Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Australian Uni Partners With Ripple on Blockchain Law Courses

The Australian National University has partnered with Ripple to develop two Masters courses examining the impact of blockchain on legal disputes.

The Australian National University (ANU)’s law school will roll out two new courses in its Masters program next year exploring the impact of blockchain on the legal field

The courses are being developed with the assistance of Ripple’s Blockchain Research Initiative (UBRI) — a program that seeks to collaborate with universities to examine emerging trends and developments in distributed ledger technology, cryptocurrency and digital payments.

ANU already offers undergraduate courses examining the intersection between blockchain and law, as do a number of other Australian universities. The University of Melbourne and The University of Southern Queensland offer courses explicitly concerned with DLT and blockchain, while other institutions incorporate the subject into broader programs.

ANU law school partners with Ripple to launch courses studying blockchain 

Scott Chamberlain, entrepreneurial fellow at the ANU School of Law, will develop and run the university’s blockchain units. The courses will examine whether blockchain and smart contracts can be used to automate and decentralize legal processes and dispute resolution.

He is passionate about its potential: “Imagine an eBay-like platform that can resolve consumer law disputes without engaging the court system,” he said. 

Chamberlain said that many simple legal processes — such as confirming the identities and relationship of the relevant parties, and the rules governing their interactions — could utilise blockchain. 

“[A legal dispute] deals with who are the legal identities that the law recognizes? What are the legal things that the law recognizes existing? What’s the relationship between people and things? And there’s a dispute resolution at the heart of it. When you look at the blockchain smart contract space, there’s projects doing all of those things."

Chamberlain operates the ‘Lex Automagica’ platform at ANU, which is an attempt to solve some of these issues without engaging the middlemen and gatekeepers of the legal industry. In February 2019, Ripple provided Lex Automatica with $1 million in funding.

Legal academics and practitioners are becoming increasingly interested in the potential of blockchain to provide decentralized dispute resolution. Projects already up and running include Jur, Kleros, and Aragon Court.



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Strict Japanese Crypto Laws Discourage Foreign Exchanges … For Now

A new report has found strict cryptocurrency regulations in Japan are discouraging foreign players — but will help the industry in the long run.

A new report has found strict regulations are discouraging overseas exchanges from opening in Japan, but would likely benefit new players in the long term.

Double jump.tokyo, the game developer behind My Crypto Heroes, commissioned a research team at So & Sato Law Offices to carry out a comprehensive report on digital assets in Japan.

Released on March 31, the report covers all aspects of digital assets in the Asian nation, from tokenized securities to crypto derivatives.

Entering the crypto market under strict regulations

Joerg Schmidt and So Saito from So & Sato told Cointelegraph Japan in an interview that local regulations for cryptocurrency exchanges are “far stricter” than in most other countries. However, he said this would be beneficial in the long run because it encourages the traditional finance world to get involved:

“The market is highly regulated in Japan. What seems to be a regulatory overkill, at first sight, is likely to help the market to mature in the mid to long term. This will allow more institutional players to enter the market and to increase their stake in the digital asset space.”

Regulations pertaining to crypto in Japan generally fall under the Payment Services Act (PSA) and the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA). Amendments passed for both acts tightening existing regulations come into effect today (April 1).

Under the new PSA regulations, crypto exchanges must employ third-party operators to keep hold of their users’ money, separating it from their own cash flow. With fewer tools at its disposal, FIEA has faced an uphill battle regulating Japan’s crypto derivatives market, which accounts for 90% of the total volume.

Foreign-operated crypto exchanges in Japan

Under Japanese law, cryptocurrency exchanges must also obtain a license through the country’s Financial Services Agency (FSA). The report details the requirements:

“To register as a crypto asset exchange [in Japan], companies must meet certain criteria. Local companies must be incorporated as a stock company and have a minimum capital of JPY 10 million. An exchange must further ensure that its net assets do not fall below the amount of users’ funds that are stored in a hot wallet.”

As of today, there are 23 exchanges registered with the FSA, although none of them are yet foreign operated (though U.S. exchange OKCoin was recently granted a license) Saito explains why the regulations discourage overseas exchanges:

“Some Chinese exchanges purchased Japanese licenses for exchanges, so it’s open for foreign exchanges to have licenses in Japan. But under the regulations, if foreign crypto exchanges themselves get Japanese licenses, they need to have similar licenses in their countries under the current regulations. There are not so many similar exchanges in foreign countries.”

The research team concluded that the most likely exchanges to be granted licenses would come from countries such as the United States, where regulations are thorough. 

Getting in on the Japanese crypto market early

While local regulations might not be conducive to foreign exchanges at the moment, the research team concluded that now was the ideal time to enter the crypto market in Japan.

They believe the regulatory measures help make Japan stand out as a safe haven for crypto, rather than the wild west of finance that it’s sometimes known for.



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Economist Jeffrey Tucker: ‘Can You Imagine BTC Price if it Had Scaled?’

Economist Jeffrey Tucker sparked a debate with prominent crypto leaders when he argued the BTC price is depressed because it hasn’t scaled.

American Institute for Economic Research editorial director Jeffrey Tucker reignited the long-running Bitcoin scaling debate with a tweet earlier today.

The economist — who has long been a proponent of Bitcoin (BTC) — suggested the current price is much lower than it otherwise would have been because the underlying technology has not been “properly scaled”.

On March 31, Tucker tweeted:

The Tweet expands on comments Tucker made earlier this month on RT, during a panel discussion with noted Bitcoin skeptic Peter Schiff. During the debate he said too much time had been wasted on this “ridiculous scaling problem” which had ultimately prevented mainstream adoption:

“Adoption hasn’t gone far enough and it hasn’t come into consumer use like it should and would have if it had been able to scale. Now we’re seeing what happens when Bitcoin was not properly scaled.” 

Tucker said Bitcoin was designed to thrive in times like the current financial crisis, and suggested the reason it hasn’t is due to its scaling problem:

“Bitcoin was innovated to become a safe haven during times just like this. So why aren’t we seeing Bitcoin become the safe haven that it was developed to be, and was for a number of years?”

Vitalik Buterin and Blockstream weigh in

The BTC scaling issue has been one of the most heated debates in cryptocurrency. The base layer network isn’t able to process transactions quickly enough to enable wide scale, mainstream adoption as a currency. The debate over raising the block size as a solution ultimately led to the Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Bitcoin SV (BSV) forks, while Bitcoin itself adopted the layer two Lightning Network as a scaling solution. 

Tucker’s March 31 tweet sparked a debate among prominent members of Crypto Twitter. Ethereum (ETH) co-founder Vitalik Buterin encouraged the economist to look at the long awaited Ethereum 2.0, which is due to launch this year, stating it will have “high scalability but without the centralization that rely solely on increasing block size.”

This provoked much derision from Bitcoin development company Blockstream’s CEO Adam Back, and CSO Samson Mow, who wrote “Lols” and posted a ‘crying with laughter’ emoji respectively.

