Google Profits off Impersonations of Banned Cryptocurrency Celebs and Companies – Bitcoin News

Cryptocurrency companies are banned on Google but the platform is allowing phishing sites to impersonate them. London-based bitcoin exchange Coin Corner showed that a fraudulent site mimicking it is allowed on Googles advertising platform though its own evidence-backed appeals of legitimacy to Google Ads have been constantly ignored.

Coin Corner marketing manager Molly Spiers says the policy is exposing customers to fraud. So @GoogleAds wont allow @CoinCorner a long-standing, legitimate business on their platform, but will allow phishing companies? Pay attention @Google! she tweeted on April 30.

Spiers shared a screenshot showing a Google advert that promotes http://www.coincornerr.com, an apparent phishing site that impersonates the Coin Corner website. The acceptance of the scam site by Google Ads enables it to come up higher on Google Search. She points out:

With Googles stance on #Bitcoin and #cryptocurrency advertising, any adverts that contain crypto-related keywords are going to be automatically disapproved, so it looks like they have copied our text but removed all references to bitcoin in order to get around Googles algorithms.

In 2018, Google banned cryptocurrency ads supposedly to protect users from scams but partially lifted the ban to allow regulated exchanges in the U.S and Japan to advertise. The continuing embargo on crypto companies outside the exempted territories, however, is not serving its purpose as phishing sites are allowed while appeals from regulated companies are disregarded.

Coin Corner has been in business for six years and is registered with the British authority, the exchanges CEO, Danny Scott, commented in Spiers thread. The company has contacted Google a number of times to ask for exemption in the UK to no avail.

Scott said Coin Corner reported the scam site to Google but it has not been removed from search results. Google has previously continued to run adverts from phishing sites even after they are exposed.

In a related episode of policy inconsistency, Googles sister platform, Youtube, recently took down Ripple CTO David Schwartzs videos, claiming that they are impersonations. You Tube is currently facing a Ripple lawsuit for not doing enough to protect users from giveaway scams.

The Alphabet-owned platforms need to update their policies and technologies to stop promoting fraudulent initiatives while censoring legitimate businesses and exposing consumers to scams.

What do you think about Googles practices? Let us know in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

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Google Profits off Impersonations of Banned Cryptocurrency Celebs and Companies - Bitcoin News

Bitcoin is the least used cryptocurrency, says John McAfee – Invezz

John McAfee, the creator of McAfee Antivirus and a known crypto supporter, recently praised privacy coin Monero (XMR). McAfee acknowledged XMR as the most used cryptocurrency. Meanwhile, he also put down Bitcoin, saying that no one wants to accept it anymore.

McAfee became a big and vocal crypto supporter over the last several years. Over the course of the last few months, he entered the crypto industry as an exchange founder and coin launcher, too. He created his own crypto exchange, McafeeDex. In addition, he also created the software enterprise, McAfee Associates.

His negative comments against Bitcoin do come as a surprise, however. After all, McAfee is well-known for his interest in Bitcoin, among other things. He was a Bitcoin advocate that claimed that the coin will hit the price of $1 million before 2020 ends.

However, it now seems that the former Bitcoin bull is no longer a fan of the worlds largest cryptocurrency.

He actually started bashing Bitcoin in his tweets from May 1st, when he called it a zero-privacy coin.

In the same tweet, McAfee expressed his surprise by the fact that all other cryptos are tied to Bitcoins price movement. He particularly questioned Moneros price to the worlds first crypto. Monero, as a privacy coin, offers and values privacy. Meanwhile, Bitcoin has ZERO privacy, as McAfee put it. With that in mind, he sees no sense in the correlation between the two.

McAfee also commented on other peoples tweets, suggesting Monero as the most used crypto. He even stressed that he does mean the most used, not the most traded coin.

He then addressed a tweet of a user called STILLHODLING, who noted that BTC is the king of crypto. The user did note that this should not be like that, but they acknowledged that it is, in fact the case. However, McAfee denied it, stating that BTC is simply the most widely traded coin. Even though everyone wants to trade Bitcoin, no one is actually using it. He once again stressed that it is Monero that is the most widely used crypto.

Interestingly, his data seems to come from the Dark Web, where, as he says, no one accepts Bitcoin anymore.

