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Tag: bitcoins

  • China Bitcoin Crackdown Leads To Exchange Shutdown

    China Bitcoin Crackdown Leads To Exchange Shutdown

    BTC38, one of China’s biggest bitcoin exchanges, informed its users that 3rd party payment processors would be suspended.

    The news came following a major crackdown by the People’s Bank of China. China’s major financial institution has previously come out strongly against the bitcoin. As the digital currency gains momentum despite recent controversy, the PBOC has moved more aggressively to weaken the ability to exchange it for Chinese yuan.

    There’s a reason why the Chinese government may feel very uncomfortable with the nature of the bitcoin and its booming popularity within the country.

    Chinese consumers who exchange their yuan for bitcoins can then use the digital currency in a largely untraceable manner. This helps Chinese bitcoin owners avoid capital controls and navigate heavily regulated markets under the radar.

    The ability to avoid government regulation was initially one of the strongest selling points of the bitcoin, especially for those seeking to avoid taxation.

    The IRS has already addressed the matter of bitcoins. Instead of viewing them as currency, the government agency has declared them a taxable form of property.

    Despite the concerns this raised among bitcoin owners and miners (persons who discover new algorithms, which generate new bitcoins) it was an act that seemed to be offering the bitcoin some much needed legitimacy.

    China does not seem to be interested.

    Despite the hard-line stance of the country’s head banking institution, the digital currency is said to be otherwise thriving in China. It’s reported that the rate of bitcoin purchases in China stands at 10,000 bitcoins per hour. This rate far exceeds that of any other country.

    While users have been readily storing the bitcoin, recent changes in the US and abroad have made some nervous about spending them. Bitcoin owners may want to get over their nervousness sooner rather than later.

    The bitcoin has been sliding downward in recent weeks. Falling from $600-$500 range, it currenty is worth about $436.

    While there’s always a chance the bitcoin’s value could surge again, the unstable nature of the digital currency means it may be wise to try and exchange it for a more acceptable currency or spend it where it’s still legal tender.

    The move should be made now, ahead of any future value-endangering government crackdowns.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • IRS: Bitcoins Are Property And Absolutely Taxable

    IRS: Bitcoins Are Property And Absolutely Taxable

    Good news and bad news has just come down the pipe courtesy of the IRS. The good news? Bitcoins have received a huge boost in terms of U.S. government recognition. The bad news? If you were hoping to invest in Bitcoins for the purpose of evading taxation…it’s a no-go.

    The IRS announced on Tuesday that they will treat the virtual currency as property for the purposes of taxation.

    Ajay Vinze, the associate dean at Arizona State University’s business school thinks that the announcement is good for the Bitcoin.

    Vinze said, “[The Bitcoin is] getting legitimacy, which it didn’t have previously.”

    He also feels that this is one act by the United States government that can help put the currency “on a track to becoming a true financial asset.”

    This doesn’t stop the announcement from being a headache for many American advocates of the Bitcoin. It’s thought of by many a currency rather than as property.

    There is some worry that the “clarification” may do more harm than good. If Bitcoins are not only unstable, but taxable property, does this make them not worth the risk?

    Pamir Gelenbe, is a partner at Hummingbird Ventures. The venture capital firm recently invested in online Bitcoin exchange Kraken.

    Gelenbe understands that many who have gotten their hands on Bitcoins may be less inclined to spend them following the IRS’s decision.

    “People might just be tempted to hoard rather than spend, because as soon as they spend they would be liable to incur capital gains taxes,” said Gelenbe.

    The IRS not only expects taxes on capital gains. The government agency is also demanding that “miners”, persons responsible for introducing new Bitcoins into the market via unique algorithms, report the Bitcoins as part of their income.

    The guidelines being set by the IRS may feel like growing pains, but growth and stability is what is needed if the Bitcoin is to maintain its global presence.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • IRS: Bitcoin is Property, Not Legal Tender

    IRS: Bitcoin is Property, Not Legal Tender

    Despite the wild swings in the virtual currency markets and the recent scandal involving the Mt. Gox exchange’s loss of $400M, Bitcoin continues to hold some value online. As the most popular virtual currency, Bitcoin is becoming increasingly popular with investors looking for risky, (though potentially lucrative) investments and tech aficionados who want to be in on the ground floor of a currency that answers to no government.

    This has led to debate and legal questions in recent years about just how legitimate virtual currencies are as legal tender. Though recognized by no official entity, Bitcoins are regularly traded and used for transactions on many parts of the web (and deep web, of course).

    The popularity of virtual currencies has also offered consumers a new way to invest or convert their real-world money, causing a bit of confusion when it comes to taxing Bitcoin and other similar products. Now the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has weighted in on the matter, clarifying how virtual currencies should be listed on tax forms.

    The IRS this week issued a notice stating that virtual currencies such as Bitcoin are to be treated as property for U.S. tax purposes, not as legal tender. The agency does acknowledge that Bitcoin operates much like a “real” currency in many places, but cites the fact that it does not hold the distinction of being legal tender in any real-world jurisdiction.

    The IRS also outlined a few different outcomes that follow from this decision. Wages paid in virtual currency are taxable to employees; are subject to income tax and payroll tax; and must be disclosed on W-2s. The same applies to payments made to independent contractors. Also, payments made using virtual currencies are subject to the information reporting required of other property transactions.

    Governments around the world have begun to take an interest in Bitcoin, as the technology could potentially impact or even threaten real-world currencies in the future. The FBI has taken an interest in Bitcoin almost purely for its link to illegal inter-state sales, an interest which culminated last fall in the shut down of the popular online black market Silk Road. China has taken a hard-line approach to Bitcoin, outright banning its banks from accepting the virtual currency as deposits.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Bitcoin Creator Possibly Found. Anyone Care?

    Bitcoin Creator Possibly Found. Anyone Care?

    If anyone was anticipating a major furor over the creator of Bitcoins being discovered, they’re no doubt disappointed.

    As of now a Japanese American known by the alias Satoshi Nakamoto is thought to be the creator of the digital currency. He was reportedly found in Southern California where he presently resides.

    The man denied any and all involvement with the creation of Bitcoins to the Associated Press. Either the wrong man was credited with the currency’s creation or for some reason the “Father” of Bitcoins wishes to remain unknown. Some speculate the reason for his adamant denials are tax-related.

    Regardless of the man’s story, numerous sources insist that his discovery is largely irrelevant. The survival of the Bitcoin is said to rest in the many hands of the persons responsible for its creation and maintenance.

    By all accounts…not exactly a smooth ride so far given the recent scandals and theft

    Despite ongoing troubles, some continue to throw their full support behind the Bitcoin, including the Winklevoss Twins. A few days ago the capitalist brothers made headlines when they used an estimated $500,000 worth of the currency to purchase tickets for a flight into space.

    Though owning the coins has worked out well for some, others have have been so unfortunate as to watch their money vanish.

    Those who have thus far held onto their money may soon find that their previously unregulated cash stash is highly taxable. Despite Japan not recognizing the Bitcoin as a currency, there is talk of taxing it.

    With the Bitcoin’s ongoing struggle for legitimacy, it’s no wonder that no one really has time to stand around in awe and admire the man who allegedly gifted the world with the Bitcoin.

    Gregory Maxwell, a core developer of the Bitcoin, said, “If the creator of bitcoin mattered to our ability to use it, then bitcoin has failed in its technological goals”.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Bitcoin Exchange Mt. Gox At Heart Of Criminal Probe

    Bitcoin Exchange Mt. Gox At Heart Of Criminal Probe

    Mt. Gox, the Bitcoin exchange that went dark following a major theft, is now at the heart of a criminal probe.

