Currency Summit at the IRS headquarters in Washington, DC. This event included stakeholders in the crypto community such as exchanges, crypto tax software companies, tax practitioners and crypto advocacy groups. This was the first of its kind and showed the services effort to learn more about the intricacies of the crypto compliance industry.

As we came closer to the end of this quarter, COVID-19 lockdowns started affecting everyones day-to-day lives. In order to provide tax relief during this difficult time, the US Department of the Treasury and the IRS extended both the tax filing and payment deadlines to July 15, 2020. This offered cryptocurrency taxpayers much needed relief when it comes to paying their taxes. This is the first time in the US history this has happened.

In conclusion, Q1 2020 revealed that the IRS has started showing some notable steps towards improving cryptocurrency tax compliance. Although these efforts have been somewhat slowed by COVID-19 crisis, its clear that the service will actively look into the cryptocurrency space as the situation returns to normal.

Disclaimer: this post is informational only and is not intended as tax advice. For tax advice, please consult a tax professional.

See more here:
What Happened In Cryptocurrency Tax Space In Q1 2020 - Forbes

What Will $6 Trillion in Monetary Expansion Do To Cryptocurrency? (Opinion) – CryptoPotato

The pressures on for Congress to pass a $2 trillion spending bill to thaw the frozen economy. While they negotiate the largest ever emergency relief bill in US history, markets are getting restless. Stock futures have been volatile as the bill makes progress and stalls, then makes progress and stalls again. Voters are getting restless too. Both sides are badgering each other to Hurry! while negotiating a $2 trillion transaction with other peoples money.

Any time either side of the partisan divide has a scruple, the other party attacks them for holding up the bill. They insinuate the other side doesnt care about all the people who are hurting right now. Of course, a swarm of each partys rank and file supporters also join in the shouting. The farther you zoom out from the picture, the more ludicrous the entire affair looks from afar.

Further, so much of the bill, styled as an emergency stimulus package, is just a massive grab bag of goodies and pork-barrel spending for bloated Washington bureaucracies America can definitely live without, and special interest groups with lobbyists on K Street. $25 million for the JFK Center for the Performing Arts. $75 million for the National Endowment for the Arts. $75 million for the National Endowment for the Humanities. And a monster $500 billion slush fund for Treasury Secretary Mnuchin to dole out to corporations at his discretion with little oversight.

When a terrible crisis strikes, politicians and special interest groups huddle together in Washington and grab all the money and power, they can possibly get their hands on. Its the American way. Washington did this to Americans during the 2008 Financial Crisis with Bushs $700 billion Wall Street bailout in 2008, and Obamas $831 billion stimulus bill in 2009.

At least in 2008, many Americans put up a fight about it. They tried to melt the Congressional switchboard calling their representatives to urge against these massive appropriations. Today America is so slavish and afraid because of coronavirus that even Trumps anti-socialist supporters are eager to get their checks.

And the $2 trillion stimulus package at the center of all this drama is dwarfed by the money the Federal Reserve is pumping into the banking system. Top White House economist Larry Kudlow says itll amount to $4 trillion. And Congress doesnt actually have any of the money for its spending bill. Its borrowing all of that, so the Fed will have to create most of it out of thin air. Just like the $4 trillion its creating to shore up banks. That will make the entire monetary expansion $6 trillion in total.

The entire adjusted monetary base is currently $3.3 trillion. So the monetary-political complex is about to triple the money supply in the coming months. Thats what they did in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Quite more than doubled it actually. And that crisis not only gave us Bitcoin but saw it rise in price so dramatically until 2017, it became the greatest investment in world history by ROI. Thats how highly sought after something like Bitcoin is for merchants and investors.

Expanding the fiat money supply at such breakneck speed will not necessarily make cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin more valuable. But it will drive monetary inflation that causes dollars to depreciate against Bitcoin, driving its nominal value higher. Though, the result of this exercise in fiscal and monetary madness will likely be increased demand for crypto. People looking for an inflation shelter will have a powerful instrument in the intensely deflationary cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. Bullish.

* Disclaimer: This article is the opinion of the author and does not represent professional financial or investing advice.