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Bitcoin is the least used cryptocurrency, says John McAfee - Invezz

Cryptocurrency This Week: Crypto Exchanges Seeks GST Clarification From RBI & More – Inc42 Media

Several banks unsupportive to crypto exchanges without clear regulations from RBI

Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethirum (ETH) prices are at $8,880.69 and $207, respectively

Hackers are using Zoom installs to spread crypto-mining malware

This week, crypto exchanges sought clarity from RBI on their status as financial institutions as banks were hesitant to work with them citing lack of clear directions.

Meanwhile, cryptocurrency startups have asked RBI on how they are going to be taxed under the goods and services (GST) framework as they are still not categorised under a particular bracket.

Sidharth Sogani, CEO of crypto-asset research firm CREBACO Global said that the RBI was supposed to issue a new circular directing bank to start banking relationships with cryptocurrency exchanges and startups after the Supreme Court had lifted the central banks ban in March 2020.

The price of Bitcoin (BTC) at the time of writing was $8,880.69, with a market cap of $163 Bn, compared to last week (May 2, 2020) which stood at $8,802.69, with a market cap of $161 Bn.

Ethereum (ETH), on the other hand, was priced at $207, with a market cap of $23 Bn at the time of writing, compared to last week (May 2, 2020), where the price of the cryptocurrency was $213, with a market cap of $23 Bn.

Cybersecurity solutions company Trend Micro recently reported that the popular video conferencing app Zoom has become one of the most popular platforms for hackers, to mine cryptocurrency. The firm said that it spotted the attack in early April and recently it encountered a similar attack with a different malware called RevCode WebMonitor RAT, which was detected as Backdoor.Win32.REVCODE.THDBABO. Trend Micro claimed that the Zoom installers look real, but are actually bundled with crypto-mining malware from an unofficial source.

Blogging platform Ghost recently reported a vulnerability in their Salt-based server (an open-source framework), which was attacked through a crypto-mining malware planted by a group of hackers. According to its website, the company officially announced that it has successfully eliminated the crypto-mining virus and will contact all customers directly to notify them of the incident and publish a public-mortem later this week.

Economist and Bitcoin (BTC) and cryptocurrency critic Nouriel Roubini announced that he will be starting a new broadcast, dedicated to explaining his views on the technology. In his Twitter post, Roubini questioned Are cryptocurrencies/shitcoins the future of money or a bubble now gone bust or a speculative store of value?

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Cryptocurrency This Week: Crypto Exchanges Seeks GST Clarification From RBI & More - Inc42 Media

Cryptocurrency Market News: Bitcoin back at $9,000, are we glued to this pivot until halving? – FXStreet

Here's what you need to know on Wednesday

Markets:

BTC/USD is changing hands at $9030, mostly unchanged both on a day-to-day basis and since the beginning of Wednesday. The coin recovered from the intraday low of $8,922. Now it is trading within the strong short-term bullish bias amid high volatility.

At the time of writing, ETH/USD is changing hands at $207.50. The price tested the low of $202.14 during early Asian hours, but reversed to the upside. The second-largest coin has barely changed since this time on Tuesday. Now ETH is moving within a short-term bullish trend. The volatility is high.

XRP/USD is hovering at $0.2196, while the recovery is completely blocked by $0.2200. A sustainable move above this area is needed for the upside to gain traction. Despite the lockdown, XRP/USD is trading within a bullish trend amid high volatility.

Among the 100 most important cryptocurrencies, ReddCoin (RDD) $0.0014 (+43.8%), DigiByte (DGB) $0.0250 (+25.2%) and Chiliz (CHZ) $0.0103 (+23.9%)

The day's losers are Hyperion (HYN) $0.4544 (-34.8%), Seele-N (SEELE) $0.0752 (-6.9%), Quant (QNT) $4.8 (-4.88%).

Chart of the day:BTC/USD, 30-min chart

Market

According to the recent research performed by a German Bitcoin freelance developer known under a pseudonymous name 0xb10c, the average fee paid by bitcoin users spikes for up to an hour around mid-morning New York time due to BitMEX daily broadcasting.

At around 13:00 UTC every day, BitMEX, a cryptocurrency exchange and derivative trading platform, broadcasts multiple megabytes of large transactions into the Bitcoin network. This affects the transaction fees paid during European afternoons and US business hours, he writes.

As the fees depend on how much congestion is in the network, too many transactions sent at the same time cause a sharp increase. Moreover, miners confirm through those with higher fees in the first place, while transactions with smaller fees will have to wait.

