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Topic: Coinbase announcement on Monday (Read 5718 times)

full member
Activity: 420
Merit: 117
January 26, 2015, 10:16:28 AM
#64
Its a done deal... if you know where to look and who is saying what, they are telegraphing the play. The thing is you have to be smart enough to read between the lines.

For instance "Fortune Magazine" is front running things.. as odd as that may seem. I will give you an example of what is really being said.

http://fortune.com/2015/01/22/qa-gavin-andresen-bitcoin-foundation/?utm_source=bitcoinweekly&utm_medium=email

In the last year, the regulation picture has gotten a lot clearer in the U.S. and most of Europe. And that’s fantastic. I think that’s why you’re seeing companies like Microsoft and Dell accepting Bitcoins. If people pay you in Bitcoins for products and services, it’s clearer now what taxes you owe, how you treat Bitcoins, and so on. In other parts of the world it’s still fuzzy. If I was living in a country where the regulators hadn’t said one way or another how these newfangled cryptocurrencies should be treated, I’d be more worried.

Like I said its a trade off.... Buy BTC on credit cards?Huh Ummmm you mean like a Citibank CC? We all know how much annonymity that will get someone LOLz

Yes sir. BTC with credit cards is a genius idea for creditors. What better way to lock customers into debt? You have existing fiat debt and new forms of credit/debt on the digital level. Best part is a lot of these companies are investing in the platforms surrounding derivatives (Citigroup, NYSE). Now they can trade BTC debt and gamble it in a semi-regulated exchange (to which they are investors of) to increase profits even more. I just wish I had millions to invest.

Smart man! Now you see what is being said to those that know how to get to the bottom of the Male Bovine Fecal pile... keep your eyes on the "leaders and devs" of BTC

BTW I do not want to go too deep into the "Hows and whats" But lets say if CB allows certain government agencies to spike the blockchain with a passive "Man in the Middle" MITM, MitM, MIM, MiM or MITMA on the "transaction" the end result is a done deal, kinda like the hackers do now... I am sure the "certain" governmental agencies will allow the sky to open up and rain gold on them.... meanwhile their customers are getting audit notices in the mail.

Ok I am done with my FUD rant/speculation/hysteria or whatever else you want to call it....

Haha, true that. It's good to see a few others (besides myself) in this forum with their heads/minds free of delusions of grandeur.
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
AS8UDRR8Dc4wTyZkMT7Z5vaXtiWK9zh5Hb
January 26, 2015, 10:10:52 AM
#63
Its a done deal... if you know where to look and who is saying what, they are telegraphing the play. The thing is you have to be smart enough to read between the lines.

For instance "Fortune Magazine" is front running things.. as odd as that may seem. I will give you an example of what is really being said.

http://fortune.com/2015/01/22/qa-gavin-andresen-bitcoin-foundation/?utm_source=bitcoinweekly&utm_medium=email

In the last year, the regulation picture has gotten a lot clearer in the U.S. and most of Europe. And that’s fantastic. I think that’s why you’re seeing companies like Microsoft and Dell accepting Bitcoins. If people pay you in Bitcoins for products and services, it’s clearer now what taxes you owe, how you treat Bitcoins, and so on. In other parts of the world it’s still fuzzy. If I was living in a country where the regulators hadn’t said one way or another how these newfangled cryptocurrencies should be treated, I’d be more worried.

Like I said its a trade off.... Buy BTC on credit cards?Huh Ummmm you mean like a Citibank CC? We all know how much annonymity that will get someone LOLz

Yes sir. BTC with credit cards is a genius idea for creditors. What better way to lock customers into debt? You have existing fiat debt and new forms of credit/debt on the digital level. Best part is a lot of these companies are investing in the platforms surrounding derivatives (Citigroup, NYSE). Now they can trade BTC debt and gamble it in a semi-regulated exchange (to which they are investors of) to increase profits even more. I just wish I had millions to invest.