Scaling has nothing to do with the price

On chain analyst Willy Woo suggested that scaling has nothing to do with the price or market cap, pointing to gold as an example:

“Gold is $9T. How many transactions per second does gold do? I mean shipping the underlying between vaults. That's BTC main chain. The swaps we do on ETFs and derivatives is Gold's layer 2. That s--t scales, so will BTC's layer 2.”

Bitcoin Advisory founder Pierre Rochard said the price would be the same regardless as scaling is "not the bottleneck for adoption."

Bitcoin proponent Vijay Boyapati argued it was not necessary to imagine a “properly scaled” Bitcoin, as that was Bitcoin Cash: "The price would be $200; the price of BCash. i.e., the market massively discounts what you consider "proper scaling" and greatly values immutability."

Investor and author Tuur Demeester said Tucker's tweet had annoyed him: "Having been in Bitcoin as long as you have you should know better imo — Bitcoin is scaling just fine."

To which Tucker laid down a challenge: “Well, let's get off Twitter and discuss this like gentlemen sometime.”



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Proof of Stake Vs. Proof of Work: Which One Is ‘Fairer’?

This is the first part of a deep dive into the years-long debate between proponents of Proof of Work and Proof of Stake. Which one is better and why?

This is the first of two articles providing a deeper dive into the eternal debate between the Proof of Stake (PoS) and Proof of Work (PoW) consensus algorithms. This part will focus on the basics, while also discussing the issue of wealth concentration and inequality, which is often at the center of any community argument.

Bitcoin (BTC) and many of the original cryptocurrencies were born as pure PoW systems. 

Proof of Stake was first pioneered in 2013 by Peercoin, a project that exists to this day. 

Peercoin’s contribution to the popularity of PoS is likely dwarfed by Ethereum (ETH) and its goal to transition from PoW —  which has turned out to be a very long journey. Projects such as Cardano (ADA) avoided PoW entirely, deciding on PoS after using a formal approach to assess consensus mechanisms. 

The Bitcoin and Monero (XMR) communities remain some of the staunchest proponents of mining and Proof of Work. 

What is a consensus algorithm?

In any blockchain, the consensus algorithm is designed to solve the issue of trust between the participants of a network. Used for payments, the consensus algorithm is the final piece in the complex cryptographic puzzle that makes cryptocurrency work. 

Basic features of a transaction, such as ownership and amount, are easy to verify with the help of public key cryptography, which works through fundamental mathematical properties.

Consensus algorithms exist to mitigate the “double-spend” attack, where a malicious actor is able to spend the same coin twice (or any number of times). Solving this issue requires a deliberate decision on which of the two spends is valid

There are no pure-mathematical solutions to this problem. Instead, consensus algorithms use a combination of cryptography and economic incentives to maintain a functional network.

Bitcoin’s consensus is based on a simple rule — the longest chain of blocks is the only valid one. The system was later termed Nakamoto Consensus, in honor of Bitcoin’s anonymous founder. 

In order to make the concept work, adding blocks to each chain must be relatively difficult. This is where Proof of Work and mining come in. Each block is secured through cryptographic techniques that require miners to commit computing power in order to add blocks. 

As computing power is directly proportional to electricity usage, Bitcoin is secured directly by a fundamental physical quantity — energy.

Under Proof of Stake, the network secures itself through the commitment of a stake — a certain amount of capital in the form of the network’s own tokens. Its security is meant to be derived directly from the perceived economic value of the network — how expensive it is to purchase a majority stake.

But PoW networks also have a close correlation between economic value and security. Miners receive coins as a reward, which means that the higher the value of the coin, the more money they make. 

New miners are incentivized to add more hardware and spend more energy to receive their share of the rewards — which increases security. Over time, the profit for each individual miner trends toward an economic equilibrium dictated by electricity prices. 

As a consequence, the amount of electricity dedicated to mining depends on the coin’s emission rate and market capitalization, while it is largely decoupled from the network’s performance or activity. Many PoS proponents see this as the biggest issue of PoW. 

The energy problem

Cointelegraph spoke with Aggelos Kiayias, the chief scientist of IOHK, one of the entities behind Cardano, to learn more about their decision to use PoS. She said:

“The costs and energy consumption aspects of Proof of Work blockchains were definitely a consideration. It seemed natural to think: ‘is it possible to get a protocol that has a similar type of profile with, for example, Bitcoin’s blockchain, but somehow doesn't have the same energy expenditure?’”

The electricity consumption of Bitcoin mining is significant, with the latest estimate from July 2019 placing it at an annualized value of 70 Terawatt hours. This is close to the total electricity use of a small European country like Austria — although to put that in perspective it is also just 0.28% of the global figure. 

The environmental impact is contested, with a July 2019 report estimating that 74% of Bitcoin mining is done through renewable sources. Proponents of PoW in Monero and Bitcoin often argue that the energy used in mining is not ‘wasted’, as it is necessary to ensure the resilience and decentralization of the consensus algorithm.

Jake Wocom-Pyatt, project lead for Decred, agrees with the environmental concerns but doesn't believe that PoS is necessarily the answer. Speaking with Cointelegraph, he said:

“PoW is indeed environmentally unfriendly. However, it must be considered that it is the first and simplest consensus system proposed. There are surely ways to improve PoW in the future.”

Though Proof of Stake also involves energy consumption for the delegation process, it is generally agreed to be far less energy-intensive than an equivalent Proof of Work solution. However, many argue that it compromises on too many things in order to achieve this.

Trusting PoS history

According to Wocom-Pyatt, pure PoS is reversible, which means that its history can be changed. This is similar to an argument made in a 2015 paper by Andrew Poelstra, a mathematician at Bitcoin development company Blockstream.

Poelstra argued that it is impossible for a user to rely on the proofs of stake to claim that a particular block is valid — because that stake itself depends on previous stakes within that blockchain, which are ultimately based on nothing. He wrote:

“Because there is no universal time (and to new users, no universal history), there is no way to differentiate users who are ‘now’ holding the currency from users who ‘were’ holding the currency.” 

PoW history, by contrast, can be mathematically verified to be correct and can only be counterfeited by recreating its entire mining history. As noted by Poelstra, PoS proponents will argue that as long as short-term history can be secured, changes in old blocks will “contradict the history as remembered by participants of the system.”

This, according to him, “changes the trust model from that of Bitcoin” to one where consensus relies on always-online peers. While he believes that this could theoretically work, he argues that such a trust model is “vulnerable to legal pressure, attacks on ‘trusted’ entities and network attacks” — that it’s less censorship-resistant and decentralized, in short. 

PoS proponents agree that a certain aspect of extra-protocol social coordination and consensus is necessary to maintain its security, but they argue that PoW systems ultimately rely on social consensus as well.

There is no clear winner in this line of argument. It is a philosophical debate that hinges on each individual’s opinion about whether actively relying on social consensus is an acceptable compromise to reduce electricity usage. It is perhaps for this reason that the debate has since moved into other contentious topics. 