The Twitter-bot of Whale Alert service reported that the money stolen from the Korean cryptocurrency exchange Upbit in November 2019 moved again. Someone transferred 2,000 ETH (415,390 USD) of the stolen to an unknown wallet.

Industry

The cryptocurrency exchange ExtStock with the reported trading volume over $600 million according to CoinMarketCap, is suspected in exit scam as the company does not return user funds. The team of the cryptocurrency project Lisk posted a Tweet where it warned the community against dealing with the platform.

Today, we announced that #LSK is listed on the @extstock exchange. The #Lisk community informed us that the exchange is currently experiencing major issues by withholding users' funds. For safety reasons, we removed the old tweet and recommend everyone to be very cautious.

A new token JST promoted by the CEO of TRON, Justin Sun, was sold in less than five minutes. JST is a token behind the cryptocurrency lending platform JUST, which runs on TRON blockchain. According to Sun, it took 4 minutes 26 seconds to complete the token sale that was held on LaunchBase of the cryptocurrency exchange Poloniex, also controlled by Justin Sun. Meanwhile, Poloniex hinted on possible JST listing in the nearest future.

The confirmed trading volumes on the cryptocurrency exchanges dropped sharply in April, according to the research performed by Larry Cermak from The Block.

Legitimate volume on cryptocurrency exchanges has seen a steep decline in April, which has historically never been a good sign. Down 28.4% vs. March.

Meanwhile, in March the trading volumes jumped by 22% as compared to February data. The spike was caused by a sharp growth of volatility in mid-March when Bitcoin lost over 50% of its value in a matter of days.

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Cryptocurrency Market News: Bitcoin back at $9,000, are we glued to this pivot until halving? - FXStreet

CipherTrace leader explains FATF’s rule 16 and how it affects crypto firms – Forkast News

Almost a year since the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) issued its guidelines on virtual assets, international standards for anti-money laundering continue to develop, with efforts becoming more concerted across national borders and more responsive to industry growth. To explore how the blockchain industry is responding to increasing governance and developments in oversight, we reached out to David Jevans, CEO and co-founder of CipherTrace.

As a serial entrepreneur in crypto, security and fintech, Jevans previously founded the encryption companies Receipt.com and IronKey. He also personally holds 17 U.S. patents, mainly in the areas of cybersecurity and cryptography. Jevans first became involved in cryptocurrencies in 1999. More recently, he has been advising Congress on blockchain security, internet fraud and cybersecurity.

The following Forkast interview with Jevans has been edited and condensed.

As we approach the one-year mark since FATF unveiled its risk-based framework for virtual currencies, how has the industry responded to governance?

With more than 200 countries agreeing to implement FATF mandates, the global anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing watchdog wields significant international influence. In June 2019, FATF proposed new guidelines requiring Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) to store and share personal information about senders and receivers of cryptocurrency transactions, including names and account numbers of both parties and the senders physical address, national ID number, customer ID number, or birthdate and sometimes even place of birth. Such personal information is generally not expected to be shared and recorded in cryptocurrency transactions, which presents a difficult quandary for VASPs if they are to achieve compliance. The industry has responded positively, however, creating working groups to develop open-source information sharing systems. We have released TRISA (Travel Rule Information Sharing Architecture) as open-source to support VASPs in securely sharing sender and receiver information without compromising privacy.

See related article: How the FATFs travel rule could push cryptocurrency into the mainstream

What are some of the compliance risks that banks face, and what is the impact on the industry?

A major risk that banks face is not recognizing that Virtual Asset Service Providers are Non-Bank Financial Institutions and failing to identify payments with VASPs. As such, these transactions carry additional money-laundering risks.

Banks must follow all anti-money laundering (AML) regulations and ensure they are abiding by international sanctions, or risk fines and other enforcement actions. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) recently took enforcement action against New York-based bank M.Y. Safra Bank (MYSB) for lack of crypto AML compliance and inadequate vetting of cryptocurrency customers. Though MYSB did not get levied with a fine, the actions they are being required to take will inevitably be expensive. MYSB must appoint a compliance committee within 30 days and train its board and employees on BSA laws within 45 days. Within 90 days, the board will be required to implement an independent BSA audit, monitor and report suspicious activity, and institute an independent party to review past activities. Within 180 days, it will have to hire a BSA officer and sufficient supporting staff.

Enforcement action can also occur against individuals, as it did in the case of Michael LaFontaine, former chief operational risk officer at U.S. Bank. LaFontaine was personally fined $450K for negligence in failing to intercept breaches of the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA).

