Azure SQL Database Ranked Among Top 3 Databases of 2020 – Visual Studio Magazine

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Microsoft touted the inclusion of Azure SQL Database among the top three databases of 2020 in a popularity ranking by DB-Engines, which collects and manages information about database management systems, updating its lists monthly.

The site also compiled stats for the full year of 2020, awarding second place to Microsoft's flagship cloud DBMS offering. Taking first place, and thus being named "DBMS of the Year 2020," is PostgreSQL, a repeat winner.

Microsoft took to the blogosphere to publicize its ranking, which set a record of its own, according to DB-Engines. "In the 9 years of DB-Engines, it is the first time that a cloud database service comes in within the top three of the Database of the Year award," the organization said in a Jan. 4 post.

About a week later, Microsoft penned its own post about the award, stating: "DB-Engines collects information on database management systems and it provides a widely accepted popularity ranking of database management systems. Azure SQL Database's popularity score increased 253 percent through 2020."

DB-Engines said that 253 percent improvement in the Azure SQL Database popularity score -- from 28.2 points to 71.4 points -- boosted the cloud database service from 25th place to 15th in the overall ranking (which doesn't strictly correspond the database of the year awards, which are based on the percentage increase in popularity year over year).

As the graphic below shows, the popularity of Azure SQL Database has skyrocketed over the past year, while plain old Microsoft SQL Server has stayed relatively flat over the years while decreasing slightly, especially over the past couple years.

"Microsoft Azure SQL Database is a fully managed database as a service," DB-Engines said in announcing the second-place ranking. "It is built on the latest stable version of the Microsoft SQL Server product and optimized with features for running in the cloud (auto-scale, geo-replication, automatic tuning, ...). Consequently, features like manual backup/restore, management of server configuration parameters are not supported."

Azure SQL Database fared better in a ranking of "Best cloud databases of 2021" by TechRadar, published in November 2020, where it's No. 1.

DB-Engines uses a variety of means for its ranking, including the number of mentions on web sites, Google Trends, job offers and more, with the full methodology explained here.

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer for Converge360.

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Azure SQL Database Ranked Among Top 3 Databases of 2020 - Visual Studio Magazine

An interview with Kemp IT Law discussing digital transformation in the United Kingdom – Lexology

Lexology GTDT Market Intelligence provides a unique perspective on evolving legal and regulatory landscapes. This interview is taken from the Digital Transformation volume discussing various topics, including a look at the main laws and regulations, the impact of cybersecurity legislation, cloud contract considerations, the impact of data protection laws and more, within key jurisdictions worldwide.

1 What are the key features of the main laws and regulations governing digital transformation in your jurisdiction?

As a set of resources to optimise an organisations digital capabilities, digital transformation (DT) is more a set of IT- and people-based techniques and processes than any one thing. It is also helpful to segment FT into DT the journey and DT - the destination.

DT presents a complex picture. Recent surveys have identified cloud, cybersecurity, automation, analytics and governance and compliance as top priorities on the DT journey, with a range of fourth industrial revolution developments (AI/ML, IoT, DevOps, blockchain, mixed reality) also starting to rise up the agenda. Improving customer experience is the top thing at the destination, with Web 3.0 (decentralised, peer-to-peer, blockchain and semantic web-enabled internet services) gaining traction.

DT therefore covers a multitude of rapidly developing technologies and legal areas. The main laws and regulations governing the DT journey at the moment emanate from data regulation, particularly around the cloud: the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), for processing personal data; and GDPR, telecoms security regulation, sector-specific regulation and tort (negligence) law for cybersecurity. As yet, however, there is no specific legislation regulating AI in the UK, although, as elsewhere, we have a confusing abundance of ethics and data science frameworks and policies.

The business world is migrating to the internet at an accelerating pace: in the great shove online, internet as a proportion of total UK retail sales doubled from 15 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2016 to 30 per cent in the second quarter of 2020. You can look at retail as a proxy for other sectors, whether challenged (transport, hospitality, leisure) or fuelled (healthcare, financial services) by covid-19.

As digital commerce and the power of BigTech grow, we are likely to see a sharper focus on regulating DT - the destination. The proliferation of tech-enabled payment services has been opened up by the payment services regulatory regime ushered in by PSD2 in January 2018. The EU P2B (platform-to-business) Regulation which came into force in July 2019 adds for business users of online platforms protections that have long been in place for consumers.

As ever in the tech world, it is a case in the UK of rapid evolution not revolution as law and regulation struggle to keep up with ever-accelerating technological change.

2 What are the most noteworthy recent developments affecting organisations digital transformation plans and projects in your jurisdiction, including any government policy or regulatory initiatives?

Even before the covid-19 pandemic hit in the first quarter of 2020, digital transformation had emerged as the top priority in the organisation for technology initiatives this year, followed by cloud as key DT journey enabler; a much clearer focus on cybersecurity; data protection; compliance and governance; increasing investment in data analytics and machine learning; and always on software development through DevOps and IT service management as a service.

In cloud DT projects, perhaps the most noteworthy recent developments are cloud service providers hardening attitude to risk and liability in their contracts, reflecting a shift in balance at the negotiating table as the cloud and key players business models mature. Behind that in the UK, it is still data protection, cybersecurity and sector specific rules on outsourcing that are the most critical.

