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Topic: [2014-04-18]Jihan Wu: Chinese Government Won’t Aggressively Regulate Bitcoin (Read 440 times)

legendary
Activity: 2408
Merit: 1121
Jihan "cabbage head" Wu is desperate to appear relevant. So I'm not surprised he's inserting himself in the Chinese gov't controversy.

But he's just a cog, and doesn't really help anything. If you think he's the only one to point out governments flip-flop, you'd be wrong. He adds nothing new to the conversation except his attempts to pump his PR value.
hero member
Activity: 546
Merit: 500
Jihan Wu is hardly a good source for what the Chinese government will or will not do.

He's a charlatan that pumps his own agenda, based on his mining concerns and chip-fabbing business. Naturally, he can only see an outcome where he can keep being a monopolist.

He pumps his own agenda, but that doesn't mean that he's naive and would just think he'll always succeed.  I do think that he has a point.

The Chinese government has constantly been changing their stance on Bitcoin in confusing ways for years and usually I just think they're trying to cause some price change that would be as profitable as possible for them.  For all we know they have a pretty significant stake in Bitcoin.

Clearly most of the regulations they're trying to implement on Bitcoin are trying to stop new investors getting caught in scams and Goxes.
sr. member
Activity: 2618
Merit: 439
Jihan Wu is hardly a good source for what the Chinese government will or will not do.

He's a charlatan that pumps his own agenda, based on his mining concerns and chip-fabbing business. Naturally, he can only see an outcome where he can keep being a monopolist.


Good point. We should take everything he said with a grain of salt. He is saying things that will put his agenda into it and spin it. So if you don't know him, without an argument you will believed in him like he know about everything. But be very wary my friend. Be very very wary.
legendary
Activity: 2408
Merit: 1121
Jihan Wu is hardly a good source for what the Chinese government will or will not do.

He's a charlatan that pumps his own agenda, based on his mining concerns and chip-fabbing business. Naturally, he can only see an outcome where he can keep being a monopolist.
hero member
Activity: 924
Merit: 506
Well someone without knowledge about bitcoin shouldn't invest in it in the first place so good excuse for them to defend the newbies.
14% of the hash power they have and how will that help them to switch to BU and hard fork successfully? most importantly don't they know if blockchain splits into 2 different chains then their chain won't be accepted as BTC besides no one will ever trust bitcoin again?
How's that for earning profit and running themselves out of business?
sr. member
Activity: 281
Merit: 250
Bitcoin entrepreneur Jihan Wu has spoken out and said that the Chinese government only wants to control the risk of bitcoin for investors who don’t know much about it.

In a report from ABC News, Wu, who operates Bitmain, a Beijing-based company that develops and sells the world’s leading bitcoin miner hardware using Bitmain’s ASIC chip technology, said:

The [People’s Bank of China] can potentially have very strong control over the price of bitcoin, at least in the short term, because it can effectively cut the money flow involved in bitcoin trading.


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“Potentially [the PBOC] could shut down all the Chinese bitcoin exchanges,” he added.
However, he added that he didn’t think the government would conduct aggressive regulation over the digital currency, stating:

But I don’t think the Chinese Government will do very aggressive regulation over bitcoin. I just think they want to control the risk for those investors who don’t have enough knowledge about bitcoin.

This news comes after the fact that the PBoC has recently taken an increased interest in Chinese exchanges. In February, digital currency exchange BTCC announced that it was halting its Bitcoin and Litecoin withdrawals as Chinese regulators updated their anti-money laundering measures. OKCoin and Huobi announced a similar measure too.

As a result of the PBoC conducting on-site checks in February, the price of the digital currency dropped to around $790; however, despite the crackdown on digital exchanges with the PBoC director stating that they can’t function without regulations, the currency is continuing to rise in value.

Bitcoin Scalability Debate

As the discussion surrounding the potential bitcoin hard fork increases, many proponents are coming out in support of either Bitcoin Unlimited (BU) or SegWit as the potential solutions to the digital currency’s backlog issue.

So much so, that Wu, who is also the founder of Antpool, which is the digital currency’s largest pool with around 14 percent of the network’s hardware share, announced last month that they would be switching their entire pool over to BU in support.

Wu has also shared a post on his Weibo account from an unknown author, which declared that the network’s problem can only be achieved by talking about the ‘distribution of interests‘ and reaching a ‘compromise in the pursuit of those interests.’

And yet, many believe it is only through SegWit that a solution can be found particularly when it comes to transaction malleability, which is a bug that makes it difficult for developers to implement second layer protocols. Those in support of SegWit are of the opinion that SegWit can fix this bug.
https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/jihan-wu-china-bitcoin-regulation/
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