    Both Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara and the Federal Bureau of Investigation are gathering information to determine what led to the disappearance of 750,000 Bitcoins, valued at as much as $400,000,000. They are also working to determine whether or not there were criminal violations tied to the shut down of the Mt. Gox exchange. One source reported that authorities are requesting that Mt. Gox hold onto documents related to the theft.

    Mt. Gox’s system suffered from a severe security flaw that provided a loophole for hackers to steal hundreds of thousands of Bitcoins. As an attempt to stop further loss of the virtual currency, accounts were frozen. This meant no one could recover their Bitcoins, leading to a number of frustrated and confused Bitcoin traders.

    Some of them are so angry, they’ve gathered in Tokyo to picket a building where Mt. Gox is thought to be located.

    The true location of Mt. Gox and its CEO Mark Karpeles remains unknown. Karpeles did resign from the Bitcoin Foundation about a week ago, at about the same time that Mt. Gox’s website went offline.


    According to Reuters, on Wednesday Karpeles made a statement via his website regarding his location and intentions:

    As there is a lot of speculation regarding Mt Gox and its future, I would like to use this opportunity to reassure everyone that I am still in Japan, and working very hard with the support of different parties to find a solution to our recent issues.

    Who those “different parties” are remains unclear, nor is there any corroborating evidence at present that Karpeles remains in the country.

    The Bitcoin Foundation, which is fighting hard to legitimize the Bitcoin as a global currency, has stated that they are “cooperating fully” with Bharara’s investigation. In an email-based statement sent out on Wednesday, the Seattle organization stated that they “proactively” reached out to federal prosecutors with information to help their case.

    The Mt. Gox shutdown has been distressing for many Bitcoin traders, as between the theft and the shutdown, it has left many without access to their money. Even more worrying, the more time that passes, the less it seems that they will be able to recover their funds.

    Though other exchanges have stated that they are working to rebuild the trust lost via Mt. Gox’s blunder, the behavior of the largest Bitcoin exchange seriously raises the question of the reliability and security of such exchanges and the currency itself.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Bitcoin Heists Test Currency’s Legitimacy

    Bitcoin Heists Test Currency’s Legitimacy

    In startling news Tuesday morning, one of the world’s largest bitcoin exchanges, Mt. Gox, ceased existing, leaving millions of dollars worth of bitcoins unaccounted for.

    The Tokyo-based exchange company has stated that a security leak that has been present since September has violated the integrity of some 700,000 accounts, totaling approximately $350 million in stolen currency. Due to this huge loss of bitcoins, the value of the cyber-currency has plummeted drastically in the last 2 hours, losing nearly 20% of its value on the open-market.

    In order to save some legitimacy and ethos for the currency, 6 of the world’s leading bitcoin exchanges have released a statement claiming that the heist was a result of negligent actions of Mt. Gox and is not representative of an inherent security flaw in the digital currency itself:

    “This tragic violation of the trust of users of Mt.Gox was the result of one company’s abhorrent actions and does not reflect the resilience or value of bitcoin and the digital currency industry. There are hundreds of trustworthy and responsible companies involved in bitcoin. These companies will continue to build the future of money by making bitcoin more secure and easy to use for consumers and merchants. As with any new industry, there are certain bad actors that need to be weeded out, and that is what we are seeing today… We are confident, however, that strong Bitcoin companies, led by highly competent teams and backed by credible investors, will continue to thrive, and to fulfill the promise that bitcoin offers as the future of payment in the Internet age.”

    The Mt. Gox incident is simply the most recent scandal bitcoins have faced over the past year. Earlier this month, another heist was uncovered which involved the use of a “Pony” botnet to steal the account information for 700,000 accounts. The information from these accounts allowed hackers access to 85 private wallets with a total of approximately $220,000. A botnet is a form of Trojan malware which infects thousands of host computers, which then take commands from a central computer.

    The goal of these computers is to hack into the private information owners have stored, granting the hackers access to the private key numbers which are used to access the virtual wallets bitcoins in which bitcoins are stored. Ziv Mador, security research director with Trustwave, stated that “It is the first time we saw such a widespread presence of this type of malware. It was on hundreds of thousands of machines.”

    While this may have been the first time malware has been used on such a scale to steal bitcoins, it is not the first time bitcoins have been stolen by hackers. Last year, in fact, over $1 million in bitcoins were stolen by hackers who were able to reset an exchange site’s password through an email recovery scheme.

    These latest large-scale bitcoin heists, added to the two Silk Road busts which have occurred so far, make many question whether or not bitcoins are a viable form of currency. Campbell Harvey, a professor at the Duke University who specializes in financial markets and global risk management, believes that the recent news coming from Mt. Gox “reminds us of the downside of decentralized, unregulated currencies. There is no Federal Reserve or IMF to come to the rescue. There is no deposit insurance.” However, he goes on to add that this “doesn’t mean the end of the road” for bitcoins as “increasingly sophisticated investors” will seek solutions which “raise both quality and confidence” of bitcoin exchanges.

    While Harvey may be optimistic, those at Mt. Gox are not. In a leaked “Crisis Strategy Draft” plan, executives at Mt. Gox state, “The reality is that MtGox can go bankrupt at any moment, and certainly deserves to as a company. However, with Bitcoin/crypto just recently gaining acceptance in the public eye, the likely damage in public perception to this class of technology could put it back 5~10 years, and cause governments to react swiftly and harshly. At the risk of appearing hyperbolic, this could be the end of Bitcoin, at least for most of the public.”

    Until the world knows the answer to whether or not bitcoins are a secure investment or not, one of two actions should be taken: 1) Either store bitcoins in an offline wallet; or 2) Cash those puppies in and don’t look back. Considering the wildly fluctuating value of the currency and the increased security-risks of late, option two is looking better and better everyday.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Bitcoin Exchange Giant Vanishes; Is the End Near?

    Bitcoin Exchange Giant Vanishes; Is the End Near?

    Bitcoin trader Kolin Burgress is not happy with Mt. Gox. The London-native hopped a plane and headed all the way to Tokyo, Japan to let the Bitcoin exchange giant know how he felt about losing $320,000 worth of the currency.

    “I may have lost all of my money,” said Burgess. He had been picketing the building since February 14th, demanding answers.

    “It hasn’t shaken my trust in Bitcoin, but it has shaken my trust in bitcoin exchanges.”

    There is plenty of reason at present to have one’s trust in Mt. Gox shaken. The company has yet to explain or resolve a massive security glitch that lead the organization to freeze member accounts. Mt. Gox is now blaming the security flaw for the theft of about 740,000 Bitcoins.

    The alleged value of the stolen currency is said to be around $350 million. It’s hard to put an exact value on the missing money as the currency remains unstable, prone to fluctuation as speculators worry. As questions arise over the safety and legitimacy of Bitcoins, the value continues to drop. The value of a Bitcoin fell from $550 to $470 in recent hours.

    Mt. Gox’s website remained down as of Tuesday with no signs of returning any time soon. It went dark on Sunday, following the resignation of CEO Mark Karpeles from the board of the Bitcoin Foundation. With the group is seeking to have Bitcoins recognized as a legitimate form of currency, the scandal is a serious blow to their cause.

    Since Mt. Cox’s major blunder, several exchanges and pro-Bitcoin organizations came together to release a joint statement to the public, saying they have every intent to “re-establish the trust squandered” by Mt. Gox.