Smart man! Now you see what is being said to those that know how to get to the bottom of the Male Bovine Fecal pile... keep your eyes on the "leaders and devs" of BTC

BTW I do not want to go too deep into the "Hows and whats" But lets say if CB allows certain government agencies to spike the blockchain with a passive "Man in the Middle" MITM, MitM, MIM, MiM or MITMA on the "transaction" the end result is a done deal, kinda like the hackers do now... I am sure the "certain" governmental agencies will allow the sky to open up and rain gold on them.... meanwhile their customers are getting audit notices in the mail.

Ok I am done with my FUD rant/speculation/hysteria or whatever else you want to call it....
full member
Activity: 420
Merit: 117
January 26, 2015, 10:01:42 AM
#62
Its a done deal... if you know where to look and who is saying what, they are telegraphing the play. The thing is you have to be smart enough to read between the lines.

For instance "Fortune Magazine" is front running things.. as odd as that may seem. I will give you an example of what is really being said.

http://fortune.com/2015/01/22/qa-gavin-andresen-bitcoin-foundation/?utm_source=bitcoinweekly&utm_medium=email

In the last year, the regulation picture has gotten a lot clearer in the U.S. and most of Europe. And that’s fantastic. I think that’s why you’re seeing companies like Microsoft and Dell accepting Bitcoins. If people pay you in Bitcoins for products and services, it’s clearer now what taxes you owe, how you treat Bitcoins, and so on. In other parts of the world it’s still fuzzy. If I was living in a country where the regulators hadn’t said one way or another how these newfangled cryptocurrencies should be treated, I’d be more worried.

Like I said its a trade off.... Buy BTC on credit cards?Huh Ummmm you mean like a Citibank CC? We all know how much annonymity that will get someone LOLz

Yes sir. BTC with credit cards is a genius idea for creditors. What better way to lock customers into debt? You have existing fiat debt and new forms of credit/debt on the digital level. Best part is a lot of these companies are investing in the platforms surrounding derivatives (Citigroup, NYSE). Now they can trade BTC debt and gamble it in a semi-regulated exchange (to which they are investors of) to increase profits even more. I just wish I had millions to invest.

I almost see BTC as a way for companies/governments/world to shed their fiat debts in exchange for a new era of digital debts and commerce. It's like starting over version 2.0. New digital credit backed from fiat capital being spent to finance this digital currency foray. Use debt to create a new economy out of nothing backed by nothing (QE).
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
AS8UDRR8Dc4wTyZkMT7Z5vaXtiWK9zh5Hb
January 26, 2015, 09:48:49 AM
#61
This is probably the announcement:

http://www.wsj.com/articles/first-u-s-bitcoin-exchange-set-to-open-1422221641


By GREG BENSINGER
Jan. 25, 2015 4:34 p.m. ET
0 COMMENTS
The virtual currency bitcoin is getting a very real boost on Monday, with the opening of the first licensed U.S. exchange.

Coinbase Inc., a startup backed by $106 million from the New York Stock Exchange, banks and venture-capital firms, said its exchange will offer greater security for individuals and institutions to trade bitcoin and monitor real-time pricing of the cryptocurrency.

The exchange could bring needed legitimacy to the currency, which isn’t backed by a central government and is traded over virtual exchanges, primarily overseas. Coinbase said it has insurance, offering traders some assurance that their money won’t disappear.

Bitcoin enthusiasts have been buffeted by the collapse of Japan-based exchange Mt. Gox last year—taking with it around half a billion dollars of investors’ money—and a security breach earlier this month at Slovenia-based exchange Bitstamp. The value of a bitcoin itself, determined by trading on existing exchanges, has fallen to about $240, from a peak in late 2013 of more than $1,200.

“To have an organized exchange that has the backing of thoughtful venture capitalists and investors addresses one of the main problems with bitcoin: its extreme volatility,” said Campbell R. Harvey, a Duke University finance professor who has studied cryptocurrencies. “Bitcoin has been sorely in need of something like this.”