Acquiring stake Vs. acquiring work

Economic fairness is an often debated point for both types of consensus. In line with the principle of decentralization, both sides seek to minimize issues such as unfair access to the ecosystem or increasing wealth disparity.

Proof of Stake is often considered to be a system where “the rich get richer” due to the way it rewards the ownership of capital. In a Reddit AMA, Ethereum Foundation representatives argued that the opposite is true:

“In both bases, the owning of an asset allows for seeking gains on that asset. The difference between the two is that in PoS, the mapping of capital to gains is much more direct and fair (i.e. buy token, lock token, perform duties, gain X). Where in PoW, the mapping of capital to gains is highly dependent upon extra-protocol factors.”

In the Cardano network, Kiayias emphasized that PoS makes no distinction between the “rich man’s dollar” and the “poor man’s dollar.” He explained:

“Proof of Work systems, if you look at them, cannot give you a perfectly egalitarian version [of consensus] [...] Whereas in a Proof of Stake system, in principle, you could have a situation where one dollar in the pocket of the poor person would be equal in strength to a dollar in the pocket of a rich person.”

The CEO of Equilibrium, a project designing an algorithmic stablecoin on EOS, also agreed with the Ethereum Foundation’s argument:

“I totally support this assessment. Staking highly fungible tokens doesn't create any entry barriers and doesn't lead to any kind of disparity as long as the given tokens are accessible on the open market.”

They share the opinion that mining increases wealth disparity due to the accumulation of “extra-protocol” factors. Bulk discounts, early or even exclusive access to new hardware — all of these make Proof of Work inherently unfair, according to many PoS proponents.

Alejandro De La Torre, VP at Poolin, currently the largest Bitcoin mining pool, believes the exact opposite — that extra-protocol advantages make Proof of Work fair. Speaking with Cointelegraph, he said:

“In my opinion, the possibility of creating a new chip, accelerating the OS of a mining rig, or literally any other discovery that gives you an advantage in PoW mining is essentially the reason why PoW is the fairer 'cryptoeconomic' protocol. [...] PoS only relies on having the core asset; and the more you have the more you make. There is no other way to improve your situation in PoS mining, barring of course just purchasing more of the underlying staked asset.”

Equality of opportunity is what matters

Cointelegraph also spoke with Campbell R. Harvey, Professor of International Business at Duke University, to learn more about the concept of economic disparity and how it relates to consensus mechanisms. Summarizing his position on the wealth disparity gap in blockchain economics, he said:

“Yes, one critique of PoS is that the rich get richer. In PoW, it is more of a business operation with the miners not needing to hold BTC, ETH, etc. In PoS, you need to hold.”

Harvey argues that the two systems have different economic natures, focusing on the business operation aspect of PoW — where miners can have negative profit, get outcompeted or fail entirely. He explained:

“I don’t think modern mining is an important factor for wealth distribution. Indeed, a large amount of mining becomes obsolete not because of age but because of fluctuations in BTC prices.”

When asked whether bulk discounts contribute toward wealth disparity, he replied that it is a normal economic phenomenon called scale efficiency. Mining is “no different than any other industry” according to him.

Harvey then explained that wealth inequality is generally expected in any free market system due to “differential natural endowment of skill” and luck. He continued:

“We usually focus on inequality of opportunity rather than wealth. In a free market, anyone with a good idea should be able to make it to the top 1%.”

From an opportunity standpoint, Proof of Stake systems are generally fair. Harvey pointed to the model of Delegated Proof of Stake (dPoS) as an example, where “even small holders can participate in the miner rewards by delegating some of their stake.”

Staking pools and delegation models are generally present in any PoS system though, and they could be implemented through extra-protocol measures as well — similar to PoW mining pools.

But De La Torre argues that equality of opportunity applies to the ASIC mining industry as well. He explained:

“Historically, machines last a good three or four years before they are made obsolete — break, difficulty too high, etc. [...] Like we are seeing now, with the ending of the mighty [Bitmain] S9 era, the entire cycle of the mining industry begins again. This cycle is the creation of new miners, new OS [operating systems], the sourcing of cheaper electricity around the globe. This cycle also brings in new participants that want to take advantage of PoW mining.”

Mining is not always the same

Kristy Leigh-Minehan, former CTO of Genesis Mining and one of the creators of ProgPow, believes that many of the equality concerns against PoW are specifically related to ASIC mining. When using consumer hardware to mine, their wide availability diminishes many of the supposedly unfair competitive practices. She explained:

“CPUs and GPUs have existing supply chains that are used to distribute to hundreds of thousands of individuals, every day, all over the world. So when you build a Proof of Work algorithm that takes advantage of that hardware, you're piggybacking on that supply chain and that distribution channel, instead of creating and inventing your own.”

In her view, ensuring that “Alice and Bob have the same capability of earning a coin” is crucial in designing a proper PoW algorithm. She conceded that miners will always tend to specialize and optimize their operations, so the key is to ensure that miners compete fairly “on the CapEx side.”

Capital expenditure (CapEx) for ASICs can be reduced significantly for large players due to scale effects. On the other hand, GPUs and other consumer hardware are much cheaper and easier to source for average people, according to Minehan.

The fundamental contribution of PoW

Minehan is a strong believer in the contribution to network activity from GPU miners — especially early on. She emphasized that “humans don't want to spend their hard-earned fiat on magical internet money”. On the other hand, she believes contributing with already-owned computer power is a much more suitable proposition.

In truth, the concept of an initial coin offering (ICO) is, essentially, spending fiat on “magical internet money.” But this could not have happened by itself — it is the result of the groundwork laid by Bitcoin and Ethereum. 

The former legitimized the entire concept of “magical internet money.” More than 17 months passed between the Bitcoin genesis block in January 2009 and the famous Bitcoin pizza transaction on May 22, 2010 — the first to give BTC a fiat value.

Ethereum built on this by being one of the first ICOs in 2013, and proving that the concept can work.

Distributing the initial Bitcoins would have been essentially impossible in a staking environment. It is only after the network is stabilized, Minehan argues, that the transition to staking can occur.

Wocom-Pyatt also highlighted PoW as a “high quality source of entropy” to ensure a fair distribution of tokens. Peercoin also relied on PoW for the initial distribution.

The systems are different, not necessarily better or worse

In conclusion, debates on the economic equality of Proof of Stake and Proof of Work are perhaps the wrong way to look about it, as Harvey suggested. It is difficult to conclude that one system centralizes wealth more than the other. 

In most PoW systems, the miners can gain unfair advantages over others — but they can also fail and lose their entire investment through no fault of their own, something that is normally impossible in PoS systems.

Wocom-Pyatt, whose project is a hybrid, summarized that “pure PoS is substantially different from pure PoW.”

He argues that hybridizing them allows Decred to benefit from the best of both worlds. The PoW side “works well as a means to gamify timestamping” and thus ensure immutability, but PoS is still needed to align incentives for governance.

Wocom-Pyatt believes that miners’ interests are not as strongly aligned with the cryptocurrency as for stakers, which leads to “shortcomings in the context of governance.”