    How this will be done is unknown, as s latest incident has served to undermine the claim that the Bitcoin is far more secure than existing established currencies.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Bitcoin Crash: Beginning Of The End?

    Bitcoin Crash: Beginning Of The End?

    Even when the value of the bitcoin was going up, soaring to ridiculous heights, there were whispers of doubt.

    “It’s the 90’s ‘dot.com’ bubble all over again”.

    Despite the skepticism, speculators looking to get rich quick ignored the warnings, vying to get a hold of as much of the cryptocurrency as possible. One man even took advantage of their real world value by purchasing an expensive luxury car.

    With bitcoins being a virtual currency that you could use to spend money on so many wonderful things, why not?

    Well hopefully anyone with any real aspirations has spent or cashed in their coins. If not….they may find themselves wondering what happened to the thousands of dollars they invested.

    The bitcoin crashed for the third time in recent months, leaving some to wonder if this is the beginning of the end of the once promising currency.

    The latest flap comes as the result of an oversight by Mt. Gox, the largest exchange for allowing bitcoins to be traded for traditional currency. Mt. Gox froze the accounts of all its customers and ceased operations when the company discovered an unfortunate glitch.

    According to a statement by Mt. Gox, “A bug in the bitcoin software makes it possible for someone to use the Bitcoin network to alter transaction details to make it seem like a sending of bitcoins to a bitcoin wallet did not occur when in fact it did occur.”

    In other words, the flaw would allow someone to be sent additional bitcoin currency and open the system up to all sorts of fraudulent behavior…if the mistake had not been already exploited.

    According to CNBC, the news caused the currency to drop 20% in value.

    Bitcoins are also wrapped up in an ongoing money laundering case in Florida, shedding even more doubt and negative publicity on the currency.

    The negative news has some headed for the exits, anticipating the currency fading away into nothing. Only time will tell if bitcoins will weather the imperfections and suspicions or be referenced as the failed “get rich fast scheme of the decade” by future generations.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Bitcoin Value Continues to Puzzle Economists

    Bitcoin Value Continues to Puzzle Economists

    2013 will be a year remembered for many important reasons, with perhaps the most interesting being the rise of the digital currency, the bitcoin.

    Bitcoins have been in existence for 4 years now, and over those four years the value of a bitcoin has fluctuated drastically. These intense changes in value make many people wonder what gives a bitcoin value and if they’re worth the investment. Several economists shed some light on the issue.

    Nobel Prize winning economist and author of several bestselling books Paul Krugman warns consumers and businesses about the dangers of bitcoins, saying that he is “deeply unconvinced” that the whole bitcoin phenomenon will really work:

    “So far almost all of the Bitcoin discussion has been positive economics — can this actually work? And I have to say that I’m still deeply unconvinced. To be successful, money must be both a medium of exchange and a reasonably stable store of value. And it remains completely unclear why BitCoin should be a stable store of value.”

    In order to explain why the value of bitcoins are disputed, Krugman points us toward Brad DeLong, who ponders the question himself. DeLong points out that the intrinsic value of gold being used to make pretty things gives it its market value, while the value of the dollar comes from its ability to pay taxes and create transactions here in the US.

    Considering bitcoins are a form of digital currency with no intrinsic value, then what gives them a stable, market value?

    The answer to that question comes from Business Insider’s Joe Weisenthal, who sees bitcoins as a hybrid of 3 factors: currency, equity, and social network.

    Bitcoins are obviously a form of currency due to their ability to complete transactions. While bitcoins were used almost entirely to complete online transactions at their inception, the acceptance of bitcoins as a form of currency in the physical marketplace has drastically increased over the past 4 years. Currently, there are 2,252 locations across the world that accept bitcoins as a form of currency, adding legitimacy to the argument that bitcoins are indeed a form of currency.

    Bitcoins are also a form of equity in the fact that the more people who invest in bitcoins and use them as a form of currency, the more the bitcoins are worth. Thus, bitcoins act much like individual stock shares – the more people who invest in a company’s particular stock, the higher stock prices climb due to the increased perception of said company’s value.

    However, bitcoins only act as equity as far as its social network exists and continues to grow. This is perhaps the biggest concern to consumers when pondering whether or not to make an investment in bitcoins.

    As previously stated, bitcoins have no intrinsic value; they are simply 0’s and 1’s transmitted through the internet. The value of a bitcoin is derived from its use; i.e. bitcoins gain more value as more people use them, much like how Facebook gains value as more people use its service.

    But that is where the problem lies. Recent research has shown that Facebook users are declining, especially in the younger generation. If Facebook users continue to decline, it could wind-up facing the same fate that befell MySpace.

    Or, as Joe Weisenthal put it, “Without the network effects, the technology is nothing. It’s just a theoretical amusement.”

    So, in the end, the value of a bitcoin will be ever-fluctuating as its numbers of users and businesses which accept payment continue to fluctuate. While one bitcoin is worth $750.99 today, its value could easily increase or decrease ten-fold overnight.

    If you’re still questioning whether or not you should invest in bitcoins, ask yourself this: Do you have surplus cash that you don’t know what to do with? If that answer is yes, invest in some bitcoins, ride the bubble, and hope the gamble pays off (and if it does, send some of those excess bitcoins this way).

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • China Bans Banks From Accepting Bitcoins

    China Bans Banks From Accepting Bitcoins

    For some time now, the digital currency known as “bitcoins” has been ballooning in value thanks to a lot of speculation and the promise that the money will be finite. Currency 101 dictates that the more of something there is, the less value it has, a process known as inflation. This is why it would make sense to barter with something like a rare jewel versus sand on the beach. But a digital coin that is backed by nothing but a digital handshake? A bit too shaky for some.

    This sentiment is likely why China’s central bank has decided to ban other financial institutions in the country from accepting bitcoins. The move is seen as protecting the country’s economy from exploitation via the unregulated currency. China is simply too big a nation to express such concern without a shockwave following suit. Bitcoins lost a great deal of value in hours that followed.

    In the United States, the coins are seen as a legitimate means of exchange. Which is perhaps why one man had no problem blowing $100,000 worth of bitcoins on a Tesla at a Lamborghini dealership. There is a growing list of businesses that are willing to sell items of varying value in exchange for the bitcoin. So if you happen to have a few, perhaps now might be the best time to cash in.

    To the observant eye, this bitcoin madness feels a little too much like the dot.com bubble of the nineties. This feeling is not lost on former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, who views the popular digital money as a bubble that will inevitably pop. “It has to have intrinsic value. You have to really stretch your imagination to infer what the intrinsic value of Bitcoin is. I haven’t been able to do it. Maybe somebody else can.”

    “Intrinsic value” is why we don’t carry buckets of sand to the grocery store. It’s takes both tangible and intangible factors to lend value to money of any kind. China’s main financial institution has seen the writing on the wall. While it won’t stop citizens from investing, they have been told to do so, “at their own risk”.

    If you’re willing to take huge risks, now is the time to do so. Do so and get out, because many are betting it won’t be long before the bubble bursts, millions are lost, and nobody will really be surprised.

    Image: Wikimedia Commons

  • This Anarchist Wants To Use Bitcoin to Crowdfund Assassins

    This Anarchist Wants To Use Bitcoin to Crowdfund Assassins

    Forbes author Andy Greenberg wrote today about an encrypted email he received from a person who called themselves Kuwabatake Sanjuro. Sanjuro claimed to have designed a Deepweb site called the Assassination Market, which apparently has the capability to “crowdfund” political assassinations in a similar manner as Kickstarter.