Banks and other financial institutions are wary of cryptocurrency customers due to the additional challenges posed by the pseudonymous nature of many cryptocurrency transactions. But there is now cutting-edge blockchain forensics technology that can identify criminal activity and non-compliant behaviors on behalf of financial institutions.

How have different governments engaged with crypto?

The introduction of Project Libra sparked an acute interest in digital currencies worldwide. China is moving especially quickly to roll out its central bank digital currency (CBDC), and Sweden and the Bahamas have all launched trials to test their own digital sovereign currencies. If the digital yuan is implemented via the countrys expansive 60-country Belt and Road initiative, it could become an instant global currency. The United States Congress recently proposed a digital dollar in a version of the House Stimulus Bill that wasnt ultimately included in the approved bill; however, the House was onto something with the idea. In the midst of a global pandemic that is spread via physical contact, a digital currency would dramatically reduce exposure to Covid-19 and allow the U.S. government to disperse much-needed value to its citizens faster.

Given the reality of the rapid digitization of the global economy, a transition to digital currencies is inevitable. That said, the countries that move with expedience on implementation will have a leg-up on establishing economic influence. China has long desired to unseat the U.S. dollar as the default international reserve currency; swift implementation of a more efficient, easier-to-transact digital yuan could enable China to finally achieve that aim, unless the United States and other global powers take immediate action.

Why is cracking down on bad actors so important, and is doing so integral to legitimizing cryptocurrency?

From Silk Road to ongoing bitcoin ransom schemes, the crypto community has experienced a PR problem. VASPs and other financial institutions dealing with cryptocurrencies need to implement strong measures to ensure compliance, security and privacy in order to alter the perception that cryptocurrency is somehow criminal. In actuality, it is easier to track criminals using pseudonymous cryptocurrency networks like Bitcoin than it is to track anonymous cash transactions. That said, bitcoin is increasingly becoming the preferred currency of criminals. This is partly due to the disappearing options for offloading cash and simultaneous increasing options for paying with bitcoin. There are nearly 4,000 bitcoin ATMs in the United States alone, for example. If VASPs institute appropriate AML compliance measures, suspicious activities can be identified early and bad actors ferreted out.

There are compelling arguments for both sides of the debate on whether regulatory authorities should be more heavy-handed and issue more comprehensive guidelines with oversight of distributed ledger technologies. How do you think regulatory agencies should act going forward? How do you think they will act?

Regulators should make informed decisions based on data and balance fostering innovations with consumer safety concerns.

It is the job of regulatory authorities to protect people from illicit activities, terrorist financing fraud and investment scams, but by coming down too forcefully regulators could create an environment that is unfriendly to entrepreneurs and lose crypto businesses to nations seen to have more crypto-friendly regulatory regimes, such as Bermuda or Malta. This is called regulatory arbitrage. Its worth noting, however, that even these so-called crypto hot spots must ensure any entity operating under their jurisdictions is abiding by international sanctions and AML requirements.

Ultimately, regulatory agencies need to walk the fine line between enforcing compliance with AML standards without violating the privacy right of individuals and corporations. It may not be practical to apply the same regulations on cryptocurrency companies as traditional financial institutions. Moreover, it may not even be necessary to implement all of the regulatory controls given the capability of advanced blockchain analytics products.

In what ways could blockchain play a role in the current coronavirus crisis? For example, processing medical insurance claims, tracking medical supplies or even vaccine research?

Beyond introducing digital sovereign currencies to reduce in-person contact in value transactions, governments could use blockchain technology to track sensitive information pertaining to the spread of the coronavirus without revealing personally identifying information. For example, its important for governments to know how many cases of Covid-19 exist in a given area in order to make decisions about PPE (personal protection equipment) allocations, but they dont need to know who has the virus nor have access to patients entire health histories. This information should be accessible to health care providers, however, who need this type of data to make informed treatment decisions. Secure and efficient data sharing is one of the main advantages of blockchain technology, which could be deployed to develop such systems.

IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva has declared a global recession that rivals or even exceeds the magnitude of the 2009 financial crisis. How do you expect this to impact the blockchain space, and what steps can we take to ameliorate its effects?