Decred’s experience may suggest it is misguided to debate PoS in opposition to PoW. Combining both appears to shore up any perceived weaknesses that they may have individually — something that is not applicable to other blockchain debates, such as Ethash versus ProgPow.

But from a governance standpoint, the recent exchange takeover of Steem highlighted that those who control tokens are necessarily the owners of those tokens.

The second part of this series will feature an in-depth examination of how governance works in PoS and PoW.



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‘Prime Brokerage’ for Crypto: Apifiny Launches Institutional Platform to Connect Exchange Liquidity

Apifiny’s GlobalX is being released today, and is set to connect global crypto markets to provide a unified liquidity pool and new strategies for institutional investors.

Institutions will now be able to trade on every single crypto market simultaneously thanks to GlobalX, an API platform launched on March 31 by San Francisco-based firm Apifiny. The startup hired former executives of Google X, Kraken and AlphaPoint to promote the service.

Specifically, Josh Li will act as Apifiny’s chief business officer, having previous experience in Google and Google X, Alphabet’s innovation arm. Michael Fertman will lead the B2B marketing efforts as VP Marketing of Apifiny, coming from the security tokens startup AlphaPoint.

Finally, Scott Eilbeck was brought on as VP of strategic partnerships and institutional sales. He recently served as head of Over the Counter (OTC) markets at Kraken, while counting JP Morgan and Bear Stearns under past experiences.

Cointelegraph spoke with Li, Fertman and Apifiny’s CTO, Ashu Swami, to learn more about the GlobalX platform.

Connecting global liquidity

GlobalX works by integrating all of the world’s exchanges into one platform available to institutional traders. The firm opens business accounts with as many exchanges as possible across the entire world, while presenting a unified interface to its clients.

As Swami explained, the immediate reason for this is simple — it allows institutional traders to make large orders without depressing the price on one specific exchange. 

By distributing the order across global markets, the traders tap into global crypto liquidity, instead of just one crypto exchange. But there are other benefits, as he elaborated:

“These quantitative hedge funds are in the business of finding patterns. Even with things like ‘how does the sunrise and clouds affect stock prices?’ Very hypothetical things. And by being able to access the global prices in regional markets, they can create and implement different kinds of new strategies.”

Furthermore, some exchanges also limit the number of orders in a given period of time. Spreading the load between multiple platforms would allow to decrease latency and increase trading frequency, as Swami explained.

The core proposition of GlobalX is “increasing the bandwidth” available for institutional trading desks. As Fertman highlighted, trading on multiple exchanges is complex:

“If you look at before, in order to execute these global strategies, an institutional investor would have to set up accounts on multiple exchanges, globally. In order to execute rapidly, they would need separate sets of APIs to different exchanges. [...] On the front end, it is the equivalent of calling 17 different brokers to execute one trade, and not through one interface.”

GlobalX also provides a function that few institutional trading desks can have on their own — access to all local fiat-to-crypto markets.

Connecting them can also be a way to use crypto for trading opportunities between traditional foreign exchange markets, Swami said.

Is this a crypto broker?

Crypto exchanges are, in traditional terms, a combination of both an exchange and a broker. Generally, only very high-value clients can directly access traditional exchanges, while retail buyers can only do so through brokers.

GlobalX can be seen as reintroducing the concept of a broker, as its clients will not necessarily have accounts with the exchanges they trade on. When asked about this, Li replied:

“I think what we are doing is somewhat unique in that we're trying to really build this new way of doing business. [...] We're not directly competing with exchanges, we see them as strategic partners. We’re trying to help solve this global problem where liquidity pools are isolated to only a specific country or set of customers.”

Swami highlighted that the worlds of crypto and traditional securities are very different. He replied:

“This industry is evolving in an organic fashion. And it's very hard to use the existing securities industry’s labels and slap them on the activities that we are doing. But if you had to draw the closest analogy then I think our role is that of a prime broker.”

In traditional markets, prime brokerage is usually provided by investment banks to hedge funds to satisfy some specialized needs.

GlobalX could be considered as a sign that the crypto industry is maturing as an asset class. Its team stressed that connecting global liquidity could finally bring large institutional investors on board.



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Ex-Royal Mint Team’s Crypto Insurance Now Provides $1M Cover for All Civic Wallets

Coincover is now providing automatic insurance cover on all new signups for Civic's hot wallet.

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BCH, BSV Block Halvings Will Force Miners to Bitcoin (BTC) — Report

Two halvings in April will spark a month of increasing attention to BTC until its own halving takes place, despite its lack of profitability, says Coin Metrics.

Bitcoin (BTC) miners will continue to capitulate due to low prices, but upcoming events for Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Bitcoin SV (BSV) will fuel the turmoil, says a new forecast.

In the latest edition of its State of the Network reports on March 31, Coin Metrics argued that Bitcoin was in a spiral of miner capitulation. This, it said, would get worse before it got better.

Coin Metrics expects “pattern of capitulation”

Despite BTC/USD recovering over 70% in two weeks since hitting lows of $3,700, prices are still “almost certainly declined below the breakeven price” for less efficient miners.

This is supported by the recent drop in Bitcoin’s mining difficulty, which at nearly 16% was the largest negative move since 2011. Before the mining sector recovers, more pain is in store.

“We expect miners to follow a cycle of decreased profit margins, increased selling, capitulation, and a culling of the least efficient miners from the network,” the report summarizes. 

“Once this cycle is complete, the miner industry should return to a healthier state that is supportive of future price increases.”

Bitcoin mining difficulty 6-month chart. Source: Blockchain

Bitcoin mining difficulty 6-month chart. Source: Blockchain

Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV drop halving bomb

In the short term, however, turbulent times will continue to hit miners and impact Bitcoin. Next month, hard forks BCH and BSV will both undergo a block reward halving — reducing the number of coins awarded to miners each block by 50%.

Bitcoin’s own halving will only occur in mid-May and will halve the supply for miners from 12.5 BTC to 6.25 BTC.

This gives a one-month window during which miners will direct more hash power to BTC, as its block reward will be higher, despite the increased costs, says Coin Metrics.

“When Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV halve their block rewards, this should force miners to direct even more hash power to Bitcoin as it will still have a 12.5 native unit block reward (instead of 6.25) for about a month longer,” the report adds.

“Therefore, we should expect difficulty increases for Bitcoin that should further squeeze profit margins for all miners.”

As Cointelegraph reported, analysts, particularly those who support the stock-to-flow price model for Bitcoin, are keenly awaiting the impact of the halving. At some point in 2021, and until 2024, stock-to-flow states, BTC/USD should trade at an average of $100,000.



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Bitfury Becomes Latest Crypto Industry Player to Join COVID-19 Research Project

Blockchain development firm Bitfury is re-assigning the computing power it uses for digital currency transaction processing to COVID-19 research.

Blockchain development firm Bitfury is re-assigning the computing power it uses for digital currency transaction processing to COVID-19 research.