As organisations cloud strategies mature, we can expect to see the emphasis shift to automation, big data analytics and artificial intelligence. Although there are no specific laws yet regulating these areas, there are myriad frameworks and policies, many produced by and for government, which aim to collate the wide range of legal questions arising in relation to compliant use of these technologies.

For the UK, how the government responds to Brexit and whether the underlying IT-related laws and regulations here will continue to follow or diverge from Brussels will be key. An early indication of the path ahead is likely to be seen in the UKs response when the E-Privacy Regulation (which will replace the E-Privacy Directive) is passed.

In the UK, organisations are increasingly starting to follow ISO and other technical standards in fields relating to DT. In addition to the widely used ISO 27001 information security family of standards and ISO 38505 on data governance, of particular interest in the DT arena are new and under development standards in the areas of AI (ISO Joint Technical Committee (JTC) 1, Subcommittee (SC) 42); cloud (JTC1 SC 38), data centres (JTC1 SC 39); IT service management and governance (JTC1 SC 40); and IoT (JTC1 SC 41). Certification to one or more of these standards is becoming more popular in the UK as a way of demonstrating technical compliance in an increasingly competitive environment.

3 What are the key legal and practical factors that organisations should consider for a successful Cloud and data centre strategy?

The DT journey presents a number of unique issues and hurdles for organisations, chief among them the fact that most DT projects involve the transfer of some level of control from the organisations to the various suppliers in the DT stack. Whereas in the old world, organisations bought their own servers, set up their own server rooms or farms and managed the hardware, networking, software and data elements themselves, a digitally transformed deployment model operates on the basis of degrees of delegated responsibility the organisation typically transfers management of some or all of these layers to the XaaS provider to some degree (eg, by engaging a third party to host its servers and kit, by using formally on-premise software as a service from the cloud, or by outsourcing its network security monitoring). It is therefore key to ensure that the organisation has a crystal clear understanding of: the technology, its use, and how it impacts the organisation; the individual responsibilities of suppliers, staff, sub-contractors; the various relationships among all elements of the services; and responsibility (and liability) should failures arise.

Another key consideration when departing from legacy systems is the extent to which the new cloud services align to existing deployment models. Cloud providers typically sell based on out-of-the-box configurable functionality; solutions typically do not offer significant amounts of customisation or bespoke development. This plug in and play feature of cloud-based service offerings may mean quicker and easier set-up of the new service but the downside is that bespoke developments which may have been created by the organisations IT teams over the years will not migrate across, leaving the customer with a potential functionality deficit and resulting in additional time and expense to bridge that gap.

The third key factor concerns data: what type and value; where it is stored; how it is processed or used, etc. Initially driven by GDPR concerns, establishing rights and obligations in relation to any type of data has now become a key component of any successful DT project. Organisations should understand all data flows, where data is stored at rest and what its suppliers do in relation to data. It is likely that what contract says is permissible will be factually different to what is technically possible so care must be taken to ensure that day-to-day use of the system and technology is in compliance with the contractual terms but also the organisations data collection, processing and retention policies.

4 What contracting points, techniques and best practices should organisations be aware of when procuring digital transformation services at each level of the Cloud stack? How have these evolved over the past five years and what is the direction of travel?

Despite the variety of DT services and projects, there are a number of contractual points that arise on most, if not all, DT contract negotiations.

As a first step, it is vital to understand the contractual landscape. This is becoming increasingly complex legacy contracts are unlikely to be fit for purpose and new contracts are a maze of hyperlinks and embedded documents. The first step is therefore to chase down all contractual documents, hyperlinked and cross-referenced terms, and check technical descriptions and or specifications for exclusions or restrictions (eg, exclusions from availability calculations, error definitions, etc).

Next up, customers need to ensure that the contractual services description is sufficiently detailed to result in meaningful and enforceable warranties the high-level sales pitch functional descriptions that are offered by suppliers to all customer are typically not detailed enough to capture the customers requirements contractually. The functional specification part of any procurement process is key to closing the gap and we find that most suppliers will warrant that the services will deliver the functionality requirements set out in the procurement questionnaires, RFPs, etc.

Be aware of the mantra that the SLA is the product and the product is the SLA most suppliers will offer limited service levels (usually linked solely to uptime and availability) and limited service credits (typically capped at 15 per cent to 20 per cent of the fees and the customers only remedy for SLA failures). Credits set at this level are unlikely to compensate an organisation if it cannot run its business due to an IT failure so it is important to consider other remedies (including non-contractual remedies like back-up failover systems, etc) to reduce the likely impact of a significant SLA failure.

5 In your experience, what are the typical points of contention in contract discussions and how are they best resolved?

Despite the fast-moving nature of new technologies, the same handful of points arise on every contractual negotiation. As many legacy systems reach end-of-life, market practice appears to be swinging to favour suppliers. As a result, many negotiations start from suppliers templates and customers on low value details are unlikely to achieve a significant rebalance in terms. That fact, however, should not prevent customers from raising points with suppliers, including the following commonly negotiated issues.

The first point of contention is more commercial than legal but can nonetheless impact the contractual discussions significantly: at what point does the customer pay for its licenses to use its new systems services? Generally speaking, most DT projects involve a non-insignificant transition and transformation period. During this time the supplier may need access to systems, etc, to perform any configuration, to allow data transfer, testing, etc. The customer, however, does not use the system until live operation and does not want to pay subscription fees before this date. Some suppliers recognise this concern and only bill professional services fees incurred by it over the implementation period, whereas others seek to charge all fees upfront from the date of signature. Suppliers positions on this point are usually entrenched and non-negotiable if the issue is not raised as a requirement of the customer during the procurement process.

