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Topic: [2017-07-12] Bitcoin Photobombers Crashed Janet Yellen’s Fed Testimony—and Got.. (Read 4953 times)

legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1073
I do not know if this was such a good move, because you do not want to piss off the FEDs. We have worked with governments to create a friendly

relationship between Bitcoin {the technology} and the regulations that these governments wants to implement for it to be legal. This has been a

rocky relationship and the smallest spark might cause a lot of heat. Most Bitcoin services has already bend the knee to implement strict KYC/AML

regulations on their sites to please the regulators. Now this guy is labelled as a Bitcoin Hero and I think he might have caused some sparks in a

very volatile relationship.  Roll Eyes
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 511
Bitcoin Photobombers Crashed Janet Yellen’s Fed Testimony—and Got Paid $10,000

Less than two hours into Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen's testimony to Congress Wednesday, two surprise attendees brought up one of the only financial topics not on the docket at the hearing: Bitcoin.

The boyish-looking duo, wearing suits and smirking slightly as they sat just behind Yellen in direct view of the camera, used the Federal Reserve's twice-yearly monetary policy presentation as their personal soapbox to promote the controversial cryptocurrency. Peering over Yellen's shoulder as she testified that she opposes audits of the Fed, the men quietly raised a yellow legal pad on which they'd scrawled "Buy Bitcoin" in black ink.

One Bitcoin is now worth more than double the price of gold, with a 150% increase in its value this year alone. Yet the meteoric rise in the Bitcoin price, along with that of other digital currencies such as Ethereum—whose price has multiplied 25 times in 2017 so far—has recently sparked fears that the burgeoning market has become overheated, and may be in a bubble.

The photobombers may have hoped their guerrilla stunt, which lasted only about a second, would counteract some recent bearishness in virtual currencies that has driven a month-long selloff. Cryptocurrencies as a group have lost 23% in value so far this month. Bitcoin is down more than 20% since its peak of $3,000 in early June, while Ethereum's price has fallen 50% since its high of more than $400 around the same time.

A spokesperson for the House of Representatives' financial services committee, which presided over the public hearing, told Fortune that it does not know who the two men are. About an hour after the interruption, though, the pair were abruptly booted from their seats while Yellen spoke.

"It is against the rules for people in the audience to display signs during a hearing, so they were told to leave the hearing and they did," a spokesperson for the House financial services committee said in a statement.

An 18-year-old college student, however, later tweeted a photo of one of the men, who he claimed was a friend, holding the sign from the hearing and wearing the same suit. In the picture, the photobomber also holds a sign with a number that serves as an address for others to send him Bitcoin. So far, he appears to have received more than 4 Bitcoins, worth over $10,000 at current prices.

The original tweet has since been deleted, but the image has continued to circulate online.

http://fortune.com/2017/07/12/bitcoin-buy-yellen-fed-testimony/
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