In an announcement on March 31, the company revealed that it had been allocating its high-powered GPU-enabled computing nodes to run COVID-19 calculations as of March 20.

The redirection of Bitfury’s resources is contributing to a distributed computing endeavor, Folding@Home (F@H), created by a consortium of scientific research labs across North America, Europe and Asia.

In the wake of the global COVID-19 pandemic, F@H has launched a project to run simulations of the virus’ molecular structure in an effort to contribute to the development of effective therapeutics.

The project, which demands enormous computational power, has been seeking donations of computational resources from enterprises, organizations and individuals.

Bitfury, for its part, has reportedly to date used its nodes to complete over 1,300 calculations for the F@H initiative.

In a statement, Bitfury CEO Valery Vavilov said he was “confident that this project from Folding at Home, alongside the work of many researchers and doctors, will significantly advance our understanding and treatment of this disease.”

Strong backing from the crypto industry

As Cointelegraph has previously reported, Bitfury is just the latest of a series of crypto industry players to join the F@H project.

The project has received support from decentralized computing network Golem, and blockchain platform Tezos (XTZ), who earmarked a donation pool of several hundred XTZ to be awarded to the largest F@H donor at the end of this month.

As of March 12, Tezos has had 20 teams contributing resources to the project. U.S.-based Ether (ETH) miner Coreweave has diverted the computational power of roughly 6,000 GPUs, as well as major chip manufacturer Nvidia. In mid-March, Nvidia also appealed to individual gamers to contribute their own unused GPU computing resources to the research effort.



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During Coronavirus Pandemic, IRS Cuts Taxpayers Some Much Needed Slack

In response to the coronavirus pandemic, the Internal Revenue Service tries to help taxpayers to not lose this economic battle.

Crypto communities and the United States Internal Revenue Service haven’t exactly had a love fest over the last five years. It started in 2014, when the IRS said crypto was property, and it hasn’t got much better since. In addition to sending those 10,000 “beware” letters and trying to get crypto exchanges to turn over customer lists, the IRS has even gone so far as to alter the most hallowed tax form, Form 1040, to ask a crypto-specific question.

However, the IRS is actually making a big effort to cut all taxpayers — and that includes the crypto community too — some much needed slack during this unprecedented time. It started when the head of the IRS, Commissioner Chuck Rettig, announced the “People First Initiative.” Need to pay your taxes in installments? The IRS will help and has a well-worn process for working out installment payments.

What if you have an existing installment agreement, but can’t make your payments right now? The IRS says installment payments due between April 1 and July 15 are suspended. It says this also applies in the case of direct deposit installment agreements, so you can suspend payments during this period. It says it will not default any installment agreements during this period. How about an offer in compromise, also known as an OIC?

As with installment agreements, the IRS allows some people to pay a part of what they owe and have the rest written off by the IRS. It is based on ability to pay and other factors, and there is an established procedure to go through to try to get the IRS to accept your proposal. The IRS is giving people more time to submit materials.

Haven’t filed a return? The IRS says over 1 million households that haven’t filed tax returns during the last three years are owed refunds, so fill out those returns! Once delinquent returns are filed, taxpayers who owe money should consider an installment agreement or an OIC.

Tax liens and levies are also generally being suspended during this period. A Notice of Federal Tax Lien is normally sent out almost automatically when the IRS is owed taxes, serving as a way to insure by public notice that it will eventually get paid. A levy, on the other hand, involves the IRS actually collecting owed taxes by allowing it to take funds directly from a bank account upon deposit. The fact that the IRS is trying to ease up on both during this time is significant. Even new passport debt certifications when delinquent tax debts exceed $50,000 are on hold too.

New tax audits are on hold too. One exception is when the IRS needs to act right away to protect the government’s interest in preserving the applicable statute of limitations. Usually, the statute of limitations is three years, but that’s not always the case: Here are some rules everyone should know. The IRS will continue to take steps where necessary to protect all applicable statutes of limitations. The IRS may ask taxpayers to extend the statute, or when needed, will issue notices of deficiency.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Robert W. Wood is a tax lawyer representing clients worldwide from the office of Wood LLP in San Francisco. He is the author of numerous tax books and writes frequently about taxes for Forbes, Tax Notes and other publications.



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Crypto Holders Still Face Issues Reporting Tax Liabilities, Survey of CPAs Finds

Certified Public Accountants familiar with crypto largely believe their clients might face audits or penalties for under-reporting holdings in past years, according to a survey.

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Crypto Conference Defies COVID-19 Lockdown by Hosting in Virtual Realm

The coronavirus lockdown has not stopped the annual Coinfest Conference, which has relocated to the digital realm of Decentraland for a week of games, art, prizes and... dancing.

The COVID-19 crisis may have put a stop to millions of sports events, work conferences and meet-ups across the world, but it has not halted those in the cryptocurrency space.

The Coinfest Conference, which runs until April 4, has found a way to defy the coronavirus lockdown by setting up shop in the digital blockchain realm of Decentraland. 

The first day of the virtual conference kicked off on March 30th, beginning with a round of games that offered users the chance to win MANA tokens — one of Decentraland’s native currencies.

Nearby museums and art galleries (seen below) offer visitors the chance to take in original art exhibits hosted within the virtual realm. 

In-world screenshot of the Museum District

In-world screenshot of the Museum District

April 1 sees attendees relocate to coordinate point (61,-27) to Decentraland’s MetaZone, described as a “virtual fairground [...] with fireworks, food stalls, gazebos and gardens.” The main attraction will be a four-story tall tower of blockchain games, with players given the chance to win more MANA tokens. 

The third day of the conference takes place across multiple coordinate points, including a nightclub, the Sugar Club. Also open for visitors is free entry to Ross Tower — a digital tribute to imprisoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht. Five venues in total will comprise the landscape for a treasure-hunt, with winners being rewarded with Ether (ETH).

The final day of the event takes place at the Decentraland Conference Center on April 4, where presentations will be made via a virtual projector. Nearby attractions include a meditation garden, a temple and a theater district. A dance party has also been scheduled for 5pm UTC at a nearby cafe. 

In-world screenshot of the Conference Center

In-world screenshot of the Conference Center

Relocation to Decentraland’s Digital Realm

The Coinfest Conference is a free annual event that normally runs in multiple locations around the world simultaneously. On March 17, the creators of the event notified followers on Twitter that all event locations hosted in Europe and North America would be canceled due to the coronavirus lockdown. 

The hosts initially hoped the Africa-based locations would still go ahead, but by March 21 it was announced that those too had been canceled

Decentraland (MANA) launched in 2017, and comprises over 90,000 “parcels” of digital land — represented by LAND tokens. The dimensions of those parcels are 10 square meters, equating to a virtual landscape that’s 9 square kilometers in size (not including vertical space).

In May 2019 a 64-block parcel of land known as “The Secret of Satoshis Tea Garden” sold for $80,663, or 1,299,999 MANA.



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Institution-Focused Crypto Trading Platform Reports 737% Revenue Increase in 2019

Hong Kong Stock Exchange-listed BC Group, the operator of institution-focused digital assets trading platform OSL, reported a 737% increase in revenue in 2019.