The second point of contention revolves around remedies for breach. Post go-live, suppliers typically limit liability to minimal service credits for SLA failures or fix replace obligations for breach of functionality warranties. Liability for loss of profit, loss of revenue and loss of business are typically also excluded. The cumulative impact of these three points means that customers are unlikely to have meaningful remedies for a supplier breach. This can have a catastrophic effect a failure may prevent the customer from trading or running its business and no amount of service credits or fix commitments will compensate the customer from that loss. A termination right, for example, for material breach, is likely to offer little practical resolution as the customer will need to find a replacement supplier, etc, and this can take months. A compromise may be reached by granting the customer the right to sue for damages if the service credits max out of a period of months or if the supplier fails to meet the SLA on a consistent basis. Loss of profits, etc, if direct, should also be recoverable by the customer and the customers right to terminate for material breach should apply without prejudice to its other rights or remedies.

Liability and indemnity are perennially on lawyers lists as issues that arise on every contract; DT and cloud contracts are no different. Market practice becoming more supplier-friendly as newer technologies become ubiquitous and is leaning towards capped liability for the suppliers, expressed usually as separate caps or supercaps for breaches of confidentiality; data protection and information security; and a general, aggregate cap for all other breaches. The caps are normally calculated as a multiple of the contract value, however, in certain sectors and among certain suppliers we are beginning to see caps for breach of confidentiality, data protection and information security capped at a specific GBP or US$ amount.

6 How do your jurisdictions cybersecurity laws affect organisations on their digital transformation journey?

In recent DT market surveys, cybersecurity has emerged as the key risk to be managed, ahead even of the cloud. Organisations undergoing DT should be aware from the outset of the key sources of regulation.

First, under GDPR and the UK Data Protection Act 2018 (DPA), the key standard is to take appropriate technical and organisational measures (ATOMs) to ensure that processing is carried out compliantly.

Second, an intricate group of regulations on cybersecurity risk emanate from the UKs telecoms regulatory framework. These are the UK regulations (SI 2018/506) that implemented the Network and Information Systems Directive; the UK Communications Act 2003 where the cloud provider is a public electronic communications (PEC) network; and the Privacy and E-Communications Regulations in the case of PEC service providers.

Third, sector specific regulation may apply to cloud or other services used by the regulated entity, as in the case of financial services and the European Banking Authoritys September 2019 outsourcing guidelines.

Fourth, the normal duty in negligence to take reasonable care looks likely to equate to the ATOMs duty under the GDPR and DPA.

We are starting to see a more business risk-based approach to managing cyber risk. The UK Information Commissioner was reported in July 2019 as saying that the ICO would focus on whether the security to protect peoples data was consistent, adequate, reasonable and effective and commentators have picked up on this as a CARE standard for cybersecurity. In the words of one research company, this approach supports the creation of a balance between protection and running the business, embodying the incentive to build better security capabilities that deliver better outcomes, rather than just spending more money on security. This more practical approach will help inform organisations in their security assessments of DT providers and their own cybersecurity duties.

7 How do your jurisdictions data protection laws affect organisations as they undergo digital transformation?

Data protection, and in particular GDPRs introduction in 2018, has been the catalyst for a more streamlined and process-driven approach to all issues surrounding an organisations data, and not just personal data. We have seen more focus on how and where all types of information are stored and used (from personal data to analytics, etc): information security vetting is now commonplace; customers are routinely asking for evidence of standards certifications for information security and data management and copies of data and information audits; data storage and processing locations are contractually recorded; and penetration testing and BC/DR testing are core elements of a standard approach to information security.

From a contractual perspective, data processing terms are entirely standard, as are mechanisms for implementing standard contractual clauses when required to do so if personal data exits the EU and the EEA. Most companies are also considering how best to address a no-deal Brexit.

8 What do organisations in your jurisdiction need to do from a legal standpoint to move software development from (traditional) Waterfall through Agile (continuous improvement) to DevOps (continuous delivery)?

It is five years since Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella famously said that every business will become a software business, build applications, use advanced analytics and provide SaaS services but it has taken the rise of DevOps for this prediction to start to become a reality.

DevOps can be thought of as Agile+, in other words, moving on from Waterfall, (highly structured, iterative) and Agile (collaborative, evolutionary) to DevOps shortened development life cycle (Dev) and continuous delivery (Ops).

Building an effective DevOps function has two main features. The first is an internal HR-related policy approach of empowering individuals in the team (developers, IT operations, management) in a flexible, results oriented environment. The second is ensuring that appropriate governance and best practices are followed by the team for all software it uses and develops.

Third-party software will either be proprietary or open source. For proprietary software, it is critical that the software is used within the scope of the licence granted to avoid over-deployment issues. This is especially important as legacy (on-prem) contracts may not address in-cloud use, and as organisations migrate their development environments to the cloud, aligning use and licence scope becomes key. This is becoming more material as software providers change their licensing policies and increasingly carry out software audits on their customers. Automated Software Asset Management systems are increasingly used to manage this risk.

DevOps relies on the ubiquitous use of Open Source Software (OSS). Although copyleft licences have declined in popularity in recent years (the GPL licence familys share has halved from 60 per cent in 2012) and use of the MIT and other permissive licences has increased, the need for an effectively OSS policy for the DevOps team has not gone away.