    For the technically unfamiliar, “the Deepweb” or “DarkNet” (depending on who you’re talking to) is the part of the internet that remains inaccessible and uncatalogued by most websites due to anonymizing protocols like Tor. Sites that exist in this unexplored frontier operate on a scale from legal ‘gray markets’ that appear as an eBay for criminals to terrorist groups attempting to solicit donations for their violent agenda.

    In an email to Greenberg, Sanjuro said the site went up four months ago, and six targets have been submitted. Those six targets (and their bounties) include: 10 bitcoins for the death of Gen. Keith Alexander; 40 bitcoins for the assassination of President Obama; and the site’s largest bounty, 124.14 bitcoin, for the head of Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve and one of the biggest opponents of bitcoin banking.

    The aspirations that Sanjuro has for his site are terrifying. As Greenberg put it, Sanjuro hopes to greenlight enough political murder to scare politicians into returning their power to the masses. “[The Assassination Market will] destroy all governments, everywhere,” he said.

    “Thanks to this system, a world without wars, dragnet panopticon-style surveillance, nuclear weapons, armies, repression, money manipulation, and limits to trade is firmly within our grasp for but a few bitcoins per person,” he added. “I also believe that as soon as a few politicians gets offed and they realize they’ve lost the war on privacy, the killings can stop and we can transition to a phase of peace, privacy and laissez-faire.”

    Greenberg went as far to contact the FBI and the Secret Service, who declined to comment on the Assassination Market.

    One thing is for certain, though: the idea of cryptographically-concealed currencies being used to fund assassinations has been discussed by numerous computer science experts since the 1990’s. Sanjuro’s efforts were spurred by the PRISM leak from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

    The idea for an online “assassin’s market” originated in 1992 from a former Intel engineer who wrote that uncrackable cypher messages combined with encrypted, anonymous donations would give rise to online assassination markets. A second former Intel engineer named Jim Bell described how such a system might be implemented in an essay called “Assassination Politics.”

    Like the earlier generation of “cypherpunk” enthusiasts, Sajuro places his faith in cryptography. He claims that “with cryptography, the state, or any protection firm, is largely obsolete…all activity that can be reduced to information transfer will be completely out of the government’s, or anyone’s, hands, other than the parties involved.”

    But even the world-famous Deepweb drug hub SilkRoad (and its engineer) were busted by the feds in spite of all the anonymity. Unlike Dread Pirate Roberts, Sanjuro claims he has put “measures in place to prevent the effectiveness of such an arrest. Naturally these will have to be kept secret.”

    In conclusion, Sanjuro said simply, “I am a crypto-anarchist… [and] We have a bright future ahead of us.”

    If you want to read more on the burgeoning world of crowdfunded assassins, do yourself a favor and check out Greenberg’s piece in Forbes.

    If you want to learn about how Bitcoins came about and how they’re used, this Lionel commentary represents an eloquent explanation.

    [Image via Thinkstock]

  • “Silk Road” Underground Site Shut Down by FBI

    “Silk Road” Underground Site Shut Down by FBI

    The FBI has officially shut down the underground site “Silk Road.” Operating since January 2011, the site gave drug dealers a platform to sell heroin, cocaine, LSD, methamphetamine, among other drugs and illicit goods. The site allowed people to anonymously buy illegal drugs. Silk Road gets its name from the lucrative Chinese silk trade, because its extensive network of routes.

    The site worked as an online marketplace for buying and selling illegal drugs using virtual currency, known as “bitcoins.” Bitcoins work like regular currency, fluctuating with the market. Now that “Silk Road” is down, FBI seized $3.6 million from the bit coin marketplace. The value of a bitcoin has plummeted from $123 to $105 and continuing in a downward spiral.

    FBI arrested the Ross Ulbricht, 29, the owner and operator of the site, known as “Dread Pirate Roberts” or “DPR.” Ulbricht is charged in New York with narcotics trafficking, computer hacking, soliciting a murder-for-hire and money laundering.

    Silk road held roughly $2 million in Bitcoins on any given day. The FBI said between Feb. 6, 2011 and July 23, 2011, analysts tracked over a million transactions, between more than 147,000 buyers and 4,000 vendors.

    Not available to the “Average Joe,” Silk Road and other websites on the Deep Web are accessible only through a special anonymized browser named Tor. Tor works as an anonymizing software that encrypts traffic by routing it through computers around the world. Because of the nature of Tor, it has allowed other online black markets to thrive.

    Image via WikiCommons

  • Still Wondering If You Should Use Bitcoin? Read This.

    Still Wondering If You Should Use Bitcoin? Read This.

    Bitcoin is getting a lot of attention in the news this week with the value of a single Bitcoin surpassing $100, and the currency’s total value topping $1 billion. Naturally, a lot of questions are being asked.

    Questions like: What is it? Is it the future of currency? How valuable can it get? How risky is it to use Bitcoin? One article even asks if “Bitcoin versus government” is the “new gun rights battle”.

    Does your business accept Bitcoin payments? Do you use it to buy stuff? Why or why not? Share your thoughts about this currency in the comments.

    First off, if you’re unfamiliar with the concept of Bitcoin, a brief explanation is probably in order. It’s a non-government-based, open source, P2P digital currency, in short. As Bitcoin.org explains, it’s also a protocol, and a software than enables instant P2P transactions, worldwide payments, low or zero processing fees and “much more”.

    “Bitcoin uses peer to peer technology to operate with no central authority; managing transactions and issuing Bitcoins are carried out collectively by the network,” the site explains. “Through many of its unique properties, Bitcoin allows exciting uses that could not be covered by any previous payment systems.”

    For users, Bitcoin compares the transaction process to that of email. That makes it sound pretty simple, doesn’t it?

    “As a new user, you only need to choose a wallet that you will install on your computer or on your mobile phone,” Bitcoin.org explains. “Once you have your wallet installed, it will generate your first Bitcoin address and you can create more whenever you need one. You can disclose one of your Bitcoin addresses to your friends so that they can pay you or vice versa, you can pay your friends if they give you their addresses. In fact, this is pretty similar to how email works. So all that is left to do at this point is to get some bitcoins and to keep them safe. In order to start using Bitcoin, you are not required to understand the technical details.”

    There are reasons why Bitcoin might appeal to the non-geeky. As Business Insider’s Henry Blodget writes on Yahoo Finance, “The premise and promise of Bitcoin–the part that appeals to folks who don’t happen to be gold bugs or cryptography geeks–is that the current plan is for only a finite number of Bitcoins to be created. This is in direct contrast to standard government-issued currencies, which governments can always print more of. If the supply of Bitcoins remains finite, this should theoretically eliminate inflation, which is one of the biggest drawbacks of paper money.”

    In turbulent worldwide economic times like these, this presents a pretty interesting concept.

    About a year ago, WebProNews talked to Bitcoin Lead Core Developer, Gavin Andresen. In light of recent developments, it seems worth revisiting some of what he had to say about the currency and its future.

    In the wake of a “press avalanche” following a controversy in which Bitcoin was being used in drug transactions, Andresen said, “Where the first couple of mainstream articles about Bitcoin caught the attention of other reporters, who in turn also wrote about it, which then triggered even more press. That was both great and terrible for the project: great because it drew a lot more technical and business talent to look at Bitcoin and start Bitcoin-related projects, but terrible because when people realized that Bitcoin still has a lot of growing up to do, the speculative bubble popped.”

    “I think it is very likely the same thing will happen again sometime in the next few years as other parts of the world discover Bitcoin or it is re-discovered in Europe and the U.S.,” he said. “I expect the wild price fluctuations to diminish over time as Bitcoin infrastructure grows up and speculators start to get a better idea of the real value of Bitcoin.”