Hong Kong Stock Exchange-listed BC Group, the operator of institution-focused digital assets trading platform OSL, reported a 737% increase in revenue in 2019.

On March 31, BC Group revealed that its OSL digital assets platform had been its largest 2019 earner, accounting for 44% of the Group’s revenues — up from just 6% in 2018.

The OSL digital assets platform offers institutions services that include over-the-counter brokerage, Software-as-a-Service tools, custodial services and institutional digital asset exchange. 

Regulatory progress

Total year-on-year revenue for BC Group in 2019 was RMB72 million ($10 million) — up 737% from the previous year, as noted above. 

This increase in revenue was accompanied by OSL’s submission of an application for licenses to conduct regulated activities under the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission’s new regulatory framework for digital asset trading platforms.

Submitted in November 2019, the license application is judged by the firm to be a milestone in its digital assets business development, with BC Group CFO Steve Zhang stating:

“We view the introduction of licensing for digital assets in Hong Kong in 2020 as an inflection point. This will galvanise institutional participation in the digital asset space and accelerate growth of BC Group and our OSL digital asset platform business as traditional securities continue to digitize.”

Noting that the digital asset securities market is forecast to grow by over 5,000% to $11 trillion by 2024, BC Group says it has focused its energies on strengthening management and rebranding is digital assets products and services. 

Strategies include opening a new OSL office in Singapore in July 2019, intensifying SaaS sales efforts to major institutions, and issuing a $36 million share placement in January 2020 to fund continued expansion.

Despite the turmoil in world markets amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the firm does not believe this will impede the transition of financial services towards digital assets. 

In February, Cointelegraph reported that Fidelity International had acquired a stake in BC Group, purchasing 17 million shares for a 5.6% ownership position.



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Bitcoin’s Recent Recovery Won’t Salvage a Terrible Month for Prices

While bitcoin has recovered sharply from recent lows below $4,000, the cryptocurrency is still on track to end March with a double-digit price loss.

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‘MLB Champions’ Downplays ETH, Aims for Mass Market in New Game Reboot

Blockchain game MLB Champions is rolling out a slew of new gameplay features while reducing its reliance on Ethereum.

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BMW’s Blockchain Solution for Supply Chains to Roll Out in 2020

World-famous car manufacturer BMW Group plans to roll out its blockchain supply chain solution to 10 suppliers this year.

World-famous car manufacturer BMW Group plans to roll out its blockchain supply chain solution to 10 suppliers this year.

Dubbed “PartChain,” the platform has already been successfully tested by BMW in 2019, an official announcement on March 31 revealed. 

In its early version, PartChain is designed to ensure traceability and immediate data transparency for automobile components across complex supply chains that engage multiple international parties. 

The 2019 pilot implemented the solution for purchasing and tracking front lights, with the involvement of two of BMW Group’s total 31 plants, as well as three locations of the supplier Automotive Lighting.

Andreas Wendt — a member of BMW AG’s Board of Management, who is responsible for the Group’s purchasing and supplier network — said that BMW now wants to expand the project to “a large number” of other suppliers, with 10 selected for 2020.

Combining blockchain with cloud technology

In the long-term, Wendt said that BMW’s vision is to use blockchain to create “an open platform that will allow data within supply chains to be exchanged and shared safely and anonymized across the industry.” 

Whereas the pilot had been limited to component tracking, BMW sees the platform’s future applications extending to tracing critical raw materials for manufacturing “from mine to smelter.”

Together with blockchain — which provides for tamper-proof, verifiable data collection and transaction —  PartChain uses cloud technologies from Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. 

Intra-industry development

Wendt revealed that BMW now intends to share the PartChain solution with other members of the Mobility Open Blockchain Initiative (MOBI), which BMW co-founded back in 2018. 

As Cointelegraph reported at the time, MOBI is the result of a collaboration between BMW, GM, Ford and Renault — as well as high-profile blockchain, tech and engineering firms including Bosch, Hyperledger, IBM and IOTA.

The project has led to the creation of the MOBI Vehicle Identity Standard, which aims to establish a blockchain-based database for Vehicle Identity Numbers. This supports unique digital certificates for information such as vehicle identity, ownership, warranties and current mileage, which can be securely stored in an electronic wallet.



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SEC Claims Telegram Injunction Applies to ‘Any Person or Entity’

The SEC has opposed Telegram’s request for clarification as to whether the injunction granted against its Gram distribution has jurisdiction outside of the United States.

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has opposed Telegram’s request for clarity regarding the geographic scope of a court injunction barring the company from distributing its Gram (GRAM) tokens.

In a letter to Judge Castel dated March 30, the SEC asserts that the injunction “unambiguously, and properly, applies to Telegram’s delivery of Grams to ‘any person or entity’ [...] and requires no clarification.”

The Gram tokens correspond to the firm’s $1.7 billion initial coin offering that raised money to launch the Telegram Open Network — or TON — in 2018.

SEC claims injunction unambiguously applies to “any person or entity”

On March 27, Telegram’s lawyers filed a letter requesting that the court clarify whether the court’s March 24 injunction has jurisdiction outside of the United States.

The letter noted that while the Supreme Court has previously recognized “a ‘presumption against extraterritorial applications’ of the U.S. securities laws.’” As such, Telegram is seeking to distribute tokens to the investors that represent the $1.27 billion that the firm raised from outside of the United States.

The SEC describes Telegram’s letter as “procedurally barred and legally meritless” — citing its injunction request, which sought to prevent Telegram from “delivering Grams to any person or entity or taking any other steps to effect any unregistered offer or sale of Grams.”

Despite the firm’s letter being “styled as a request for ‘clarity,’” the SEC asserts that “Telegram’s request is really a motion for reconsideration in disguise.”

TON community may seek to launch network despite court ruling

On March 24, Judge Castel ruled that the SEC had “shown a substantial likelihood of success” in seeking to prove that Telegram’s token issuance would distribute unregistered securities — granting a preliminary injunction against the firm from delivering Gram tokens to investors. Telegram immediately appealed Judge Castel’s ruling.

Two days later, the founder of the TON Community Foundation revealed to Cointelegraph that the community was considering launching the network itself, as the code is open-source. Daniel Perez, the head of TON Spain, added:

“No one can prevent the launch of TON by any other entity, person or a community, [be]cause TON is a decentralized open-source solution. Already, there are two different test networks, and within the community, there is at least 1 group planning to launch the third.”



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Voatz Bug Bounty Kicked Off of HackerOne Platform

HackerOne has removed blockchain-based voting platform Voatz’s bug bounty program following a number of issues.

For the first time in its history, bug bounty and vulnerability disclosure platform HackerOne has kicked a company off its platform.

Blockchain-based voting platform Voatz has long touted its bug bounty program through HackerOne when asked about the security of its blockchain-enabled mobile voting app. 

