Don’t laugh – Bitcoin is making a serious point

"On one side of the Bitcoin argument, this internet-based currency has some fervent backers – many of them tech-savvy youngsters. On the other side stand almost all reputable economists, together with a fierce range of vested interests – including the banks, credit card companies and other conventional players in the extremely lucrative money-transferring business. To them, Bitcoin is a cross between a dangerous irritant and a bad joke. To mention it in conversation is tasteless. To take it seriously is deeply suspect. Yet several events happened last week that made me suspect that Bitcoin – and the idea of 'stateless' currencies more generally – will soon catch the zeitgeist." Continue reading

Continue ReadingDon’t laugh – Bitcoin is making a serious point

‘Without third party bitcoin is safer than Fed notes’

"WM: What we see in the world today with the libor crisis, and Greece, and the failure in Cyprus is regulation does not work. You have regulatory capture, you just have system failure. And the thing that makes bitcoin exciting for people that believe in bitcoin is the fact that it is an emergent system. If it does require regulation to survive then it really wasn’t as good as we thought it was. These sorts of things do happen. You can call this a bank. I would say this is a hosted service run by an 18-year-old. It is not a bank. The people who trusted the third party were really giving away the strength of bitcoin which does not require a third party." Continue reading

Continue Reading‘Without third party bitcoin is safer than Fed notes’

Federal Reserve Economist On Bitcoin: ‘Small Phenomenon But Growing’

"It’s a big moment for Bitcoin. The digital currency has gotten an official nod from the overseer of U.S. currency in the form of a primer out of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. Senior economist François R. Velde wrote an elegant critique of the four-year-old currency, explaining its mechanics, limitations, and prospects for success, ultimately deeming it a 'remarkable conceptual and technical achievement, which may well be used by existing financial institutions.' If this were Economic Mean Girls, this is the part of the movie where Lindsay ‘Bitcoin’ Lohan gets friended by the powerful, popular crowd." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFederal Reserve Economist On Bitcoin: ‘Small Phenomenon But Growing’

The Rise and Fall of the World’s Largest Bitcoin Exchange

"Mt. Gox evolved into a reliable marketplace for buying and selling bitcoins, now the world’s most popular digital currency. By one estimate, Karpeles has made over $8 million plus 345,000 bitcoins (at current rates: $86 million) swapping bitcoins for dollars and yen and other federal currencies. Karpeles and his company are a metaphor for the bitcoin world as a whole. Created by an anonymous computer scientist, the digital currency rose to prominence after it was embraced by software geeks across the globe. But now, as its influence continues to grow, these young, idealistic hacker types are running into the government regulators who control the existing financial system." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Rise and Fall of the World’s Largest Bitcoin Exchange

Farmers help bitcoin grow organically in Argentina

"Organic farmers in Argentina are finding bitcoin to be a compelling solution when selling their produce through a website called Tierra Buena. The website has been highlighted in a new short film by Jacob Hansen. The film tells the story of how Nubis Bruno (one of the people behind the exchange site, Conectabitcoin) helped local farmers by creating the website as a means to sell their produce online in exchange for bitcoin or litecoin (and Pesos). The existence of Tierra Buena doesn’t signal a pending economic revolution in Argentina, or anywhere else. However, it is a great anecdote of how digital currencies can be genuinely helpful." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFarmers help bitcoin grow organically in Argentina

Bitcoin helps Iranian shoe store overcome international trade sanctions

"The business is Persian Shoes, an over 70-year-old business selling handmade footwear. It is located inIsfahan, the third-largest city in Iran. The owners are happy to ship anywhere, but paying them is a problem. The usual e-commerce channels are blocked. Trade sanctions against the entire country of Iran by the United Nations, United States, European Union and others mean Western Union and major credit card companies will not deal with Iranian businesses, even those in the fashion world. The only way to pay someone in Iran is with cash carried in your pocket – or some easily transferrable, mostly unregulated, digital currency." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBitcoin helps Iranian shoe store overcome international trade sanctions

“The US is bankrupt…and it’s only going to get worse from here!”

"Jeff Berwick from The Dollar Vigilante chats with Vanessa Collette about the current state of the US economy and the latest news from the Bitcoin phenomenon. Taped at Cambridge House's Spokane Silver Summit 2013. Always entertaining!" Continue reading

Continue Reading“The US is bankrupt…and it’s only going to get worse from here!”

The Bitcoin revolution could change government

"All governments, including ours, and especially the US’s, use the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001 as an excuse for reversing gains in human liberty achieved over many decades of struggle. In the name of fighting terrorism and other 'organised crime', jurisdictions, banks and companies that used to respect privacy must now reveal all. Under what the Constitutional Court called 'draconian' powers, anyone’s assets can be seized by unbridled bureaucrats. Bitcoin enables ordinary people to fight back, to avoid and evade snooping governments, which enact, use and abuse laws that allow them, without due process, to investigate, tax, control and seize privately owned assets." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Bitcoin revolution could change government