    Indeed, many have now seen the value. Not only has the Bitcoin’s value surpassed $100, but there is a huge list of online and real world businesses that currently accept Bitcoin here. Even that is not all inclusive, as it is noticeably missing reddit, which recently announced that it now accepts Bitcoin for reddit gold.

    If you’re a small business interested in accepting Bitcoin yourself, you’d probably do well to start with this walkthrough.

    “If you expect that the number of people interested in using Bitcoin is small, you might simply start by posting a sign or a note: ‘We Accept Bitcoin’, and ask people to contact you directly in order to make a payment,” it says. “Even if hardly anybody uses Bitcoin as a payment method, you’re helping Bitcoin in two ways: one, by increasing awareness, and two, by making your customers more willing to accept Bitcoin as payment from others in the future, because now they know somewhere they can spend it.”

    For selling goods or services on a website, it says, you’ll want to use a Bitcoin merchant solution to accept the currency. You can usually opt to have Bitcoins converted to dollars or other currencies automatically. For brick and mortars, customers can pay with their mobile phone apps, so the guide recommends placing a QR code near your register, so customers can quickly scan and pay.

    “I tell people to only invest time or money in Bitcoin that they can afford to lose,” Andresen said in the interview. “There are a lot of things that could possibly derail it, ranging from some fundamental flaw in the algorithm that everybody has missed to world-wide government regulation to some alternative rising up and replacing Bitcoin.”

    He did note at the time that he finds these scenarios to be unlikely.

    He also had some interesting things to say about potential digital currency competition: “I think to overcome Bitcoin’s head-start, an alternative will either have to have a large company or government backing it and marketing it. Or else, it will have to be radically better in some way. There seems to be a perception that Bitcoin is in a winner-take-all race against other currencies; either everybody in the world will be using it for all of their online purchases in 50 years or it will not exist. I think the online payment world will like our current world of currencies – different currencies used in different places. The online payments won’t be divided by geography, though it might be divided by language or culture or social network.”

    “I think there will eventually be one dominant currency that is used for 80% of worldwide online transactions,” he predicted. “But I think there will always be alternatives. The most likely outcome in my lifetime, the next 40 years or so, is most people will use their national currencies when purchasing goods and services from other people in their own countries but will use something else for international payments.”

    Questions about the security of Bitcoin are likely to run through many heads, particularly as we read about sites and businesses being hacked nearly every day. The Bitcoin stance on this is essentially that the security is in your hands just as the security of your physical wallet is. It’s up to you to take the precautions. It is recommended that you backup your wallet, encrypt your wallet, “be careful with online wallets,” and use an offline back up for savings. This is all discussed a bit more here.

    “To steal your Bitcoins, thieves would have to break into both your computer or smartphone and your bank,” Andresen said in the interview. “And, it would be impossible for anybody at the bank to steal them without first breaking into your computer.”

    About a month after WebProNews spoke with Andresen, Bitcoin exchange service Bitcoinica became the victim of a $92,000 theft.

    There is a lot of speculation out there about what Bitcoin can truly become, and that’s not likely to change anytime soon. Andresen tweeted that he enjoys “appropriately skeptical but accurate articles,” like “How Bitcoin could destroy the state (and perhaps make me a bit of money)” at The Spectator. Here’s an excerpt from that to give you an idea of what he means:

    So. The first thing you need to know about Bitcoin is that it’s a peer-to-peer, digitised crypto-currency. No, please, don’t stop reading. Just hold that one in your mind while we talk about the second and third things you need to know about Bitcoin, which are far more exciting. For example, you can buy drugs with it! I mean, sure, you can buy plenty of other stuff, too, but I’m really not sure anybody actually does. According to one study, Silk Road, the main ‘buy drugs with Bitcoin’ website, has a monthly turnover of around a million quid. And thirdly — you’ll like this one, you capitalist Spectator types — its value is rocketing. A month ago — out of interest, rather than a desire for heroin, Mum — I bought £100 of Bitcoin. Two weeks ago, like, I said, it was worth £157. Today, it’s worth £213. Interested yet?

    Actually, the second and third things aren’t as important as I made out. Mnyeh, drugs, you can buy them anywhere. And, sure, Bitcoin is bullish at the moment, but the value notoriously bounces all over the place (in 2010 somebody spent 10,000 of them on a pizza, a sum which would today make that pizza worth £465,368). So, no, far more interesting than the drugs and riches is the core idea, which is this peer-to-peer crypto business. For the non-tech-savvy among us, this basically means it’s not quite like any other currency we’ll have ever used. It doesn’t have a central bank. Nobody is in charge. A Bitcoin is a thing that simply exists, like gold.

    There is a hard limit on the amount of Bitcoins that can be created, and that’s 21 million. That number is expected to be reached in the year 2140. Is Bitcoin’s future bright enough to last that long? Do you accept Bitcoin payments? Do you plan to? Do you use the currency to make payments? Share your thoughts about this interesting digital money platform in the comments.

  • Bitcoin Theft Drains $92,000 from Bitcoinica

    Bitcoin Theft Drains $92,000 from Bitcoinica

    A Bitcoin exchange service was victim of a security breach over the weekend in a heist that yielded 18,547 BTC to unknown hackers. A post on Bitcoinica’s official blog detailed that its servers were compromised and, following the complete draining of the service’s online wallet, caused Bitcoinica to halt all operations while they figure out what went wrong.

    Bitcoinica makes clear that the theft was from them and not from Bitcoin users, assuring them that all withdrawal requests will still be honored.

    According to Zhou Tong, who founded the exchange service, posted on bitcointalk.org that the Bitcoinica team had noticed a suspicious transaction that wasn’t initiated by any of the company owners. The next morning, an update was provided:

    – It’s more serious than we thought. We need some additional time to come up with a compensation proposal.
    – Likely we will either shut down the platform or re-develop entirely (which will take months instead of days).
    – The preliminary decision: reimburse for the full amount, including margin balances and position P/L.
    – The root cause of this problem is an email server compromise. The email server belongs to one of our team members.
    – Reminder again: Please do not reuse your Bitcoinica passwords as the database server was compromised. Do not click any links in the email. All Bitcoinica announcements will be updated on Bitcoinica website when available.

    Skip ahead to this morning and Zhou Tong posted another comment in bitcointalk.org detailing how he suspects the hack-heist happened.

    Update: How the hacker hacked Bitcoinica

    I don’t think this should be a secret, so I would just share my version of the story.

    – I received several emails regarding password reset and finding out the username for our Rackspace account.
    – I initially thought it was Patrick, because he did a password reset a few days ago, but I became suspicious when I realized that someone forgets the username of the account! (So it must not be Bitcoinica team member.)
    – I immediately set the password back, and log in to the account. I SSH’d into the Bitcoin wallet server and found that everything is gone.
    – This thread was posted and I tried to contact Rackspace the lock down the account.
    – They suspended all servers, so that the hacker couldn’t log in. However, despite two password changes and server suspension, the hacker is still in the session. I asked Rackspace to terminate his session but it seems that they don’t know how to do it.
    – The hacker recreated the server using our database backup, and possibly got the database successfully.
    – Later we found out that Patrick’s email server was compromised, and since he is in our mailing list, all emails sent to info@bitcoinica.com were delivered to his compromised email account.
    – We are now working on a settlement plan. Patrick is in charge of the claim page.

    If anything of the following happened this would be prevented:

    – Patrick’s email was not added to the mailing list, and he used Bitcoinica email instead.
    – Rackspace should just terminate the sessions then at least the database would be safe.
    – We should not use the official Bitcoin client because it’s very hard to secure it without large investments and affecting instant withdrawals in large amounts.