Founded in 2012, HackerOne connects businesses with pen testers and cybersecurity researchers. It has hosted over 1,800 customer programs, but the beleaguered Massachusetts-based company’s bug bounty is no longer one of them.

“As a platform, we work tirelessly to foster that mutually beneficial relationship between security teams and the researcher community,” HackerOne spokesperson Samantha Spielman told Cointelegraph, “We partner with organizations that prioritize acting in good faith towards the security researcher community and providing adequate access to researchers for testing. Because the Voatz program did not adhere to either of those requirements, we terminated our partnership in March 2020.”

In a statement, a Voatz spokesperson attributed HackerOne’s decision to boot them off the platform to “pressure from a small group of researchers” who “believe Voatz reported a researcher to the FBI.” In fact, Voatz reported the student to the jurisdiction which then reported it to the FBI.

Voatz faced criticism after a student security researcher was referred to the FBI over what the company says was an intrusion attempt—even though that research appears to have been protected by the safe harbor statement in the company’s bug bounty program. After the FBI referral made headlines, Voatz retroactively updated its HackerOne bug bounty program terms to narrow the scope of its safe harbor policy, making it unclear whether it even provided full legal protection.

“Trust is paramount throughout the bug bounty model between security teams, hackers and the platform. Once trust is broken, it’s hard to rebuild. While Voatz was able to surface and resolve vulnerabilities through their bug bounty program, the program was no longer productive for either party,” said Spielman.

Independent security researcher and avid bug bounty hunter Jack Cable said that Voatz was slow to even confirm the two bug bounty reports he filed. In one instance, he found a vulnerability—Voatz storing private keys from Stack Overflow on its app—that Voatz said had no role in its election process. However, a security audit by Trail of Bits suggested it was in use in certain functionality and was listed as a high-security bug.

“There are a lot of cases where they tried to downplay the severity of something or weren’t too clear about whether it was even a vulnerability. Overall, it was just not a very productive experience,” Cable said.

Cable also found his IP address blocked when testing the app, though he says it is unclear whether this was automated. “There were a couple times when I was testing and I was no longer able to even on their staging environment because my IP address was blocked,” he said.

MIT researchers who identified serious security flaws with Voatz found many vulnerabilities that would have been outside of the scope of the bug bounty program, had they gone through it. Instead, they went through CISA. “We wanted the research to speak for itself, and had legal concerns about Voatz’s unprofessional response to prior independent security research, as has been documented in multiple news outlets,” the researchers wrote in an FAQ

Cable pointed to Voatz’s “general hostility to security research as a whole.” Voatz denied security vulnerabilities described in an MIT report, even after it was confirmed by Trail of Bits, the auditing firm it hired. “On one hand, they're saying, ‘come tell us about the vulnerabilities you find.’ But then when people actually find vulnerabilities, they deny that they even exist,” he said.

“They're clearly not receptive to security research. HackerOne has a responsibility to protect not only its customers, but also hackers on its platform as soon as the company starts crossing that line. I think HackerOne had to act, so I’m glad that they did in this case.”

Voatz said it plans to announce a comprehensive bug bounty program in the coming days.



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Bitcoin Starts Strongest Quarter Q2 With Price Down Just 10% YTD

Quarterly performance for Bitcoin has stabilized after its drop to $3,700 two weeks ago, while Q2 is historically the best three months for BTC/USD.

Bitcoin (BTC) has in total suffered just 10% from the coronavirus outbreak which obliterated stocks and caused the United States to print $6 trillion.

That was according to the latest quarterly price data from monitoring resource Skew.com on March 31, which showed that for Q1 2020, BTC/USD is only down by around 10.7%. 

Bitcoin streets ahead of macro assets in 2020

At press time, the pair remained higher after seeking new support at $6,500 on Monday. 

At those levels, the pair is just $700 lower than its position at the start of 2020, and $3,800 beneath its current year-to-date all-time high of around $10,300. 

Bitcoin has advanced 75% in the two weeks since hitting its quarterly low — in a volatile period, that recovery at one point reached 90% as markets peaked at over $7,000 on some exchanges.

Bitcoin versus U.S. 10-year bond yields, 1-year chart

Bitcoin versus U.S. 10-year bond yields, 1-year chart. Source: Skew

As such, Bitcoin now looks increasingly resilient as an investment option versus traditional markets, which are still trailing much more as a result of coronavirus. 

That was despite intervention by central banks on a scale never before seen in history — as Cointelegraph noted, the U.S. money printing exercise alone recreated the country’s entire GDP of 1990 and added it to the dollar supply.

Indicator flashes green as lucrative Q2 looms

Statistically, Q2 in a given year tends to be the most profitable for Bitcoin holders. Since 2013, just one Q2 has delivered negative returns, Skew reveals, with average gains totaling 65%.

Bitcoin quarterly returns since 2014

Bitcoin quarterly returns since 2014. Source: Skew

Signs of potential are becoming visible on some indicators. As Bloomberg reported on Tuesday, the GTI Vera Convergence Divergence Indicator is giving the Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index its first “buy” signal in three months.

The mood among analysts is also turning more optimistic. In his latest forecast on Monday, veteran trader Tone Vays said that he no longer expected BTC/USD to find new lows of less than $3,700. 

Earlier in March, he had warned that Bitcoin could plunge to as low as $2,800. Even if this were still to happen, he added, it would not pose a threat as long it was before May’s block reward halving event.



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Australian Crypto Exchange CoinSpot Wins ISO Security Accreditation

CoinSpot says it's jumped through the hoops to meet the internationally recognized ISO standard.

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Civic Wallet Now Offers $1M ‘FDIC-Like Insurance’ for Crypto

Civic Wallet is now offering “FDIC-like insurance” for cryptocurrency holdings worth up to $1,000,000.

Civic Wallet is a multi-signature non-custodial wallet that now comes with a $1,000,000 guarantee from Coincover.

Civic Technologies (CVC) has been known in the crypto space as one of the leading providers of decentralized identity and is now purportedly the first company to offer a non-custodial wallet with $1,000,000 protection. The wallet is currently in private beta.

Speaking to Cointelegraph, Civic co-founder and CEO, Vinny Lingham compared its key feature to the protection offered by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC):

“This is the first time that both technical and non-technical users can feel safe about their holdings. Until now, people had to keep their coins in the cold storage, but now they don’t have to worry about it as their holdings are insured up to $1,000,000 just like a bank account with the FDIC.”

Coincover CEO, David Janczewski said, “Coincover is not an insurance company, we like to think of ourselves as ‘protection and security company for cryptocurrency’, for the insurance, we work with Lloyd’s of London underwriters.”

Inheritance benefits

This being a multi-signature wallet, one key is stored by the user, another by the custodian BitGo, and the third one, currently by Civic, but will eventually migrate to Coincover. According to Lingham, one of the main benefits of this insurance is that in case Civic goes under, users will not lose their coins. 

Another major advantage is the ability of legal heirs to recover funds through Coincover. For now, the coverage is only available to the United States residents but in the future, it will be extended globally and will include all the coins supported by BitGo.