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What Will $6 Trillion in Monetary Expansion Do To Cryptocurrency? (Opinion) - CryptoPotato

The Role of Cryptocurrencies in the Rise of Ransomware – Cointelegraph

Cryptocurrency and ransomware have had a long history together. They are so closely intertwined, in fact, that many have blamed the rise of cryptocurrency for a parallel rise in ransomware attacks.

Ransomware attacks are certainly increasing they rose by 118% in 2018 but its not clear that this is due to cryptocurrency. While the vast majority of ransoms are paid in crypto, the transparent nature of these currencies actually means that they are a pretty bad place to hide stolen funds.

In this article, well take a look at the relationship between cryptocurrency and ransomware, as well as what the future holds.

There are at least two ways in which cryptocurrency is important for ransomware attacks. The first one is the most obvious the majority of the ransoms paid during these kinds of attacks are generally in cryptocurrency. This was the case, for instance, in the WannaCry ransomware attacks, still the largest attack of its kind in history. Victims of the attack were instructed to send roughly $300 of Bitcoin (BTC) to their attackers.

There is another way in which crypto and ransomware are intertwined, though. Today, plenty of hackers are offering ransomware as a service, essentially letting anyone hire a hacker from online marketplaces. If you are so inclined, you can even buy ransomware off-the-shelf from these marketplaces. Both of these services can be paid for in youve guessed it cryptocurrency.

Cryptocurrency is also implicated in many other forms of cyberattack. Cryptojacking a form of attack that uses victims computers to mine cryptocurrencies is also on the rise, and new forms of malware such as Adylkuzz can be used by almost anyone with even a slight level of technical knowledge. Though these forms of attack are not technically ransomware, they further suggest the deep relationship between cryptocurrency and cybercrime.

At first glance, it seems obvious that ransomware hackers would demand payment in cryptocurrency. Surely these currencies, based on anonymity and encryption, offer the best place to store stolen funds?

Well, not really. There is actually a different reason why ransomware attacks make use of cryptocurrencies. As Coin Center director of research Peter Van Valkenburgh wrote in 2017, it is the efficiency of cryptocurrency networks, rather than their secrecy, that attracts hackers. As he later put it:

Its electronic cash, so its easy to write software that can automatically demand payment and automatically demand that payment has been made.

The value of cryptocurrency during a ransomware attack is actually the transparency of cryptocurrency exchanges. A hacker can simply watch the public blockchain to see if victims have paid up, and can automate the process of giving a victim their files back once this payment has been received.

This point also suggests a slightly curious aspect of the role of crypto in ransomware attacks: Cryptocurrency is, perhaps, the worst place to store ransom money. The open, transparent, nature of Bitcoin blockchain transactions means that the global community is closely watching the ransom money. That makes it extremely difficult to convert these funds into another currency, and means that they can be tracked by law enforcement.

As the director of research at Coin Center, Peter Van Valkenburgh, stated:

In the U.S., every major bitcoin exchange is regulated by FINCEN. Right now the $50,000 extorted from victims is just sitting on the bitcoin network. ... That [exchange into local currency] is where youre vulnerable to being identified.

The fact that stolen funds can be tracked in this way doesnt necessarily mean that the hackers who stole them can be brought to justice, of course. The anonymity of cryptocurrency means that it is often impossible for law enforcement agencies to uncover the true identity of ransomware hackers, though of course there are exceptions.

Chief among these, according to Coin Center, is that the blockchain allows one to trace all transactions involving a given bitcoin address, all the way back to the first transaction. That gives law enforcement the records it needs to follow the money in a way that would never be possible with cash.

Because of that, and also in response to a number of recent high-profile ransomware attacks, some have called for cryptocurrency to be regulated more closely. Regulation will need to be implemented carefully, however, because one of the major attractions of cryptocurrency for ordinary citizens and hackers alike is the fact that it is anonymous.

This means that attempts to regulate the space may make catching criminals even more difficult. As pointed out by Will Ellis, head of research at community advocacy group Privacy Australia, cryptocurrency bans led to a rise in VPN use, as investors seek to circumvent Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering requirements in their home countries.

In addition, most governments simply dont have the understanding or the resources to regulate the crypto space effectively. Some are so far behind that they arent even certain how to define what cryptocurrencies are. In this context, it is difficult to see how the close link between ransomware and cryptocurrency can ever be broken.