    For those keeping score at home, the 18,547 BTC roughly equates $91,993.12 US dollars (Note: Ars Technica reported on Friday that the exchange value of the stolen Bitcoins was $87,000; my calculation of $91,993 is based on the low end exchange rate for today obtained from Mt. Gox. Since that’s what’s current today, that’s what I’m sticking with) so as you can imagine, some people are peeved about the security breach as a few see this as a breach born of negligence. However, as Gaven Andresen stressed when I spoke with him about the Bitcoinica theft, you shouldn’t really invest in Bitcoins unless you can afford to lose some money as the online currency is still in experimental stages. “I’ll repeat something I’ve been saying for quite a while now: treat Bitcoin like you would a high-tech startup company. Only invest time or money that you can afford to lose, and expect there to be lots more ups and downs as Bitcoin infrastructure is created and matures.”

    While some people appear to have ignored that caveat, Zhou Tong has said that Bitcoinica intends to return all balances and unrealized profit and loss. However, things get a little complicated because Bitcoinica was sold to another Bitcoin exchange service, Intersango, about three weeks ago.

    Communication between Bitcoin users and Intersango seems to be a little obtuse. Zhou Tong makes clear in one of his updates that he is merely an employee of Bitcoinica but when I asked Intersango for comment, the team replied, “We are currently restricted in things we can say and are helping Zhou to release statements,” suggesting that Zhou’s comments are supported by Intersango as official statements.

    While a Bitcoin theft like this should be expected at this stage of the online currency’s lifespan, it looks particularly bad for Bitcoinica because this is the second time in less than three months that the company has been hacked.

    It’s unfortunate that Bitcoinica fell prey to hackers not only twice but twice within a relatively short amount of time. Such security breaches aren’t really doing the Bitcoin network in favors insofar fostering consumer confidence in the currency. I spoke with Rob Rachwald, director of security strategy at Imperva, who speculated on how such the heist could’ve been prevented. One, he said, it isn’t typical protocol for a company to be using an employee’s personal server. “You’d never find something like this at a place like Wells Fargo,” he said.

    Rachwald also concurred that security breaches like this – especially within close proximity of each other – undermine the public’s confidence in online currency such as Bitcoin. However, he added, the public’s hesitation to warm up to Bitcoins right away isn’t too far off from the way people were originally skeptical about online banking.

    In the meantime, Bitcoin users, be patient with your online money and be frugal with your investments.

  • Bitcoins Are on FBI’s Radar According to Leaked Report

    Bitcoins Are on FBI’s Radar According to Leaked Report

    Wired has obtained a new report from the FBI that details the agency’s growing concern that Bitcoins will become an attractive currency for those looking to dabble in some illicit activities without (hopefully) getting caught.

    I won’t go into the ins and outs of how Bitcoins work since I covered that pretty extensively last month, but here’s the Cliff’s notes version: Bitcoin is a decentralized, virtual currency that operates on a peer-to-peer network. You will never hold a bitcoin as it exists only only online. Use of Bitcoins is mostly anonymous. There is a finite amount of Bitcoins that will ever be produced, which is how the market is regulated from over-production. Currently, the exchange rate of Bitcoins to U.S. dollars is about 1 Bitcoin to $4 or $5.

    The FBI report highlights some insightful details about the current economy of Bitcoins. For any Doubting Thomases who had written off Bitcoins as a fad, the report details some lucrative highlights:

    As of 18 April 2012, the third-party bitcoin trading platform Mt. Gox recorded more than $8 million in transactions conducted over the past 30 days through Mt. Gox trading, an average of more than $276,000 per day.

    According to Bitcoin as of April 2012, there were more than 8.8 million bitcoins in circulation. With the average market price in
    April 2012 between $4 and $5 per bitcoin, the FBI estimates the Bitcoin economy was worth $35 million to $44 million.

    The report goes on to detail the ways in which Bitcoins have already been manipulated to conduct illegal activity, such as a money laundering scheme via an online role-playing game or how Bitcoins have been thieved from third-party services by hackers. Indeed, if you’re using Bitcoins you probably should fear the threat of getting hacked a bit more than the feds, but if the multi-signature security that Gavin Andresen, the Lead Core Developer of Bitcoin, is working on, that threat will be less, well, threatening.

    One of Bitcoins’ greatest appeals is how it mostly keeps the identity of the user anonymous, although this isn’t fail-proof, either. In a classic example of cutting off one’s nose to spite the face, the FBI lists ways in which Bitcoin users can be identified, which should be a tip-off for Bitcoins users on what not to do if they really want to avoid being tracked down (hint: according to the report, it involves laundering Bitcoins through third-party services registered outside the U.S). Wired actually went a step further and compiled a to-do list gleaned from the FBI report on other steps Bitcoin users can take to ensure their anonymity:

  • Create and use a new Bitcoin address for each incoming payment.
  • Route all Bitcoin traffic through an anonymizer.
  • Combine the balance of old Bitcoin addresses into a new address to make new payments.
  • Use a specialized money-laundering service.
  • Use a third-party eWallet service to consolidate addresses. Some third-party services offer the option of creating an eWallet that allows users to consolidate many bitcoin address and store and easily access their bitcoins from any device.
  • Individuals can create Bitcoin clients to seamlessly increase anonymity (such as allowing users to choose which Bitcoin addresses to make payments from), making it easier for non-technically savvy users to anonymize their Bitcoin transactions.
  • Although, given that the FBI knows how Bitcoin users can improve anonymity, you should probably assume that the agency is already working on ways to work around these steps, so caveat emptor, Bitcoiners.

  • Bitcoins & The Future Of Online Currency

    Bitcoins & The Future Of Online Currency

    Bitcoins are not mere drug currency.
    Bitcoins are not failing.
    Okay?
    Are we clear about that?

    Good.

    The future of online commerce looks to rely less and less on the physical amount of money you have in your bank accounts and wallets and more on what you could call “digital” wallets: online reservoirs where you store money. Really, we already use some variation of a digital wallet, we just don’t easily acknowledge it. You work, you get paid via direct deposit, numbers change in your checking account, you use debit and credit cards to make transactions, you go back to work. Rinse, repeat. You hardly ever see cash unless you deliberately withdraw it from an ATM. Anymore, our money consists of strings of number values running through some computer located who knows where. We just confidently assume that all that money is actually staying or going where it should be staying or going.

    While that describes our current model of commerce, it also serves as a fair portrait of Bitcoins, the emerging currency exclusive to the Internet.

    If you’re familiar with Bitcoins and run an online business, how do you feel about accepting this form of currency? Cash currency has never kept somebody from getting ripped off, so what is the main hesitation for you and your business when it comes to accepting an exclusively online currency? If you’re unsteady about it right now, what would you like to see change with Bitcoins (or any type of online currency) before you were more comfortable with using it? Or, are you totally onboard with this form of currency already? Share your thoughts with us and other readers below in the comments.

    Essentially, Bitcoins are an intangible currency, really no different in action than the numbers bouncing up and down in your bank account. Alternately, instead of representing sums of physical currency, Bitcoins are literally a majestic sequence of unique numbers that can be traded for goods. Instead of swapping wads of bound fibers and inks that are woven together into this germy thing we call cash, Bitcoins exist in a purely digital tapestry. It’s an experiment in decentralized currency, and while it’s been a good experiment and still has some growing to do, it doesn’t show any signs of disappearing anytime soon.