Finally, organisations should put in place Source Code Management arrangements to record and manage the software developed internally. GitHub is a popular source code repository here.

9 What constitutes effective governance and best practice for digital transformation in your jurisdiction?

DT does not happen in a vacuum and takes place when the business is in flight, putting a premium on strategy, planning, governance and best practices around implementation.

Planning the organisations cloud journey is critical, and the dependencies in DT projects are a major source of execution risk. Delays in one project will have a knock-on effect on later projects, increasing time and costs. DT governance arrangements should ensure individual projects are managed within an overall framework, where sequencing, dependencies and relief events are robustly addressed, and a common approach to reporting, information sharing and testing is put in place.

While data protection is still the foundation of data management, organisations are increasingly looking at data end to end through the lens of policy considerations, based on data value (quantity and quality, measured by context and timeliness); cost (storage, maintenance and disposal); risk (based on data sensitivity classification); and constraints (including contractual, regulatory, privacy, IP and commercial).

Looking through this lens, data use cases are parsed in different ways, between data that is human impacting and human non-impacting; data used for input, processing and output; and data used internally and externally.

Different sets of standards and automated checklists will then apply to different use cases segmented according to these criteria.

This business risk-based approach to managing data and risk is also reflected in a more pragmatic regulatory approach to cybersecurity. In an interview in July 2019, the UK Information Commissioner was reported as saying that the ICOs focus was on whether or not there was adequate, reasonable, consistent and effective data security to protect peoples data. This more practical approach will help inform organisations in their security due diligence assessments of DT providers.

As software development moves centre stage, effective internal policies around software asset management (ensuring proprietary third-party software is used within licence scope), open-source software (managing residual risk around copyleft/inheritance) and source code management (for internally developed software) are becoming critical.

The Inside Track

What aspects of and trends in digital transformation do you find most interesting and why?

For lawyers, DT represents the intersection of law, regulation, technology and business and the scale and pace of the changes we are all living through means the area is incredibly diverse and rapidly changing. You can be looking at intricate, detailed contracting points on IP or liability one minute, advising on contract management and governance the next, and looking at knotty regulatory points around data and cybersecurity the next. The variation between sectors, different areas of black letter law and the practicalities of getting the deal through and bringing our wide-ranging experience to bear for clients is hugely stimulating.

What challenges have you faced as a practitioner in this area and how have you navigated them?

Advising effectively on digital transformation means four main things. First, understanding a wide range of technologies cloud, AI, big data, analytics, outsourcing, GDPR, cybersecurity (the list is pretty much endless). Second, understanding the ins and outs of intricate contracts at all levels of the technology stack. Third, deep knowledge of an incredibly broad and rapidly changing range of law and regulation. And fourth, bringing all this together for the client on their digital transformation journey. So the challenge and the stimulus and satisfaction is all about constantly learning to learn and get better in each of these four areas.

What do you see as the essential qualities and skill sets of an adviser in this area?

As well as understanding the tech, the contracts and the law, you need to be able to bring all this together for the client. You need to be able to see the big picture of where the client wants to go, as well as the detail of each step along the way so you can help the client navigate the digital transformation journey and get the deal done. Experience really helps, and lawyers analytical but practical mindsets, as well as the soft skills and negotiating skills are qualities that clients really value in the complex projects.

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An interview with Kemp IT Law discussing digital transformation in the United Kingdom - Lexology

Bitcoin Tops $40,000 for the First Time, Pushing the Value of the Worlds Cryptocurrency Over $1 Trillion – Robb Report

Theres never been a lack of skepticism surrounding cryptocurrency. And its fair to say the jury still wavers at times. But with 2021 just a week old, the worlds most polarizing and misunderstood currency is making a strong case for its staying power.

On Thursday, the price of a single Bitcoin, the oldest virtual currency, topped $40,000 for the first time, according to Business Insider. The 12 percent increase on the day pushed the total value of Bitcoin to over $700 billion and all cryptocurrency to over $1 trillion for the very first time.

The surge continued into Friday, with Bitcoin valued at over $41,000 as of press time. That means that value of Bitcoin has risen by over 400 percent over the last year. Interest in the virtual currency has been especially high over the last month, during which time its value has more than doubled. The interest has reportedly been driven by investors desire for an alternative asset not tied to a central bank, unlike the dollar or euro. Of course, that interest may or may not last. If nothing else, cryptocurrency has proven itself to be quite volatile in recent years. The value of Bitcoin, for example, crashed from $19,000 to $3,200 between 2017 and 2018.

For now, the news is good. With a market cap of over $1 trillion, cryptocurrencies are now worth almost half as much as Apple, the worlds most valuable company, reports Business Insider. It also makes cryptocurrency more valuable than the entire Swiss economy.

While the recent surge in Bitcoin value is great news investors, this is especially true for Satoshi Nakamoto. The creator of the virtual currency is believed to own one million Bitcoin. If true, Ars Technica reports that the investment would put his net worth at more than $40 billion. That would make him one of the 35 richest people in the world, according to the Bloombergs Billionaire Index.

Bitcoin may be the currency that has most benefited from the recent surge in interest, but other virtual currencies have also seen their value rise as well. By the end of trading on Thursday, Ether, which is used by the Ethereum network, was valued at $140 billion Meanwhile, other notable currencies arent doing too shabby either. Tether is now worth $22 billion, Litecoin sits at $11 billion, and Bitcoin Cash checks in at $8 billion.