Blockchain companies are by no means immune to the economic impacts of the coronavirus crisis. That said, many blockchain companies are ahead of the curve by already having remote work processes in place. For our part, we were fortunate to already have virtual work systems in place with multiple cloud providers for redundancy and two-factor authentication to ensure security. Despite the additional strain of remote work and fewer venture capital investments coming from overseas, Im confident that the companies with resilient operational systems will find a way to get through this period of uncertainty.

Though no one wishes for hard times, global challenges like the coronavirus pandemic can reveal holes in our existing systems that can lead to lasting change. The very idea of Bitcoin, for example, emerged from the 2009 financial crisis an innovation that led to the plethora of blockchain-powered systems and platforms to serve industries as wide-ranging as healthcare, entertainment, finance and governance.

We at CipherTrace believe that this recession, and the Covid-19 crisis, will accelerate the use of blockchain to build central bank digital currencies in the coming years. Every country will issue one within 10 years.

Link:
CipherTrace leader explains FATF's rule 16 and how it affects crypto firms - Forkast News

Cryptocurrency Market Future Growth by In Depth Industry Analysis, Size, Trends and Forecast to 2026 – Cole of Duty

Intel Corporation

The scope of the Report:

The report analyzes the key opportunities, CAGR, and Y-o-Y growth rates to allow readers to understand all the qualitative and quantitative aspects of the Cryptocurrency market. A competition analysis is imperative in the Cryptocurrency market and the competition landscape serves this objective. A wide company overview, financials, recent developments, and long and short-term strategies adopted are par for the course. Various parameters have been taken into account while estimating market size. The revenue generated by the leading industry participants in the sales of Cryptocurrency across the world has been calculated through primary and secondary research. The Cryptocurrency Market analysis is provided for the international markets including development trends, competitive landscape analysis, and key regions development status.

By Regions:

* North America (The US, Canada, and Mexico)

* Europe (Germany, France, the UK, and Rest of the World)

* Asia Pacific (China, Japan, India, and Rest of Asia Pacific)

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* Middle East & Africa (Saudi Arabia, the UAE, , South Africa, and Rest of Middle East & Africa)

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Speculations for sales:

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This report gives a forward-looking prospect of various factors driving or restraining market growth.

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It assists in making informed business decisions by creating a pin-point analysis of market segments and by having complete insights of the Cryptocurrency market.

This report helps users in comprehending the key product segments and their future.

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Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9: To evaluate the market by segments, by countries and by manufacturers with revenue share and sales by key countries in these various regions

Finally, the report global Cryptocurrency market describes Cryptocurrency industry expansion game plan, the Cryptocurrency industry knowledge supply, appendix, analysis findings and the conclusion. It includes a through explanation of the cutting-edging technologies and investments being made to upgrade the existing ones.

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Cryptocurrency Market Future Growth by In Depth Industry Analysis, Size, Trends and Forecast to 2026 - Cole of Duty

Bitcoin ATM Locations Surge to Over 7700 Worldwide Amid Global Crisis – Bitcoin News

The number of bitcoin ATM locations has been growing rapidly amid nationwide lockdowns and the coronavirus crisis. With hundreds of new machines added each month, there are now more than 7,700 bitcoin ATMs spread all over the world. A new bitcoin ATM operator also installed its first bitcoin machines in April.

Many bitcoin automatic teller machines (ATMs) were installed across the globe in the month of April despite nationwide lockdowns, rising numbers of covid-19 cases, and global economic crisis. According to the bitcoin ATM tracking website Coinatmradar.com, there are now 7,729 cryptocurrency ATMs in 72 countries. Moreover, there are also 148,849 services allowing people to buy (and sell) cryptocurrencies, such as newspaper and mall kiosks.

The country with the most bitcoin ATMs is the U.S., which has 5,749 machines nationwide. Among American cities with the most bitcoin machines are Los Angeles (558), Chicago (292), Atlanta (283), Miami (263), Houston (250), Detroit (246), Dallas (195), Philadelphia (131), Boston (126), and Las Vegas (126).

After the U.S., Canada comes second with 771 bitcoin ATM locations, followed by the U.K. with 296 locations, Austria with 145 locations, Spain with 84 locations, Switzerland with 83 locations, and the Czech Republic with 69 locations. In Canada, the cities with the most bitcoin ATMs are Toronto (249), Montreal (110), and Vancouver (87). Germany, which started regulating bitcoin ATM businesses early this year, now has 34 machines, according to Coinatmradar. One machine is in Berlin, one in Munich, and three in Frankfurt. In March, German financial regulator BaFin shut down unauthorized bitcoin ATMs in the country.