    While it’s still got some time to really appreciate and grow stronger as a currency, a purely online currency will exist in one form or another. It won’t ever replace your tangible currency, but work alongside it for all of your online consumer decisions.

    To find out more about the current state of Bitcoins and what will happen with them in the near (and far) future, I got in touch with Gavin Andresen, the Lead Core Bitcoin Developer, about the developments of the past year regarding Bitcoins and why this novel currency could feature prominently in the future of online commerce.

    Bitcoins: A Primer

    Money as an object is meaningless. It’s paper and and some inks and, thanks to people, lots of bacteria. It’s an arbitrary token that merely represents a commercial promissory value people can earn in exchange for goods or services that can then either be saved or spent on other goods or services. Dollars, euros, yen, pounds, rupees, tobacco leaves, rands – it doesn’t matter what object you invest value into, it’s the idea behind the currency that buttresses its value. The Bitcoin is no different.

    The only difference is that, as opposed to physical money that you’ll stuff into your pockets and wallets, you will likely never actually hold a Bitcoin (yes, there are physical versions of Bitcoins if you absolutely must have a real version to thumb around in your palms). Just because you’re likely to never touch one, though, doesn’t mean that Bitcoins are any less valuable than the bills you have folded up in your right pocket. Instead, think of it like this: you are no more likely to hold a Bitcoin in your hand than you are to hold Pythagoras’ theorem in your hand.

    What does distinguish this disembodied currency from its corporeal familiars, however, is that Bitcoins are not dependent on anything except the people who produce and use it. No governments, no banks, no organizations – just people. A truly anarchistic, peer-to-peer currency.

    For a simplified explanation for how the Bitcoin market works on a consumer level, have a look at this video put together by We Use Coins.

    The currency, however, doesn’t just fall into your lap like a prize from a cereal box, nor is it just magically conjured up from the imagination like the latest Internet meme. The production of Bitcoins is best explained through the simile of gold mining. Instead of boring through a mountain to unearth precious metals, new Bitcoins are generated by unlocking a mathematical sequence called a block chain and are doled out in increments of 50. The people that produce these Bitcoins, then, are known as miners (that’s actually the technical term for Bitcoin producers, too, not just a metaphorical descriptor). These miners, however, have traded in their helmets and pickaxes in exchange for loads of GPU firepower and very sophisticated software capable of deciphering the block chains. The software works in tandem across a network to solve these cryptographic proofs and the miner who is the first to solve the block chain will receive the 50 Bitcoins. Once a block chain has been unlocked, it is added to a ledger in order to prevent those Bitcoins from double-spending.

    Eventually, as more blocks are solved, fewer Bitcoins will be generated because the block chains will be worth fewer new coins. Solving a block chain today is worth 50 new Bitcoins, but as of this December that reward will be reduced to 25 Bitcoins. Some time off in the future, it will be reduced again to 12.5. The gradual reduction in rewards works to mitigate the generation of new Bitcoins so as to avoid flooding the market, which would result in a devalued currency.

    As more miners work to generate Bitcoins, the difficulty in unlocking the block chains increases so as ensure that a new block is generated only every 10 minutes on average. The increased difficulty of unlocking a block chain’s sequence is designed in such a way that, over time, the maximum capacity of Bitcoins that will be generated will be 21 million. Added to the multiplied difficulty of solving subsequent block chains, more and more computer power is required, which some have said could be a deterrent for would-be miners from working on the more difficult block chains. Andresen disagrees with the argument that hardware needs are becoming preventive. “Mining Bitcoins is becoming increasingly energy efficient,” he says. “Bitcoin miners want to pay as little as they can for electricity, so they’re constantly working to make mining more efficient.”

    Energy requirements wouldn’t really matter in the grand scheme of Bitcoin production anyways, Andresen explains, as the Bitcoin production process is smart enough to adjust for variations in the miner work force. “The Bitcoin system adjusts itself so that the target number of Bitcoins are created about every 10 minutes, no matter how many miners there are.”

    He adds, “The number of Bitcoin miners has almost nothing to do with how quickly Bitcoin transactions are processed, so it doesn’t matter to the Bitcoin system how much energy or how many miners are working – as long as there is one, the system will work.”

    The production of Bitcoins isn’t infinite, though. In fact, there is a fixed amount that will ever be produced: 21 million. Although that peak Bitcoin mark isn’t expected to be reached until 2140, the number of Bitcoins generated will begin to taper off toward zero well before that, at which point miners will then be compensated with Bitcoin transaction fees. As the generation of Bitcoins decreases over time, the cost of a transaction using Bitcoins will increase, which these blocks exist to verify. In lieu of transaction fees, though, Andresen postulates that miners could also be compensated by a “more complicated arrangement between merchants that want their transactions confirmed quickly and securely.” One way or another, though, the monetary reward for generating Bitcoins will always be present.

    As of this year, over 8 million Bitcoins have been generated. The first block of Bitcoins to be unlocked was completed by Satoshi Nakamoto, who could be considered the progenitor of Bitcoins. As Wired Magazine’s Benjamin Wallace covered extensively in a piece about bitcoins last year, Nakamoto might be best understood as the Tyler Durden of the Bitcoin culture. An effluvium of mystery envelopes Nakamoto as no one is certain of who he is or where he came from or, most intriguing, where he disappeared to following his last public communication near the end of 2010. It’s rumored the name was a pseudonym or that Nakamoto was actually a collective of developers. It’s even been suggested that Nakamoto was a nom de guerre for assorted bodies of the United States government. Nobody knows, and every major player in the Bitcoin industry denies being Nakamoto.

    At this point, though, as the Bitcoin system is beginning to become more stabilized and the project is on the cusp of transcending any one person, does the origin of Bitcoins really matter anymore? It’s been around long enough to confidently assess that dealing in Bitcoins is likely not some kind of Faustian gamble. Besides, one of the prominent features of Bitcoins is its near-anonymity of the users who deal with it, a quality celebrated by Bitcoin proponents. If the currency users are mostly anonymous, why then shouldn’t the progenitor of Bitcoins be anonymous, too? If the shoe fits, right? We could all be Nakamoto and none of us would be Nakamoto. To obsess over the origin of Bitcoins threatens to belie the hard work that the currency’s current legion of developers are doing in order to bolster Bitcoins into a formidable, viable option for online commerce.

    The Problem With Bitcoins

    The Bitcoin has had a tumultuous twelve months. Perhaps its biggest mainstream debut to date happened in June 2011 when Gawker’s Adrian Chen published a piece about the underbelly of the Internet, the Silk Road, where you can buy, among other things, any fashion of drugs (drugs I didn’t even think existed anymore) one desires. Because of the anonymity that accompanies the use of Bitcoins, the Silk Road trades exclusively in the currency. As Gawker’s story was many people’s introduction to Bitcoins, the piece carelessly marginalized it as The Currency for underground drug trafficking on the Internet.

    Regardless of Gawker’s oversights, Bitcoins blew up. The value of Bitcoins skyrocketed after Chen’s piece began to circulate and inspire interest in legions of new potential customers of Silk Road. Consequently, Senator Chuck Schumer called for a federal investigation into the Silk Road in order to hopefully shut it down. Now that the Bitcoin market had attracted the attention of the United States government, the popularity of the currency continued skyward.

    The boom was short-lived, though, as it was not an organic and sustainable growth. It was an artificial trend born from a sudden onslaught of sensational media attention that ballooned the value of the currency. Being at the mercy of the public’s caprice, though, the value of Bitcoins crashed back to Earth a month later. By August, it had returned to its pre-Gawker levels.