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Bitcoin Tops $40,000 for the First Time, Pushing the Value of the Worlds Cryptocurrency Over $1 Trillion - Robb Report

$150 billion wiped off cryptocurrency market in 24 hours as bitcoin pulls back – CNBC

GUANGZHOU, China Bitcoin and other digital coins tanked on Monday, wiping some $150 billion off the cryptocurrency market.

The market capitalization or value of the cryptocurrency market was $931 billion around 6:00 p.m. ET, down from $1.08 trillion a day earlier, according to Coinmarketcap.

Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency, fell over 10% from a day earlier to $34,200, according to Coin Metrics data. It earlier sank to an intraday low of $30,863. Ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency, was down 15% to $1,060. It briefly tumbled below $1,000, hitting an intraday low of $945.

The sell-off in cryptocurrencies comes after a huge rally and perhaps signals some profit-taking from investors. Bitcoin is still up over 300% in the last 12 months and last week hit an all-time high just below $42,000.

"The correction we saw was expected as we believe the BTC price surge recently from under $20,000 to $40,000 in the past four weeks will induce sell pressure," said Simons Chen, executive director of investment and trading at cryptocurrencyfinancialservices firmBabel Finance.

The $40,000 mark could have been a trigger for profit-taking, Chen said.

Bitcoin's resurgence has been attributed to a number of factors includingmore buying from large institutional investors.

And it has also been likened to "digital gold," a potential safe-haven asset and a hedge against inflation. In a recent research note,JPMorgan said bitcoin could hit $146,000in the long term as it competes with gold as an "alternative" currency.The investment bank's strategists noted, however, that bitcoin would have to become substantially less volatile to reach this price. Bitcoin is known for wild price swings.

But some bitcoin critics such as David Rosenberg, economist and strategist at Rosenberg Research have called bitcoin a bubble.

Long-term bullishness around bitcoin remains however.

Jehan Chu, founder of cryptocurrency-focused venture capital and trading firm Kenetic Capital, said the pullback in bitcoin could be a buying opportunity for new investors.

"This short term correction is both natural and needed, and is a great entry point for long-term investors as we quickly reach $50k this quarter and $100k by year's end," Chu told CNBC.

Last week, Social Capital's Chamath Palihapitiya said bitcoin could go above six digits.

"It's probably going to $100,000, then $150,000, then $200,000," Palihapitiya told CNBC's "Halftime Report." "In what period? I don't know. [Maybe] five or 10 years, but it's going there."

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$150 billion wiped off cryptocurrency market in 24 hours as bitcoin pulls back - CNBC

Cryptocurrency’s value plummets. Here’s what it means for your taxes – CNBC

StefaNikolic | E+ | Getty Images

Holders of cryptocurrency have more than price volatility to worry about this year. The taxman wants to know about your trading activity.

Bitcoin hit fresh highs during the weekend, creeping toward $42,000 on Jan. 8. However, its value tanked on Monday amid a sell-off in cryptocurrencies, and bitcoin's value is now hovering around $33,000.

Regardless of whether you interpret the decline in price as a buying opportunity or an alarm to get out, you'll need to share the information with the IRS.

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Transactions you partake in this year will be reportable when you submit your 2021 tax returns next spring.

This tax season, the taxman asks a "yes or no" question on the front page of the 2020 federal income tax return: "At any time during 2020, did you receive, sell, send, exchange, or otherwise acquire any financial interest in any virtual currency?"

"If you're particularly active using bitcoin, not only is every transaction potentially income or a deduction, but when you use it to pay for goods, you could have reportable gain on that bitcoin," said E. Martin Davidoff, partner-in-charge in the national tax controversy practice of Prager Metis.

Buying and selling cryptocurrency aren't the only actions that create a reporting obligation.

You'd also have to check the "yes" box on your tax return if you happened to pocket any crypto for free or if you received your holdings in exchange for goods or services.

Swapping your bitcoin for other property is also a reportable transaction.

That's where things can get messy, since users may be using multiple exchanges or platforms for their crypto trading activity.

Some exchanges will only provide you with a Form 1099-K for tax time. It contains the details of your activity if you've had gross payments exceeding $20,000 or you've made more than 200 transactions.

That means the onus for accurate recordkeeping, reporting and tax payment is really on the investor.

"You have to keep track of every transaction you did, every sale," Davidoff said.

Mykola Tys/ | LightRocket | Getty Images

In general, the IRS regards virtual currency as property. That means if you sell your holding, you've either racked up a capital gain or a loss.

Meanwhile, wages that are paid to you in cryptocurrency will be reported to you on a Form W-2, which your employer must send you by the end of this month. Federal income tax and FICA taxes would apply to the payment as they do for wages paid in dollars.

Cryptocurrency that you mine must also be included in your taxable income. In this case, you would include the fair market value as of the day you received it.

Failure to report the income can lead to penalties and interest and in the most extreme cases, prison and fines up to $250,000.

Indeed, back in 2019, the IRS sent letters to thousands of taxpayers with virtual currency transactions, notifying them to pay back taxes and submit amended returns.

Aside from tracking your transactions, tax professionals recommend keeping detailed records of your basis or your original investment in the asset.

How long you've held the asset before you transact with it also matters.

