A lot has been going on in the Bitcoin world lately, so let’s
recap, review , and organize this for you.
Satoshi Nakamoto has been found! Or has he?
Newsweek
may have jumped the gun on their story last week. Reporter Leah McGrath Goodman
claimed to have found the inventor of Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto. She claims to have tracked him down to his
home just outside of Los Angeles California. Living a humble life in relative
solitude, Dorian S. Nakamoto, is this years target. Although the answers given
by Dorian Nakamoto leave very little certainty to her claim it was published
nonetheless. Many attempts to put a face
to the digital currency have been made since the release of the “Nakamoto
Whitepaper” in 2008, all of which have been debunked. This Nakamoto lives a
life very much unlike what you would think of someone who holds $400 Million in
Bitcoin. This may have been just another attempt to unmask the ghost that is
Nakamoto. As the story made its viral way around the internet something very
strange happened, Satoshi’s account on the P2P Foundation website where he had
introduced the world to Bitcoin, his account has been inactive for years,
suddenly there appears this message, “ I
am NOT Dorian S. Nakamoto.”
Mt. Gox Implosion.
The largest Bitcoin holding and trading
company has vanished long with about 850,000 Bitcoins, worth roughly $474
million. The closing of Mt. Gox is a result of security breaches, bugs, and transaction
malleability. It is unknown what has been done with the remaining Bitcoins held
by Mt. Gox. In its wake the US and Japanese
governments have started to move on the regulation and taxation of the currency
and its profits. Senator Joe Manchin [D] WV has called for the regulation of
Bitcoin, and The Federal Reserve has answered. In one of her first acts being
the new chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet
Yellen gave this as her response to Sen. Manchin, “Bitcoin is a payment
innovation that’s taking place outside the banking industry. To the best of my
knowledge there’s no intersection at all, in any way, between Bitcoin and banks
that the Federal Reserve has the ability to supervise and regulate. So the Fed
doesn’t have authority to supervise or regulate Bitcoin in anyway,”
Greg Simon, Founding member of The Bitcoin Financial
Association says this, “Mt. Gox was a private corporation that was offering
financial services, mainly related to bitcoin. The management of that
corporation has lost or stolen approximately $400 million worth of client
funds.Those funds were in fiat currency and in bitcoin. Bitcoin the protocol
did not steal it. Bitcoin itself did not disappear. Management of a corporation
lost or stole it.”
This sudden closing has also taken to the internet forums
and every financial magazine, website and show has blasted the company as well
as the currency itself. Many people feel that Bitcoin is a Ponzi scheme and a
mal-investment, and I wouldn’t wholeheartedly disagree with them, though I don’t
wholeheartedly agree with them either. Bitcoin is a currency, and like any
other currency it is merely a tool for the transferability of wealth and the
attainment of goods and services.
Mr. Simon also states, “The problem is not the integrity of
digital bitcoin or digital US dollars or digital whatever currency. The problem
is the need to centralize trust into humans. Humans are corruptible with power.
When we centralize trust and control into humans that creates a risk, a single
point of failure in the system. The single point of failure in the case of Mt.
Gox was humans.”
And then there is the Suicide…
On February 28th 28-year-old Autumn Radtke,
chief executive of First Meta, a Singapore-based virtual-currency exchange, was
found dead in her home, a suspected suicide. As yet, nobody knows if her death
was related to her business.
This is a huge loss for her family, The First Meta Company as well as the entire
Bitcoin community.
“Prior to taking the reins at First Meta in 2012, the
28-year-old Radtke had once closely worked with technology giant Apple to bring
cloud-computing software to Johns Hopkins University, Los Alamos Labs and the
Aerospace Corp., according to her biography. She then took up business
development roles at tech start-ups Xfire and Geodelic Systems, according to
information on her LinkedIn profile.” Says Javier E. David for CNBC online.
First Meta “provides a safe & sanctioned place to
bring all your virtual assets online or on your mobile devices, enabling you to
organize, manage, and easily cash out your virtual assets” according to their website.
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