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Bitcoin Businesses The Almighty Buck Your Rights Online

Winklevoss Twins Plan Regulated Bitcoin Exchange 80

itwbennett writes They of the square jaws and famous dispute with Mark Zuckerberg over the origins of Facebook, are also believed to be among the largest holders of Bitcoin in the world. Now they want to launch a regulated Bitcoin exchange—named Gemini, of course. To bolster confidence, they said they have formed a relationship with a chartered bank in the state of New York. "This means that your money will never leave the country," the twins wrote in a blog post. "It also means that U.S. dollars on Gemini will be eligible for FDIC insurance and held by a U.S.-regulated bank.
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Winklevoss Twins Plan Regulated Bitcoin Exchange

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  • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @12:36PM (#48893475)

    not least of which, allowing an organisation that is answerable to none but the United States Supreme Court to regulate a virtual currency that is in direct competition with its own pet, the Almighty Dollar.

    • by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @12:45PM (#48893539)

      >a virtual currency that is in direct competition with its own pet, the Almighty Dollar.

      This is what Bitcoin proponents would have you believe, but there is no competition at present, and the flaws inherent in the protocol mean there never will be.

      Perhaps some other future crypto will be a competitor, but all Bitcoin does is spawn scams or payment gateways that evolve into PayPal equivalents (once they're big enough they cut Bitcoin out of the loop).

      • Bitcoin [spawns] payment gateways that evolve into PayPal equivalents (once they're big enough they cut Bitcoin out of the loop).

        But the important part of these is that they cut PayPal out of the loop. I imagine that a lot of BTC adopters got burned by some policy ruling by PayPal.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        but all Bitcoin does is spawn scams or payment gateways that evolve into PayPal equivalents (once they're big enough they cut Bitcoin out of the loop).

        Example of a gateway which spawned from Bitcoin and no longer supports Bitcoin?

      • by Canth7 ( 520476 )

        >a virtual currency that is in direct competition with its own pet, the Almighty Dollar.

        This is what Bitcoin proponents would have you believe, but there is no competition at present, and the flaws inherent in the protocol mean there never will be.

        Perhaps some other future crypto will be a competitor, but all Bitcoin does is spawn scams or payment gateways that evolve into PayPal equivalents (once they're big enough they cut Bitcoin out of the loop).

        Bitcoin might be flawed or it might just be that it doesn't fit into a box and therefore most people, including Slashdotters reject it out of hand. What do you think about the $400m+ of venture capital invested in Bitcoin infrastructure in the last 18 months? Obviously not all investors share your convictions about the flaws.

    • by beheaderaswp ( 549877 ) * on Saturday January 24, 2015 @05:34PM (#48895153)

      not least of which, allowing an organisation that is answerable to none but the United States Supreme Court to regulate a virtual currency that is in direct competition with its own pet, the Almighty Dollar.

      Right... because allowing a random guy in Asia to regulate the exchange worked out great?

      • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

        as opposed to a random guy in the United States? Or Europe?

        Here's a completely crazy idea: how about we let the user community regulate it?

        It worked for a bloody long time to pretty much fix the value of salt against any other given commodity.

    • allowing an organisation that is answerable to none but the United States Supreme Court to regulate a virtual currency that is in direct competition with its own pet, the Almighty Dollar.

      As I've said many times before - so long as you follow a few very simple rules and you pay your taxes in dollars, the US Goverment doesn't care if you conduct your daily business in dollars, Bitcoins, or jars of pickled hamster poop. They whole idea of "competition" has been created out of whole cloth by the Bitcoin Tinfo

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I've tried to use BTC recently. I think it's an interesting concept, but the block chain is goddamn awful to deal with as a normal user. It's fucking massive. We're talking about many gigabytes of data to download. BTC becomes a lot less convenient to me if I have to wait a day or more to fetch the block chain data just to begin using it! I know there are services out there that can help alleviate some of these problems, but that just defeats the whole purpose of BTC. Not having to depend on third parties i

  • seizure-ready (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mabu ( 178417 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @12:46PM (#48893549)

    It also means when the time comes for the traditional banking institutions to lobby the authorities to seize all the assets of this "illegal currency", they can easily do so.

  • So like regular money, only fun. But wait... nothing in the park accepts Itchy and Scratchy money...