If the holding period exceeds one year, you're subject to favorable long-term capital gains treatment when you sell your virtual currency. In that case, the tax on appreciation can be 0%, 15% or 20%.

However, if you sell your virtual currency less than a year after acquiring it, ordinary income tax rates kick in. Those rates can be as high as 37%.

You do have to track your basis even if you use your bitcoin to buy things at a merchant, so be mindful of how you transact.

"If you're having to choose between using your U.S. currency versus crypto, at least with cash you don't have to track the basis," Davidoff said. "It's a huge headache."

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Cryptocurrency's value plummets. Here's what it means for your taxes - CNBC

Bitcoin’s roller-coaster ride shows why people should be cautious before investing in cryptocurrency – CNBC

An illustration of bitcoin on Euro banknotes.

Nicolas Economou | NurPhoto via Getty Images

The extreme movements up and down are relatively common for bitcoin and are expected to continue.

"The only thing I can expect for sure is volatility," said David Yermack, a professor of finance at New York University Stern School of Business. "From day one, this has been a risky investment for people."

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Bitcoin has seen both astronomical growth over the last decade and major selloffs at various points in between. Although many bulls point to its past performance as a sign that the cryptocurrency will continue to surge in the future, that might not happen, according to Yermack.

"It's a purely speculative asset," he said, adding that while bitcoin has grown in popularity, it's still not considered a mainstream investment, meaning that many have little information about the asset.

"You should never invest in anything that you don't understand," said Yermack.

Financial experts generally advise that people looking to invest in bitcoin allocate a small amount of their portfolio that they'd be okay with losing entirely to the asset. The U.K.'s Financial Conduct Authority just issued a similar warning.

"People should only invest really what they're willing to lose," said Daniel Polotsky, CEO of CoinFlip, one of the largest bitcoin ATM companies in the U.S.

He added that people near retirement, those who will need the money they're investing near term or people who are looking to trade frequently to make a profit may want to reconsider bitcoin as an asset for those goals.

"Maybe there are more opportunities to make money because it's so volatile, but it can get very addicting very quickly to start trading back and forth," he said. "And, most of the people that do that lose money."

People should only invest really what they're willing to lose

Daniel Polotsky

CEO, CoinFlip

If you are going to assign part of your portfolio to a speculative asset like bitcoin, take a disciplined approach and impose rules for buying and selling, said David Sacco, an economics professor at the University of New Haven.

"You can get experience and not blow yourself up in the process," he said.

There are also potential ways to invest in the idea of cryptocurrency without putting money directly into an asset as volatile as bitcoin, according to Yermack. That could mean investing in large technology companies utilizing Blockchain such as IBM or media companies with their own digital currencies, such as Facebook.

In addition, Coinbase, the largest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange, recently filed for an initial public offering, meaning it could be available to retail traders in the future.

To be sure, there are many bulls who see bitcoin exploding in value in the future as adoption continues and more large institutional investors buy into cryptocurrency.

To those determined to hold bitcoin for the long run, the most recent selloff after hitting a record high is not a huge concern.

"This is definitely to be expected," said Polotsky, adding that he expects bitcoin to continue to climb in the future and sees the recent dip as a potential buying opportunity for those that expect to hold the asset long-term.

"I think today we saw some profit taking investors liquidating, but if you're a bitcoin bull and you have a long-time preference, you know that corrections are normal," said Harry Alford, co-founder of Humble Ventures, on "Squawk on the Street" Monday.

He's not fazed by the recent selloff, he added, and believes that cryptocurrency can lead to financial freedom for Black Americans or other groups. "We're going to see a lot of skepticism turn into curiosity," he said.

Those who want to invest in bitcoin should assess where they stand with other personal finance and investing goals to determine if they have some extra money to put into a risky asset.

If you do, then it's fine to put some money in bitcoin, and to buy on a day when it's down, said Anjali Jariwala, a certified financial planner and CPA and founder of Fit Advisors in Torrance, California.

"Throw some money into it and kind of let it stay in there and season for a while," she said. "Just so you're not making decisions every time there's a fluctuation in price, which at this point happens every few days."

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Bitcoin's roller-coaster ride shows why people should be cautious before investing in cryptocurrency - CNBC

Lost Passwords Lock Millionaires Out of Their Bitcoin Fortunes – The New York Times

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Stefan Thomas, a German-born programmer living in San Francisco, has two guesses left to figure out a password that is worth, as of this week, about $220 million.

The password will let him unlock a small hard drive, known as an IronKey, which contains the private keys to a digital wallet that holds 7,002 Bitcoin. While the price of Bitcoin dropped sharply on Monday, it is still up more than 50 percent from just a month ago, when it passed its previous all-time high of around $20,000.

The problem is that Mr. Thomas years ago lost the paper where he wrote down the password for his IronKey, which gives users 10 guesses before it seizes up and encrypts its contents forever. He has since tried eight of his most commonly used password formulations to no avail.

I would just lay in bed and think about it, Mr. Thomas said. Then I would go to the computer with some new strategy, and it wouldnt work, and I would be desperate again.

Bitcoin, which has been on an extraordinary and volatile eight-month run, has made a lot of its holders very rich in a short time, even as the coronavirus pandemic has ravaged the world economy.

But the cryptocurrencys unusual nature has also meant that many people are locked out of their Bitcoin fortunes as a result of lost or forgotten keys. They have been forced to watch, helpless, as the price has risen and fallen sharply, unable to cash in on their digital wealth.