Coinbase’s founders say they have been working for five months to win licenses from state financial regulators. They have regulatory approval in half of U.S. states, including large population centers like New York and California. For now, Coinbase can do business with account holders only in states where it has approval.

Coinbase will take a small percentage—likely less than 1%—of most transactions, said Fred Ehrsam, 26 years old, a co-founder. The exchange will initially be limited to users in the U.S., but Chief Executive Brian Armstrong, 32, said he plans to expand overseas.

Mr. Armstrong said he expected to attract both individuals and businesses looking to trade bitcoin. “Our goal is to become the world’s largest exchange,” he said.

Others are looking to open U.S.-based bitcoin exchanges, including Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, the twin brothers known for their early feuds with Facebook Inc. founder Mark Zuckerberg .

Financial regulators, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have been scrutinizing bitcoin recently. Benjamin Lawsky , the superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services, is working on a so-called BitLicense for firms looking to offer digital-currency services in the state; Coinbase is operating under earlier regulations. Mr. Lawsky’s plan is seen as a template for legislation in other jurisdictions, and it may give outsiders more confidence in the currency.

Bitcoins are created using high-powered computers that “mine” for the currency by solving complex mathematical equations. They are exchanged digitally either for currency, or goods and services. Ownership and transactions are recorded, anonymously, in a so-called blockchain, which backers say reduces the risk of fraud.

Bitcoin grew to prominence in recent years in part because of the ease with which it can be transferred.

Coindesk, which tracks the price of bitcoins, says 82,000 businesses accept the currency, double that of a year earlier, including e-commerce site Overstock.com Inc. and Expedia Inc., as well as many small retailers. The value of all bitcoin is $3.2 billion, according to Coindesk’s price index.

The NYSE invested in Coinbase during a $75 million round of fundraising that closed this month. Other investors include USAA Bank, the venture arm of Spain’s Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, former Citigroup Inc. CEO Vikram Pandit and former Thomson Reuters Corp. CEO Tom Glocer. Venture backers include Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Andreessen Horowitz and Union Square Ventures.

The NYSE’s investment was intended in part to “keep an eye on bitcoin as it matures as a legitimate currency,” President Tom Farley said. “Any currency relies on its acceptance.” The Coinbase exchange “is an important step for the currency to become socially acceptable.”

Coinbase counts about 2.2 million consumer wallets and nearly 40,000 merchants that use its services. The company has about 75 employees and plans to operate in 30 countries by year-end, up from 19 today.

I have been following this for months, if you look at the players and think about what and how they do things USAA Bank Citigroup ect ect and look at how Coinbase operates... you can pretty well kiss annonymity good bye if you use these services its a trade off and totally your decision.

Just the first step for centralization and "regulation" of Bitcoin, although not total regulation and centralization... YET.

This is what I worry about. I have been a long time Coinbase customer since its beginnings and over the years I have seen them slowly integrate more and more tracking with regards to tying your customer profile to addresses you send coins to or asking you about who you are transferring coins.

I suppose, the tax man wants his cut too, but the anonymity of olden days helped build trust between individuals. Regulation should never be a substitute for trust and that is what we have today in the banking world. We (as customers/users) pay companies and banks for "trust" and in return we get secure transactions. In return for giving "trust," banks and companies get unprecedented access and control over its customer base.

Its a done deal... if you know where to look and who is saying what, they are telegraphing the play. The thing is you have to be smart enough to read between the lines.

For instance "Fortune Magazine" is front running things.. as odd as that may seem. I will give you an example of what is really being said.

http://fortune.com/2015/01/22/qa-gavin-andresen-bitcoin-foundation/?utm_source=bitcoinweekly&utm_medium=email

In the last year, the regulation picture has gotten a lot clearer in the U.S. and most of Europe. And that’s fantastic. I think that’s why you’re seeing companies like Microsoft and Dell accepting Bitcoins. If people pay you in Bitcoins for products and services, it’s clearer now what taxes you owe, how you treat Bitcoins, and so on. In other parts of the world it’s still fuzzy. If I was living in a country where the regulators hadn’t said one way or another how these newfangled cryptocurrencies should be treated, I’d be more worried.