  • Tech world (Score:2, Interesting)

    by amightywind ( 691887 )
    Are there 2 people who have less to offer the tech world than the Winklevi?
  • by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @12:56PM (#48893611)

    Who would trust them?

    First this: http://www.sec.gov/Archives/ed... [sec.gov]
    (bitcoin trust)

    Then this: http://www.investopedia.com/ar... [investopedia.com]
    (bitcoin payment system)

    Now this thing... ("regulated" exchange that can't leave the US for an international virtual decentralized currency...)

    Perhaps they just didn't get that memo about their relevance having tanked somewhere after they wanted to
    renege on their FB settlement and go for a do-over uh-gain:
    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/... [bloomberg.com]

    Their fifteen minutes of fame is up. The harder they try and bring themselves
    into relevance the funnier it gets. The bell has rung. Time to get off the stage little boys.

    E

  • by Anonymous Coward

    As a citizen of an european state, having a guarantee that my money will never leave the US is a problem, not a feature.

  • who could not manage to outmaneuver ONE Zuckerberg? What could possibly go wrong?
  • Now all the Winklevoss twins need to do is find is a reason for the average American consumer to buy BTC and use them, instead of using credit cards and debit cards that are protected from fraud and loss by federal law. Bitcoin may be a great deal for businesses, but it is a terrible deal for consumers, and without people on both sides of the economic equation it is slowly dying (witness the long slow decline in price, and the fact that a few hundred thousand people at most possess all the BTC in circulati

    • A long time ago, gold was only used to make jewelry and trinkets, and few people had use for it. But it was rare, so demand always outstripped supply which meant the price stayed relatively high. It was also lightweight, durable, easy split, and comparatively easy to distinguish the real thing versus fakes. It was around the best store of value available in the day. So eventually people who had no need for it's original uses as jewelry, used it as such. This increased the amount of value a piece of gold cou

  • So what they want to do is pump the value of BTC up so they can dump their 'largest holding of bitcoin'.

  • by Ritz_Just_Ritz ( 883997 ) on Saturday January 24, 2015 @07:47PM (#48895815)

    If the Winkletwins want to hype it up long enough so that I can dispose of the last of my BTC stash while 1BTC is still over US$200, I'm game.

    Having bitcoins kept in a US bank seems to defeat the purpose of bitcoin, but it it helps me with my previous point, then by golly, full speed ahead.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      If the Winkletwins want to hype it up long enough so that I can dispose of the last of my BTC stash while 1BTC is still over US$200, I'm game.

      Having bitcoins kept in a US bank seems to defeat the purpose of bitcoin, but it it helps me with my previous point, then by golly, full speed ahead.

      And that's the entire point.

      The WInklevoss bought BTC when it was probably $500 or higher - and supposedly they own around 10% of all BTC.

      And now that the price crashed from $1300 each to $250 or so, well, damn, they lost

  • ... the whole point of BTC was to "Silk Road" stuff.

    I said at the outset that BTC would die a painful death the minute it grew an appendage that touched any real currency.

    That has already happened and now they want to tie it to a goddam legitimate bank and guarantee it?

    Why in Sam Hill would anyone want to use Monopoly play money as a transient carrier for real money?

    Dude ... the emperor ain't got no clothes.

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      define "real money"?

      The US Dollar is backed against itself. It is a fiat, or debt currency.
      As is Sterling (which used to be backed by the Gold Standard, then it was the Silver Standard, now it's backed by guarantee of the Treasury which means about as much as... well, not a lot, actually).
      As is the Euro.

      The last time any Western economy had a real currency was 1914 when the Bradbury was issued. This was backed by the authority of the Crown, hence everything owned by the Crown, and was initially intended sol

  • Oh yes, let's take a complete circus run by lunatics (the bitcoin network) and attach it to a regulated exchange. How are they going to prove the bitcoins added to the exchange were obtained legally? Anyone thinking of FDIC "loss" fraud will be occurring daily? Then how do you prove your customers are actually in the US? Then how do you report on profit from investment without proving or disproving that offsetting losses were incurred at a different exchange? This is such an unbelievably stupid and imp
  • They are both actually the same person.

  • A great move for the Winklevoss Twins. This gives bitcoin some much needed credibility.

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