Of the existing 18.5 million Bitcoin, around 20 percent currently worth around $140 billion appear to be in lost or otherwise stranded wallets, according to the cryptocurrency data firm Chainalysis. Wallet Recovery Services, a business that helps find lost digital keys, said it had gotten 70 requests a day from people who wanted help recovering their riches, three times the number of a month ago.

Bitcoin owners who are locked out of their wallets speak of endless days and nights of frustration as they have tried to get access to their fortunes. Many have owned the coins since Bitcoins early days a decade ago, when no one had confidence that the tokens would be worth anything.

Through the years I would say I have spent hundreds of hours trying to get back into these wallets, said Brad Yasar, an entrepreneur in Los Angeles who has a few desktop computers that contain thousands of Bitcoin he created, or mined, during the early days of the technology. While those Bitcoin are now worth hundreds of millions of dollars, he lost his passwords many years ago and has put the hard drives containing them in vacuum-sealed bags, out of sight.

I dont want to be reminded every day that what I have now is a fraction of what I could have that I lost, he said.

The dilemma is a stark reminder of Bitcoins unusual technological underpinnings, which set it apart from normal money and give it some of its most vaunted and riskiest qualities. With traditional bank accounts and online wallets, banks like Wells Fargo and other financial companies like PayPal can provide people the passwords to their accounts or reset lost passwords.

But Bitcoin has no company to provide or store passwords. The virtual currencys creator, a shadowy figure known as Satoshi Nakamoto, has said Bitcoins central idea was to allow anyone in the world to open a digital bank account and hold the money in a way that no government could prevent or regulate.

This is made possible by the structure of Bitcoin, which is governed by a network of computers that agreed to follow software containing all the rules for the cryptocurrency. The software includes a complex algorithm that makes it possible to create an address, and associated private key, which is known only by the person who created the wallet.

The software also allows the Bitcoin network to confirm the accuracy of the password to allow transactions, without seeing or knowing the password itself. In short, the system makes it possible for anyone to create a Bitcoin wallet without having to register with a financial institution or go through any sort of identity check.

That has made Bitcoin popular with criminals, who can use the money without revealing their identity. It has also attracted people in countries like China and Venezuela, where authoritarian governments are known for raiding or shutting down traditional bank accounts.

But the structure of this system did not account for just how bad people can be at remembering and securing their passwords.

Even sophisticated investors have been completely incapable of doing any kind of management of private keys, said Diogo Monica, a co-founder of a start-up called Anchorage, which helps companies handle cryptocurrency security. Mr. Monica started the company in 2017 after helping a hedge fund regain access to one of its Bitcoin wallets.

Mr. Thomas, the programmer, said he was drawn to Bitcoin partly because it was outside the control of a country or company. In 2011, when he was living in Switzerland, he was given the 7,002 Bitcoin by an early Bitcoin fanatic as a reward for making an animated video, What is Bitcoin?, which introduced many people to the technology.

That year, he lost the digital keys to the wallet holding the Bitcoin. Since then, as Bitcoins value has soared and fallen and he could not get his hands on the money, Mr. Thomas has soured on the idea that people should be their own bank and hold their own money.

This whole idea of being your own bank let me put it this way: Do you make your own shoes? he said. The reason we have banks is that we dont want to deal with all those things that banks do.

Other Bitcoin believers have also realized the difficulties of being their own bank. Some have outsourced the work of holding Bitcoin to start-ups and exchanges that secure the private keys to peoples stashes of the virtual currency.

Yet some of these services have had just as much trouble securing their keys. Many of the largest Bitcoin exchanges over the years including the onetime well-known exchange Mt. Gox have lost private keys or had them stolen.

Gabriel Abed, 34, an entrepreneur from Barbados, lost around 800 Bitcoin now worth around $25 million when a colleague reformatted a laptop that contained the private keys to a Bitcoin wallet in 2011.

Mr. Abed said this did not dim his enthusiasm. Before Bitcoin, he said, he and his fellow islanders had not had access to affordable digital financial products like the credit cards and bank accounts that are easily available to Americans. In Barbados, even getting a PayPal account was almost impossible, he said. The open nature of Bitcoin, he said, gave him full access to the digital financial world for the first time.

The risk of being my own bank comes with the reward of being able to freely access my money and be a citizen of the world that is worth it, Mr. Abed said.

For Mr. Abed and Mr. Thomas, any losses from mishandling the private keys have partly been assuaged by the enormous gains they have made on the Bitcoin they managed to hold on to. The 800 Bitcoin Mr. Abed lost in 2011 were a small fraction of the tokens he has since bought and sold, allowing him to recently buy a 100-acre plot of oceanfront land in Barbados for over $25 million.

Mr. Thomas said he also managed to hold on to enough Bitcoin and remember the passwords to give him more riches than he knows what to do with. In 2012, he joined a cryptocurrency start-up, Ripple, that aimed to improve on Bitcoin. He was rewarded with Ripples own native currency, known as XRP, which rose in value.

(Ripple has recently run into legal troubles, in part because the founders had too much control over the creation and distribution of the XRP coins.)

As for his lost password and inaccessible Bitcoin, Mr. Thomas has put the IronKey in a secure facility he wont say where in case cryptographers come up with new ways of cracking complex passwords. Keeping it far away helps him try not to think about it, he said.