Like I said its a trade off.... Buy BTC on credit cards?Huh Ummmm you mean like a Citibank CC? We all know how much annonymity that will get someone LOLz
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1012
January 26, 2015, 09:38:17 AM
#60
Too bad this is the announcement they made. I thought they were going for alts... Apparently the "source" around here was wrong lol.

This is probably the announcement:

http://www.wsj.com/articles/first-u-s-bitcoin-exchange-set-to-open-1422221641


By GREG BENSINGER
Jan. 25, 2015 4:34 p.m. ET
0 COMMENTS
The virtual currency bitcoin is getting a very real boost on Monday, with the opening of the first licensed U.S. exchange.

Coinbase Inc., a startup backed by $106 million from the New York Stock Exchange, banks and venture-capital firms, said its exchange will offer greater security for individuals and institutions to trade bitcoin and monitor real-time pricing of the cryptocurrency.

The exchange could bring needed legitimacy to the currency, which isn’t backed by a central government and is traded over virtual exchanges, primarily overseas. Coinbase said it has insurance, offering traders some assurance that their money won’t disappear.

Bitcoin enthusiasts have been buffeted by the collapse of Japan-based exchange Mt. Gox last year—taking with it around half a billion dollars of investors’ money—and a security breach earlier this month at Slovenia-based exchange Bitstamp. The value of a bitcoin itself, determined by trading on existing exchanges, has fallen to about $240, from a peak in late 2013 of more than $1,200.

“To have an organized exchange that has the backing of thoughtful venture capitalists and investors addresses one of the main problems with bitcoin: its extreme volatility,” said Campbell R. Harvey, a Duke University finance professor who has studied cryptocurrencies. “Bitcoin has been sorely in need of something like this.”

Coinbase’s founders say they have been working for five months to win licenses from state financial regulators. They have regulatory approval in half of U.S. states, including large population centers like New York and California. For now, Coinbase can do business with account holders only in states where it has approval.

Coinbase will take a small percentage—likely less than 1%—of most transactions, said Fred Ehrsam, 26 years old, a co-founder. The exchange will initially be limited to users in the U.S., but Chief Executive Brian Armstrong, 32, said he plans to expand overseas.

Mr. Armstrong said he expected to attract both individuals and businesses looking to trade bitcoin. “Our goal is to become the world’s largest exchange,” he said.

Others are looking to open U.S.-based bitcoin exchanges, including Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, the twin brothers known for their early feuds with Facebook Inc. founder Mark Zuckerberg .

Financial regulators, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have been scrutinizing bitcoin recently. Benjamin Lawsky , the superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services, is working on a so-called BitLicense for firms looking to offer digital-currency services in the state; Coinbase is operating under earlier regulations. Mr. Lawsky’s plan is seen as a template for legislation in other jurisdictions, and it may give outsiders more confidence in the currency.

Bitcoins are created using high-powered computers that “mine” for the currency by solving complex mathematical equations. They are exchanged digitally either for currency, or goods and services. Ownership and transactions are recorded, anonymously, in a so-called blockchain, which backers say reduces the risk of fraud.

Bitcoin grew to prominence in recent years in part because of the ease with which it can be transferred.

Coindesk, which tracks the price of bitcoins, says 82,000 businesses accept the currency, double that of a year earlier, including e-commerce site Overstock.com Inc. and Expedia Inc., as well as many small retailers. The value of all bitcoin is $3.2 billion, according to Coindesk’s price index.

The NYSE invested in Coinbase during a $75 million round of fundraising that closed this month. Other investors include USAA Bank, the venture arm of Spain’s Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, former Citigroup Inc. CEO Vikram Pandit and former Thomson Reuters Corp. CEO Tom Glocer. Venture backers include Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Andreessen Horowitz and Union Square Ventures.