At the beginning of April, there were 7,384 cryptocurrency ATMs, the tracking website details. During the month, 435 machines were added and 69 were closed down, leaving a net increase of 366 ATMs, or a 5% increase from the previous month. Most of the new bitcoin ATMs 351 machines were installed in the U.S., followed by Canada with 12 more machines. Austria, Australia, and Vietnam got two more ATMs each. Slovakia, Hungary, and Slovenia got one more machine each. Meanwhile, one machine was removed from Germany, Mexico, and Malta while the U.K. lost three machines. A number of countries in Asia also have bitcoin ATMs, according to the tracking website. For example, Hong Kong has 57 bitcoin ATM locations, Taiwan has 10 machines, Singapore has eight bitcoin ATMs, Vietnam has six, the Philippines has four, and Thailand has two.

The number of bitcoin ATMs has grown 21% since the beginning of the year. According to Coinatmradar, there were 6,377 machines at the beginning of January. The month saw an increase of 328 bitcoin ATMs. February started with 6,665 machines and 339 others were added during the month. March began with 7,010 machines and 376 were added during the month as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) declared a global recession. In addition, several indicators have shown that the U.S. entered into a recession in mid-March.

There are currently 560 bitcoin ATM operators and 42 producers. Out of all 7,729 bitcoin ATMs, Genesis Coin tops the producer chart with its machines installed in 2,570 locations, followed by General Bytes with 2,283 locations, Bitaccess with 692 locations, Lamassu with 482 locations, and Coinsource with 400 locations. With the rising popularity of bitcoin ATMs, more businesses also want to host them on their premises.

During April, most of the cryptocurrency ATMs installed were Genesis Coin machines (155 ATMs). The next most-installed machines were Bitaccess with 91 new ATMs, followed by General Bytes with 72 ATMs. Meanwhile, six Chainbytes machines were removed in April.

As for operators, Coin Cloud installed 89 bitcoin ATMs, Coinflip added 54 machines, Bitcoin Depot 39 machines, National Bitcoin ATM 27 machines, Bitcoin of America 26 machines, Rockitcoin 25 machines, and Bitstop 19 machines. Meanwhile, U.S.-based operator CMJ installed its first six machines during April.

If you are trying to find the bitcoin ATM nearest to you, the Coinatmradar website provides a map showing where all bitcoin ATMs are in the world. It also gives you the option to view only one-way (buy only) machines or two-way (buy and sell) as well as select to view only the machines supporting specific coins, such as BTC, BCH, ETH, DASH, LTC, ZEC, XMR, and DOGE. In addition, all bitcoin ATM locations are listed by city and country so you can look up all the bitcoin machines near you.

What do you think about the recent surge in bitcoin ATM locations worldwide? Let us know in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons, Coinatmradar

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

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Bitcoin ATM Locations Surge to Over 7700 Worldwide Amid Global Crisis - Bitcoin News

Surveillance is going viral – Reclaim The Net

Mass surveillance by means of abusing the capabilities of mobile hardware and software and with the help of tech corporations is not exactly a new thing; after all, didnt Edward Snowden make a whole kerfuffle about it back in 2013.

One of the perhaps most striking results of the Snowden revelations was how quickly the idea of unwarranted, and all too often warrantless, snooping on regular citizens got normalized, and accepted by most of them.

With the coronavirus pandemic, the talk of mass surveillance for the greater good and when is it supposedly ever not? is resurfacing again.

Microsofts MSN has a long article about this phenomenon.

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From the headline, we learn that its the same old story with a new twist: the pandemic. But we are also told that cellphone monitoring is spreading and with it an uneasy tolerance of surveillance all that we already knew.

The piece takes a look at how exactly this spreading of monitoring is taking place right now. Its driven, at least in part, by fear. Thus a phone app in Turkey designed to tell people if their neighborhood had become a coronavirus hotspot wants users to surrender a shocking amount of personal information: identity number, a parents name, data about their relatives, their own health history and permission to track their movements. Its one of many of Turkeys invasive measures, that, according to the report, receive little to no backlash.

But those who criticize this type of surveillance that is now cropping up all over the world do it from two points of view: first, they question if data harvested in this way is actually helpful in stemming the surge of the pandemic, even if you think the trade-off between personal sovereignty and rights is fair at this point in time.