Related: From the UK to Malaysia: How Countries Have Been Classifying Crypto Across the World

The lack of governmental oversight of cryptocurrency, combined with the rapid rise in ransomware attacks, means that individuals need to protect themselves.

Some companies and individuals have taken unusual approaches. Companies have stockpiled Bitcoin not as an investment, but rather in case they need to pay a ransom as part of a future attack. Some enterprising individuals have even taken matters into their own hands, such as the German programmer who hacked back following a cyberattack using his own systems.

For most of us, though, protecting against ransomware attacks means doing the basics correctly. You should ensure that all of your systems are up to date, subscribe to a secure cloud storage provider and backup frequently. Companies of all sizes should partner with a managed security services provider to monitor enterprise networks, perform risk assessments and make recommendations specific to their data environment.

Ultimately, the relationship between cryptocurrency and ransomware is unlikely to be broken anytime soon. And while cryptocurrencies are certainly involved in the majority of ransomware attacks, we should not make the mistake of blaming crime on the currency it is conducted in.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Sam Bocetta is a freelance journalist specializing in U.S. diplomacy and national security, with an emphasis on technology trends in cyber warfare, cyber defense and cryptography. Previously, Sam was a defense contractor for the United States Department of Defense, working in partnership with architects and developers to mitigate controls for vulnerabilities identified across applications.

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The Role of Cryptocurrencies in the Rise of Ransomware - Cointelegraph

Why this cryptocurrency just surged 16% on news of a key Binance partnership – CryptoSlate

Basic Attention Token (BAT), the native cryptocurrency of the Brave Browser, spiked by more than 16 percent following a Binance trading widget integration.

The Brave team said:

Brave Software and Binance, the global blockchain company behind the worlds largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume and users, today announced a partnership that enables Brave browser users to seamlessly trade cryptocurrency assets through Binance.

The partnership allows users of Brave Browser to trade cryptocurrencies on Binance on the new tab page of the browser.

The Brave Browser remains as one of the few products with a native cryptocurrency to have millions of active users on a monthly basis.

In January 2020, Brave Software co-founder and CEO Brendan Eich said that the number of active monthly users using the Brave Browser surpassed 11.2 million.

He said:

Brave finished 2019 with 11.2M MAU & 3.5M DAU. Since then DAU has passed 3.7M DAU, and growth continues.

That is more than a 10 percent increase in user growth within a two-month span, after seeing 8.7 million users in October 2019.

Changpeng Zhao, the CEO of Binance, said that the long-term partnership with Brave will increase the utility of cryptocurrencies.

Zhao said:

The Binance widget on Braves privacy-oriented browser instills a safer way to buy and sell crypto and also reduces user friction to onboard, trade and interact with the Binance ecosystem. We are looking forward to our long-term partnership with Brave to make it even easier to interact with crypto and encourage more utility in the near future.

The recovery in the price of BAT comes at a much needed time of the year; since January 1, the price of the BAT cryptocurrency fell by nearly 50 percent against the USD.

It fell substantially as the Bitcoin price dropped sharply from $8,000 to sub-$4,000 on March 12, in one of the steepest pullbacks in the markets history.

Since bottoming out at $0.099 in mid-March, the price of BAT has increased by around 70 percent to $0.162.

The sharp correction of the U.S. stock market and the global financial sector led to a short-term decline in the valuation of the entire cryptocurrency market.

But, the industry has seen significant positive developments over the past three months. Most notably, the Supreme Court of India dismissed the circular issued by the Reserve Bank of India to prohibit cryptocurrency trading.

Investments in the cryptocurrency and blockchain industry have declined year-over-year, primarily due to the economic consequences of the coronavirus pandemic in key cryptocurrency markets such as China, South Korea, the U.S., and Europe.

Yet, industry leaders and major companies within the sector are working toward strengthening the infrastructure supporting cryptocurrencies, similar to every previous bear cycle in the last ten years.

Since 2009, Bitcoin has seen a repeated cycle of a bear market-build phase-accumulation phase-bull market many times over. Following every bear cycle, the industry had come out stronger in terms of fundamentals.

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Why this cryptocurrency just surged 16% on news of a key Binance partnership - CryptoSlate