Lingham noted that the coverage is free, but in the future Civic may start charging a fee on the accounts containing over $1,000,000 worth of cryptocurrency. 

Civic Wallet users must still abide by stringent Know Your Customer requirements by supplying their government-issued identification and subjecting their visage to facial recognition software. 

Users will also be able to connect their bank accounts and buy crypto without leaving the wallet. 

As wallets containing higher amounts of cryptocurrency continue to grow in number, an insurance policy could not have come at a better time.



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Crypto Markets Can Never Close, and That’s a Good Thing

Should markets temporarily close even temporarily to calm investor panic? Noelle Acheson says no while crypto markets can’t. Both are good things.

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Coinbase Reports Record Bitcoin Buying Amid March 12 Crash

Despite March 12 hosting a record daily drop in the price of Bitcoin, traders on Coinbase’s retail platform were buying the dip.

Leading United States-based cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase has published a report providing detailed insights into how its users responded to the violent crypto market crash suffered on March 12.

While many in mainstream markets were panicking as President Trump’s travel ban sent shockwaves across the global economy, crypto traders on Coinbase were mobilizing funds to buy the dip, according to a report published March 31.

Retail traders on Coinbase rally to buy the dip 

Coinbase’s retail platform saw “record-breaking” trading activity throughout the 48 hours during and after the aggressive slump compared to its 12-month averages.

Bitcoin (BTC) was the most-traded crypto asset during the crash, with Coinbase estimating total BTC trading was six times the average during the crash — fuelled by three and a half times the average number of active traders and a buy-ratio of 69%.

Ether (ETH) was the second-most popular cryptocurrency during the dip, with five times the average number of ETH traders driving a seven times increase in volume with a 67% buy-ratio.

All other altcoins combined also saw a seven times increase in trade driven by five times the typical number of traders on average — with XRP, Tezos (XTZ), Chainlink (LINK), Litecoin (LTC), and Bitcoin Cash (BCH) cited among the most popular markets. 

Crypto crash drive increase in buying pressure

$1.3 billion in fiat and cryptocurrency were deposited onto Coinbase amid the sell-off, comprising five times the typical average.

The influx of capital was accompanied by double the usual number of new-user signups, and triple the typical number of active traders. In total, the surge in user activity drove trade volume equating to six times the average. 

Coinbase also notes a more than 10% increase in buying pressure relative to selling — with buyers representing 67% of all trading activity, up from 60% typically.



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Monday, March 30, 2020

Mt. Gox Deadline Extended Again After Creditors Criticize Refund Proposal

Mt. Gox's bankruptcy trustee is holding off on filing a civil rehabilitation plan to the Tokyo District Court after creditors took issue with it.

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Binance to Launch Crypto Exchange Supporting KRW-Backed Stablecoin

On April 4, the Malta-based cryptocurrency exchange Binance will open Binance KR for trading in South Korea.

Crypto exchange Binance is preparing to enter the Korean market for the first time.

According to a company blog post on March 31, the Malta-based exchange will soon open Binance KR for trading. The crypto-to-crypto exchange is so named for South Korean traders. 

Binance KR will be launched on Binance Cloud and offer the “market’s deepest spot trading liquidity, most robust matching engine, and most advanced state-of-the-art security, custody, and risk controls.”

The exchange will also support Binance KRW (BKRW), a stablecoin backed by the South Korean Won (KRW). Users can trade in Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and the firm’s signature Binance Coin (BNB). By supporting stablecoins, Binance KR will allow Korean traders to easily convert their country’s fiat currency into BKRW.

Open for deposits using KRW starting April 2

The launch of Binance KR comes right on the heels of the crypto exchange announcing the purchase of fintech firm BxB, the ones behind KRWb, the world’s first KRW-backed stablecoin. Binance had been hinting at a potential expansion into Korea for some time, but nothing had been confirmed until this week.

Jiho Kang, CEO of Binance Ltd., said: 

“We are committed to bringing a fully compliant world-class digital asset exchange to the Korean market via Binance Cloud and BKRW. We are honored to partner with Binance to work towards our mutual mission of increasing the freedom of money together.”

Binance KR will open for registration and deposits on April 2 at 10:00 AM KST, with trading being allowed from April 4. Withdrawals will not be available until April 9.

COVID-19 prevention measures still in place in South Korea

Measures to prevent the spread of the coronavirus are still in place in the Korean peninsula. While some bigger cities like Seoul and Daegu discourage citizens from going out, all of South Korea will soon require anyone flying into the country to remain isolated for two weeks.



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Bitcoin & Stocks Rise as US Economy Grinds to a Halt — Furloughs Soar

Bitcoin price attacked the $6,600 resistance on Monday but a move above $6,900 is what’s really needed to change the current trend.

Monday proved to be a surprisingly fruitful day for Bitcoin (BTC) price as the digital asset rallied 12.73% to $6,599 before pulling back to $6,380 a few hours later. 

Despite gloomy news of the U.S. reaching 3,000 deaths from the Coronavirus and major retailers furloughing 500,000 workers, traditional markets also surged on Monday. The S&P 500 rallied 3.35% while the Dow and Nasdaq gained 3.19% and 3.62% respectively. 

Crypto market daily price chart

 

Crypto market daily price chart. Source: Coin360

As discussed in a recent analysis, the price of Bitcoin needed to reclaim the $6,200 level to avoid a revisit to $5,870. Retaking $6,200 placed the price above the descending trendline and the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level. 

BTC USDT 4-hour chart

BTC USDT 4-hour chart. Source: TradingView

Earlier in the day Cointelegraph contributor MichaĆ«l van de Poppe suggested that once above $6,200 the price could quickly rise to $6,600 and traders will note that today the price sliced through the volume gap from $6,250-$6,590 on the VPVR indicator. 

Despite today’s impressive gain, van de Poppe believes that while below $6,900 Bitcoin price remains bearish and he expects the price to encounter stiff resistance once $6,600 is reached.

According to van de Poppe, both “bull/bear scenarios pivot around the $6,600 area” and he further explained that: 

”The moment that the $6,600 area is rejected and the CME gap is closed, further downward pressure is expected to occur.”

BTC USDT daily chart

BTC USDT daily chart. Source: TradingView

A push above $6,900 wouldn’t necessarily be the cure-all for Bitcoin’s bearish slant as there is a large high volume VPVR node at $7,200 and this level is expected to function as a strong resistance. Once above $7,200 traders will set their targets on the $8,000 where the 50 and 200-day moving averages are currently situated. 

Bitcoin daily price chart

Bitcoin daily price chart. Source: Coin360

The majority of the top-10 altcoins also posted moderate gains as Bitcoin price surged toward $6,600. Ether (ETH) notched a 3.57% gain while Bitcoin SV (BSV) and Binance Coin (BNB) added 9.66% and 5.50% respectively. 

The overall cryptocurrency market cap now stands at $180.7 billion and Bitcoin’s dominance rate is 65.2%.

Keep track of top crypto markets in real time here


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