Others are worried about what negative effects these new tools might have in the long term, that is, if they will really just be decommissioned once the health crisis is over.

But for now, different implementations of snooping apps and techniques have become the new normal for millions across the world, just like social distancing and wearing masks in public.

Original post:
Surveillance is going viral - Reclaim The Net

Covid-19 and the limits of journalism without fear or favour – Daily Monitor

By Emilly Comfort Maractho

Throughout this lockdown period, there was increased online discussion about the future of journalism after Covid-19. Many of them could cause a general loss of appetite.

To launch the 2020 Press Freedom Index report, Reporters Without Boarders (RSF) hosted a virtual conference on April 21, that they titled: Journalism in Crisis: A Decisive Decade.

The impressive list of five speakers included Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel economics prize laureate; Edward Snowden, president of Freedom of the Press Foundation; Christopher Deloire, secretary general of RSF; Rana Ayub, journalist and Global Opinion writer at the Washington Post; and Maria Ressa, a journalist and author.

Despite persistent prediction of doom for journalism as we know it, many young people are attracted to it. At Uganda Christian University alone, we grapple with high demand. At any one time, the Faculty of Journalism, Media and Communication has about 500 students pursuing journalism and communication at both undergraduate and graduate levels. Many other institutions are training a good number. This interest also demonstrates confidence of parents in the industry.

If there was ever a time to say there is enough army of journalists to do a great job reporting news and media to have quality content, it is now. If there was ever a time that we could lay claim to professionalism in journalism and an ethical media, it would be now. The famous fish mongers who paraded as men and women of the news are, if anything, long gone-giving way for a young, smart, ambitious, tech-savvy and professionally trained lot, or at least those gifted in it. Some of them fit the bill of super journalists working across platforms.

These trained journalists would be the perfect kind of troops for what the organisers of this years Press Freedom Day usually marked on May 3 called for, journalism without fear or favour. The theme was coined before Covid-19 became the nightmare that it is, which has forced the organisers to push the official celebration to later in October.

What Covid-19 has done is to truly test the limits of those who take journalism seriously, imagining that there could be journalism without fear or favour. Predictably, the public has rushed to blame the media for the disinformation that has assaulted us. No doubt, the media is not blameless. But what if the media is not the main problem? What if the problem is those who are the custodians of the truth and a deliberate attempt to twist that truth? What happens when facts are not enough?Covid-19 unleashed a series of actions by governments across the globe. Many of them needed questioning. But we all quickly became complicit, accepting that no one had the answers, or worse still, knew the truth. All we had to do was trust science to someday find a solution, in the meantime follow the rules, not question anything. Leaders waited on science to direct them, so did journalists.As I reflected on the concept of journalism without fear or favour, I wondered if the real crisis we are having is really a crisis of journalism or crisis communication. Maybe it is a crisis of governance and the inability of leaders to ask questions and use governmental structures and resources which journalism cannot even dream of to find answers, quickly. As we ask ourselves about the future of journalism and the crisis of communication, what continues to bother me is the failure or slow pace of investigation, not just from a journalistic point of view, but from science too. It is incredible how little is coming out of the great science to dispel in a systematic way questions around the virus and to decisively deal with them. For journalism without fear or favour to happen, we have to be in position to ask great questions in order to find the right answers. In fact, we have to exercise disbelief in the known truth or facts before us. If we only license certain groups to ask questions, we shall miss the different angles needed for us to shade light on the situation in a holistic way.We have to start reflecting on what it means to say the media is doing a great job because if doing a great job is being a vessel through which official information is passed or praising the powers that be, then indeed we have a journalism crisis. We also have to reflect on what it means to pursue journalism without fear or favour, especially when fear is the weapon of control in a crisis.

As the authors of the World Press Freedom Day have noted, we need to examine the ways that new forms of control of media threaten the role of journalism in providing the public with reliable facts and inclusive views.

As we hold the media accountable, we should also address ourselves to the limitations of journalism coming from business, politics, technology platforms and the public. A crisis of journalism, if ignored, becomes that of democracy.

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Covid-19 and the limits of journalism without fear or favour - Daily Monitor

The Global Cloud Encryption Software Market is expected to grow by $ 2.82 bn during 2020-2024 progressing at a CAGR of 38% during the forecast period…

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Originally posted here:
The Global Cloud Encryption Software Market is expected to grow by $ 2.82 bn during 2020-2024 progressing at a CAGR of 38% during the forecast period...