    Five months after the Gawker piece, Wired was preparing the toe-tags for Bitcoins, citing the currency’s sustainability problems and increasing lack of interest in the continued production of Bitcoins.

    Andresen concurs that Bitcoins were pushed out onto the main stage long before the system was ready to handle that kind of attention. “We had a press avalanche last year,” he says, “Where the first couple of mainstream articles about Bitcoin caught the attention of other reporters, who in turn also wrote about it, which then triggered even more press.”

    He continues, “That was both great and terrible for the project: great because it drew a lot more technical and business talent to look at Bitcoin and start Bitcoin-related projects, but terrible because when people realized that Bitcoin still has a lot of growing up to do, the speculative bubble popped.”

    It’s misleading to say that Bitcoins failed because of that popped bubble. True, investing in Bitcoins currently isn’t as profitable as it was for a brief period last year, but that kind of inflation was artificially generated and really should never have happened in the first place. More, it’s probably not the last time the Bitcoin will encounter some heavy turbulence. “I think it is very likely the same thing will happen again sometime in the next few years as other parts of the world discover Bitcoin or it is re-discovered in Europe and the U.S.,” Andresen says. “I expect the wild price fluctuations to diminish over time as Bitcoin infrastructure grows up and speculators start to get a better idea of the real value of Bitcoin.”

    That’s Money 101 for you, though: the potent volatility of supply and demand working upon, for better or worse, the unpredictable engines of human interest. Adding to the uncertainty is the fact that, most obviously, people already have a form (if not multiple forms) of currency, which has likely created an erroneous impression for the laity that Bitcoins are a second-class currency.

    Then again, Bitcoins were never really intended to launch like an unstoppable money-missile into the future. Nakamoto, Andresen, and other Bitcoin developers have always cautioned investors that Bitcoins should at best be considered an experiment. “I tell people to only invest time or money in Bitcoin that they can afford to lose,” Andresen says. “There are a lot of things that could possibly derail it, ranging from some fundamental flaw in the algorithm that everybody has missed (he doesn’t see this as a likely possibility at this point) to world-wide government regulation (also unlikely, he says) to some alternative rising up and replacing Bitcoin.”

    In a way, the story thus far of Bitcoins as an unpredictable investment is the quintessential story of the Internet as a whole. Every prominent company that currently claims a seat among the pantheon of technology giants – Apple, Google, Facebook, Twitter, IBM, et al. – has come into that position due to the rise and fall of previous online ventures. The lessons gleaned from the decline of previous companies like the Myspaces and Friendsters and Lycos is likely the only reason the current generation of tech leaders have managed to prevail for so long. In the end, the diminished presence of these companies is less a woeful tale of failure and more a triumphant testament to how resilient and efficient the evolution of ideas has been on the Internet, especially in such a short amount of time.

    With Bitcoins, it remains to be seen if it will eventually be minted as a mainstay in online culture or merely serve as an early milestone in the continuing evolution of online currency. Andresen is optimistic, though, that Bitcoins are here to stay even in light of competing online currencies possibly popping up in the future. “I think to overcome Bitcoin’s head-start, an alternative will either have to have a large company or government backing it and marketing it. Or else, it will have to be radically better in some way,” he says.

    “There seems to be a perception that Bitcoin is in a winner-take-all race against other currencies; either everybody in the world will be using it for all of their online purchases in 50 years or it will not exist. I think the online payment world will like our current world of currencies – different currencies used in different places. The online payments won’t be divided by geography, though it might be divided by language or culture or social network.”

    As it were, the currency network’s public image may have taken a bruising last year, but the reports of Bitcoin’s demise appear to have been exaggerated.

    The Currency of the Future?

    For now, the Bitcoin experiment appears to have weathered the Great Media Blitzkrieg of 2011. Bitcoins’ value is once again growing at the organic rate it was intended to grow at. So… to 2140 and beyond, right?

    “I’m not even going to try to predict what will happen in the year 2140,” Andresen is quick to say. His focus is more attuned to the more immediate future of Bitcoins. “In December of this year, the Bitcoin will be 4 years old and the number of new Bitcoins produced will be cut in half. I think we will learn a lot when that happens and that will give some insight into what will happen over the years as Bitcoin production slowly drops to zero.”

    Like any model of currency, it’d be a risk to really put all of your eggs into the Bitcoins basket. The currency could have long-term staying power. Then again, it could exist as a prototype that ends up producing a more advanced model of online currency and eventually be supplanted by something like a Bitcoin 2.0, for lack of a better term. Either way, some version of Bitcoin will continue to grow and become a part of our future experience with online commerce.

    “I think there will eventually be one dominant currency that is used for 80% of worldwide online transactions,” Andresen predicts, “but I think there will always be alternatives. The most likely outcome in my lifetime, the next 40 years or so, is most people will use their national currencies when purchasing goods and services from other people in their own countries but will use something else for international payments.”

    Naturally, as Bitcoins continue to evolve, developers like Andresen are working hard at ensuring the private security of Bitcoin users. Andresen says his past six months have been spent building “multi-signature transactions” for the Bitcoin network. He explains the multi-signature security feature as thus: “They are kind of like if you took all of the paper money in your wallet and then tore it in half and put half in your safe deposit box and kept the other half in your house. A robber would have to break into both your house and your safe deposit box to steal your money.”

    You’d be hard pressed to find that kind of security with your current stash of cash if for nothing else but because it would be ungodly inconvenient for the consumer, to say nothing of the ambitious thief. Andresen says that’s one of the major advantages Bitcoins will have over our current terrestrial currency: you can conjunctively store your Bitcoins in two places at once so that in order to use them, a person would need access to both storage sites. One location where you might store your Bitcoins could be a secure website run by a bank which acts as the proverbial safe deposit box for Bitcoins whereas the other could be your computer or smartphone.

    “To steal your Bitcoins, thieves would have to break into both your computer or smartphone and your bank. And, it would be impossible for anybody at the bank to steal them without first breaking into your computer.”

    The infrastructure for this multi-signature security technology is still in production, he says, but he expects that by the end of this year “there will be easy-to-use, incredibly secure and convenient solutions for storing and spending Bitcoins.”

    With that kind of unprecedented level of security, it’s even possible that in the future Bitcoins might become a wise means for stashing your savings.

    While the security advances will likely be a strong draw for future Bitcoin investors, perhaps of equal importance to the gradual growth of Bitcoins will be its acceptance as a form of payment with more online businesses, but that’s all in due time. As the reliability and legitimacy of Bitcoins is developed over time, don’t be surprised to see more online businesses begin accepting it. For now, though, the goal is to nurse the Bitcoin economy to a level where it will persevere the next blizzard of media attention the developers anticipate in the coming years. It’s possible Bitcoins may endure another “rise-and-fall” inflation in the future, but hopefully it won’t so easily shake the faith of the masses, at least as badly as last year’s roller coaster appears to have done.

    In the meantime and in-between time, reconsider what those figures in your bank account really mean to you. You might see dollars or whatever your country’s currency happens to be, but the reality is that what you’re using these days intrinsically isn’t so far removed from Bitcoins. The Bitcoin experiment may or may not survive to 2140 but even if the Bitcoin itself were to disappear, the very idea of it is powerful enough that the development of an online currency will undoubtedly continue.

    So now that you know a little bit more about Bitcoins, what do you think? Still wary about it or would you give it a try? If you’re still uncomfortable with the idea, what would allay your anxiety with using Bitcoins? Why wouldn’t a standard currency used exclusively for online purchases across the globe be a good idea? Again, let us know what you think.