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This Week in Bitcoin is your roundup of the prime talking points from across the cryptosphere. From the major news to the minor debates that erupted into huge arguments, weâve captured the flavor of the frenetic soup that is Bitcoin and all that simmers in it. In this edition, the deadline for the $8 billion Tulip Trust looms closer and bitcoin maximalists are caught behaving badly.
Also read: Accused Onecoin Co-Conspirators Fight Criminal Charges in the US
Monday: $8 Billion BTC and Post-Fork Fixes
On Monday, September 9, we led with the story of the Tulip Trust, which is due to deliver $8 billion in BTC to Craig Wright in less than three weeks. Supposedly. We also covered the SEC approving a bitcoin futures fund, and the new IRS tax form targeting crypto owners in Mondayâs regulatory round-up.
Also on Monday, in the wake of Ethereumâs Constantinople hard fork, researcher Antoine Le Calvez showed how thousands of dapps failed due to the changes made to smart contracts, which caused them to run out of gas. He noted how even crypto exchanges were affected, with Gemini unable to âsweep user deposits into its hot wallet after the fork, each attempt resulting in an out-of-gas error.â The Ethereum ecosystem suffered another blow on December 9 when a different researcher explained how a well-funded attacker could âturn $20M into $340M in 15 secondsâ by exploiting the Makerdao contract.
On crypto Twitter, a debate broke out over Bitcoinâs lack of privacy. Business-owner Jason Smith explained his reservations with paying overseas staff in BTC, confessing: âI became frustrated with how open Bitcoin is. It exposes way more than one wants to the staff. That lead me to consider the improbability of the world adopting a financial tool that doesnât afford business decent levels of privacy.â Ironically, Smith was formerly opposed to privacy coins, before undergoing a volte-face and paying his overseas employees in zcash.
Tuesday: Blockstream Alienates Everyone
On December 10, Blockstream caught flak after its plans to raise $50M by issuing a BTSE exchange token were leaked. The revelation that Blockstream was projecting an increase in revenue of 3,700% for 2020 to justify the token sale forced Samson Mow onto the defensive, a position heâs occupied on crypto Twitter for weeks, as the companyâs beleaguered CSO has poured fuel on fires that were of his own making. As Cobra Bitcoin put it, âLiquid is just Blockstreamâs platform for scam token issuance as a service. And how exactly does an exchange forecast going from $2M in revenue in 2019 to $100M+ in 2020?â The BTSE row was to rumble on all week, with Samson Mow and Adam Back digging themselves deeper into the hole they had constructed.
Elsewhere, in The War on Cash, Marty Bent highlighted tough new laws in Greece and Italy effectively criminalizing the use of cash, opining: âThe governments of these countries are herding their citizens into the digital panopticon that is the current global financial system so that they can milk them for all of that sweet sweet tax money.â In related news, we covered Italiansâ love of cash and growing appreciation for crypto. And in unrelated news, Ross Ulbricht had a stab at predicting when bitcoinâs next all-time high will occur.
Wednesday: Jack Tries Some Blue Sky Thinking
On December 11, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey got the cryptosphere all of a stir when he revealed Blue Sky, a âsmall independent team of up to five open source architects, engineers, and designers to develop an open and decentralized standard for social media,â funded by Twitter. âIt would be incredible for the future of free speech and censor-resistant information to see a decentralized twitter protocol with various clients and front-ends built atop that standard,â enthused Messariâs Ryan Selkis.
âA tech CEO that understands Bitcoin and decentralized social networks,â tweeted Blockstackâs Muneeb. âFacebook is trying to start Libra. My guess is Jack will prefer to extend existing open crypto networks instead.â
Thursday: Bitcoin Maximalists Bust out the Banhammer
Crypto is full of contradictions, with one of the greatest being the glee with which certain proponents of censorship-resistant money will censor their opponentsâ opinions. Weâre looking at you, bitcoin maxis, with your high follower count and low tolerance for dissenting voices. The loss of Crypto Deleted, a Twitter account that screenshotted the foolish tweets hastily purged by members of the cryptorati, was led by Jameson Lopp.
Imagine calling yourself a â#Bitcoin cypherpunkâ and spending your free time coding censorship bots. pic.twitter.com/c9BkNV1rvM
â SmileyGnome (@SmileyGnome) December 11, 2019
Critics of the circle-jerking maximalists, including Romano, were quick to point out their hypocrisy. âImagine writing a blog post that ultimately led to mass reporting and suspending an account that you didnât agree with. And then imagine celebrating it â as a cypherpunk nonetheless,â chipped in Larry Cermak.
Friday: Tether Time
Friday 13th was to prove unlucky for Tether, which found itself on the receiving end of yet another legal brief from the New York Attorney General. âIf these allegations are true Bitfinex/Tetherâs chances in this case should be toast,â tweeted âlex nodeâ who broke down the filing for those who couldnât face trawling through the full document. Others demurred, however, asserting that the NYAGâs latest doc contained nothing new.
Friday was a bad day for crypto regulatory news: BTC payments platform Bottle Pay revealed it was shutting down due to impending KYC/AML regulations, writing:
To maintain our integrity as service providers, and to protect the interests of our team, investors and users, we have taken the painful decision to shut Bottle Pay down completely rather than become subject to these new regulations.
Meanwhile, over on crypto Twitter, bitcoin maximalists finished the week the way theyâd started it: by acting hypocritically and getting called out for it. This time it was Peter McCormackâs turn to get grief for his double standards and general sycophancy.
> be a horrible investor and trader> give investment advice anyways> transform into parasitic leech to leech off of successful people with âpodcastâ> encourage and engage in negativity, toxicity, and tribalism> complain people are being mean to you
Just delete your account pic.twitter.com/IwCHMCvZ1A
â moon (@MoonOverlord) December 13, 2019
Finally, in real news, Dutch banking giant ING declared it was developing a crypto custody service, and the European Central Bankâs Christine Lagarde outlined her plans to keep the ECB âahead of the curveâ when it comes to digital currency and stablecoins.
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What stories caught your attention this week? Let us know in the comments section below.
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The post This Week in Bitcoin: $8 Billion BTC Trust and Maximalists Misbehaving appeared first on Bitcoin News.
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