Savers boosting bitcoin demand in China, exchange says

"A co-founder of China’s biggest bitcoin exchange on Friday said there were 'boundless opportunities' for the digital currency in the country because of the Chinese saving ethic. 'The main reason why bitcoin has become big in China is because Chinese people are savers, and more people are seeing bitcoin as a way to store and invest their money,' Linke Yang, vice-president of BTC China, told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in Singapore. 'There are boundless opportunities for BTC China and bitcoin in the next five years, you never know with the way the internet develops,' Yang said through an interpreter." Continue reading

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The strangest bull market ever

"This bull market is really odd. The Dow and S&P 500 are near all-time highs. The Nasdaq is inching closer to 4,000 for the first time since the tech bubble did its best weasel impersonation and popped in 2000. Twitter (TWTR) surged on its first day of trading, despite the fact that it is not yet profitable. Snapchat has reportedly turned down offers to sell out to Facebook (FB) for $3 billion. This is a company that is not even generating sales yet. How are all those hot 'pre-revenue' Internet companies from 15 years ago doing? Are they still monetizing eyeballs? It looks like bears remain in hibernation and the bulls are ... wait for the Rage Against the Machine reference ... still on parade." Continue reading

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Here’s Why The Winklevoss Twins LOVE Bitcoin

"'This idea that people aren't betting when they hang on to a dollar is incorrect.' They also love the currency's transparency, explaining that 'there is nothing predictable or transparent about the US dollar. No one has any idea what the Federal Reserve's going to do, how they operate.' Bitcoin, on the other hand, is fixed at 21 million coins that will come out incrementally and predictably over time. 'Bitcoin brings the promise of email to the finance sector. Now it's instant and effectively free to send money anywhere,' the twins said." Continue reading

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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

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‘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

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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

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Dwolla Credit launched as competitor to PayPal’s Bill Me Later

"Pay instantly and get paid instantly. It’s just how payments in the modern world should work. No more loading your account, no more typing in your card information. Simple and quick checkouts are just one benefit to building a new network, working with great developers and great retailers is another. On Dwolla’s network, there are no plastic cards, no terminals, no complicated reseller agreements, and no card data that could be left behind. Just the internet…simple. Credit, is now a feature. Dwolla Credit, provided by our friends at Comenity Capital bank, owned by Alliance Data (NYSE: ADS), is making this all possible. I’m exceptionally proud of the work both of our teams have done." Continue reading

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The Markets Are Rigged! How to Opt Out and Still Profit

"Call me nostalgic, but I remember a time when a bad jobs outlook sent the large-cap companies down, not up. The economy is weak, so a company's profit expectations suffer. The logic makes sense. Today, however, we live in the topsy-turvy world of government-manipulated markets, where such asinine statements make complete sense… until they don't. The problem with a market that lives at the teat of Washington's policies is that it can be reversed in mere moments. One election. One popular news story. One social media outcry. One back-channel policy. One bloody coup d'état. That's all it takes." Continue reading

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SEC Proposes Crowdfunding Rules, But…

"To produce an offering disclosure document, enlist a funding portal, run background checks and file an annual report with the SEC year after year might well cost upwards of $100,000. In order for equity crowdfunding to the public to serve as a useful tool, as intended, Congress needs to amend the JOBS Act to make it less onerous and costly. Unfortunately, the SEC’s hands are tied since the JOBS Act itself creates most of the restrictions in the proposed rule. The SEC, for its part, did not tighten restrictions from the JOBS Act. This might be signal that even the SEC thinks the JOBS Act is too restrictive. Time will tell." Continue reading

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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

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