I got to a point where I said to myself, Let it be in the past, just for your own mental health, he said.

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Lost Passwords Lock Millionaires Out of Their Bitcoin Fortunes - The New York Times

UK Treasury Calls for Feedback on Approach to Cryptocurrency and Stablecoin Regulation – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

The U.K. Treasury has released a consultation paper to gather feedback from stakeholders concerning the governments regulatory approach to cryptocurrencies and stablecoins.

The consultation solicits opinions on how the U.K. can make sure its regulatory framework is equipped to harness the benefits of new technologies, supporting innovation and competition, while mitigating risks to consumers and stability, and incorporates advice from the Cryptoassets Task Force.

With a large proportion of crypto assets falling outside regulatory oversight, the Treasury says they may pose a risk to consumers and lack financial safeguards.

The U.K. is planning a a staged and proportionate approach to new crypto asset developments, taking a focus in the paper on stablecoins cryptocurrencies that generally aim to have a stable value by being backed by assets such as the U.S. dollar.

[T]he landscape is changing rapidly. So-called stablecoins could pave the way for faster, cheaper payments, making it easier for people to pay for things or store their money. There is also increasing evidence that [distributed ledger technology] could have significant benefits for capital markets, potentially fundamentally changing the way they operate, said John Glen, M.P., the Treasurys economic secretary, said in the papers introduction.

However, he said, such developments could pose a range of risks to consumers and, depending on their uptake, to the stability of the financial system.

The consultation focuses particularly on developing a sound regulatory environment for stablecoins, which the U.K. government considers have most urgent risks and opportunities.

Since the announcement of the Facebook-backed libra project (now rebranded as diem), regulators and governments worldwide have raised concerns over the potential effects of so-called global stablecoins on financial stability and even monetary sovereignty.

The U.K.s Financial Conduct Authority has already issued guidance on crypto assets including exchange tokens like bitcoin, ether and XRP setting out which do and dont fall under its jurisdiction in July 2019.

This new consultation will focus on the roles of crypto assets and stablecoins in payments and investment, as well as the use of blockchain or distributed ledger technology in financial markets. It will also look at additional regulatory actions that might be required in the space.

The paper marks the second Treasury-led crypto consultation. The first, announced last summer and concluded in October, set out plans to increase oversight into cryptocurrency promotions in order to protect investors. The results will be published in due course, the Treasury said in the new paper.

The FCA recently banned the sale of derivatives and exchange-traded notes, saying it considers the products to be ill-suited for retail consumers due to the potential harm they pose.

Responses to the consultation paper are being accepted until March 21.

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UK Treasury Calls for Feedback on Approach to Cryptocurrency and Stablecoin Regulation - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

Cryptocurrency Hackers Steal $3.8 Billion in 2020 – OCCRP

Cybercriminals robbed victims of almost US$4 billion across 122 attacks against cryptocurrency platforms and holdings last year, according to a recent report.

Attacks against blockchain wallets earnt hackers an average of $112 million per breach (Credit: pixabay, Creative Commons Licence)Atlas VPN, a virtual private network provider, said on Tuesday that the overwhelming majority of these losses stemmed from attacks against blockchain wallets digital resources that allow users to store and manage cryptocurrency with hackers netting a total of $3.03 billion at an average of $112.12 million per breach.

Cryptocurrency exchanges also proved key targets, with 28 breaches over the past twelve months resulting in $300 million worth of losses.

The global coronavirus pandemic has seen an explosion in illegal activity online, with the United Nations warning of an increase in internet-enabled criminality of more than 600% by the middle of last year, at an average rate of one attack taking place every 40 seconds.

Most notable had been the meteoric rise in the number of pandemic-related phishing scams, leveraging pervasive fears among the public so as to extort money from victims, as well the increased incidence of malware attacks against public and private institutions alike.

Atlas VPN nevertheless noted in its report that the attacks against cryptocurrency platforms in 2020 had actually failed to top the record-breaking number observed in 2019.

The decline may owe to the sheer extent of attacks across the previous year, when 33 hacks were recorded in January alone, or perhaps the increased value of cryptocurrency, with growing investment online amid economic downturn, or even simply the growth in opportunities for internet-enabled criminality in other areas.

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Cryptocurrency Hackers Steal $3.8 Billion in 2020 - OCCRP

Amid all the Bitcoin hype, another Indian cryptocurrency startup CoinSwitch Kuber gets $15 million in funding – Business Insider India

And that has meant cryptocurrency startups too have caught investors attention. CoinSwitch Kuber, a cryptocurrency investment platform, is the latest startup to raise $15 million from Ribbit Capital and San-Francisco based crypto-focused investment firm Paradigm.

This marks Ribbit Capitals first investment in a cryptocurrency firm in India.

While the crypto landscape in India remains nascent, it has been an exciting past 12 months and over time we believe India could be one of the largest global crypto markets. Ashish and the CoinSwitch team have shown tremendous resilience and strong execution in a challenging market, giving us confidence in their potential to build a market leader in the years to come, said Matt Huang, Co-founder and Managing Partner at Paradigm and Arjun Balaji, Investment Partner at Paradigm in a statement.

The Series A funding round also saw participation from Sequoia Capital India and CRED founder Kunal Shah.

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Amid all the Bitcoin hype, another Indian cryptocurrency startup CoinSwitch Kuber gets $15 million in funding - Business Insider India