The NYSE’s investment was intended in part to “keep an eye on bitcoin as it matures as a legitimate currency,” President Tom Farley said. “Any currency relies on its acceptance.” The Coinbase exchange “is an important step for the currency to become socially acceptable.”

Coinbase counts about 2.2 million consumer wallets and nearly 40,000 merchants that use its services. The company has about 75 employees and plans to operate in 30 countries by year-end, up from 19 today.

I have been following this for months, if you look at the players and think about what and how they do things USAA Bank Citigroup ect ect and look at how Coinbase operates... you can pretty well kiss annonymity good bye if you use these services its a trade off and totally your decision.

Just the first step for centralization and "regulation" of Bitcoin, although not total regulation and centralization... YET.

Agreed, bye bye anonymity if you use them. As for regulation/centralization, they will never achieve it (they would kill their own business if they could achieve it somehow)
sr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 250
Relax!
January 26, 2015, 09:37:46 AM
#59
ah, they have a proper taker/maker pricing system. no more ripping off both sides of a trade to increase income Smiley

That's one of the things they are doing very intelligently. Everything they've incorporated into the exchange looks very sound and well thought-through. The fee system is just the icing on the cake - no actually it's the filling, I guess. But yeah, this truly is a next-generation exchange. Still centralized, but legally registered, insured, backed by NYSE, awesome API, etc...
full member
Activity: 420
Merit: 117
January 26, 2015, 09:36:24 AM
#58
This is probably the announcement:

http://www.wsj.com/articles/first-u-s-bitcoin-exchange-set-to-open-1422221641


By GREG BENSINGER
Jan. 25, 2015 4:34 p.m. ET
0 COMMENTS
The virtual currency bitcoin is getting a very real boost on Monday, with the opening of the first licensed U.S. exchange.

Coinbase Inc., a startup backed by $106 million from the New York Stock Exchange, banks and venture-capital firms, said its exchange will offer greater security for individuals and institutions to trade bitcoin and monitor real-time pricing of the cryptocurrency.

The exchange could bring needed legitimacy to the currency, which isn’t backed by a central government and is traded over virtual exchanges, primarily overseas. Coinbase said it has insurance, offering traders some assurance that their money won’t disappear.

Bitcoin enthusiasts have been buffeted by the collapse of Japan-based exchange Mt. Gox last year—taking with it around half a billion dollars of investors’ money—and a security breach earlier this month at Slovenia-based exchange Bitstamp. The value of a bitcoin itself, determined by trading on existing exchanges, has fallen to about $240, from a peak in late 2013 of more than $1,200.

“To have an organized exchange that has the backing of thoughtful venture capitalists and investors addresses one of the main problems with bitcoin: its extreme volatility,” said Campbell R. Harvey, a Duke University finance professor who has studied cryptocurrencies. “Bitcoin has been sorely in need of something like this.”

Coinbase’s founders say they have been working for five months to win licenses from state financial regulators. They have regulatory approval in half of U.S. states, including large population centers like New York and California. For now, Coinbase can do business with account holders only in states where it has approval.

Coinbase will take a small percentage—likely less than 1%—of most transactions, said Fred Ehrsam, 26 years old, a co-founder. The exchange will initially be limited to users in the U.S., but Chief Executive Brian Armstrong, 32, said he plans to expand overseas.

Mr. Armstrong said he expected to attract both individuals and businesses looking to trade bitcoin. “Our goal is to become the world’s largest exchange,” he said.

Others are looking to open U.S.-based bitcoin exchanges, including Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, the twin brothers known for their early feuds with Facebook Inc. founder Mark Zuckerberg .

Financial regulators, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have been scrutinizing bitcoin recently. Benjamin Lawsky , the superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services, is working on a so-called BitLicense for firms looking to offer digital-currency services in the state; Coinbase is operating under earlier regulations. Mr. Lawsky’s plan is seen as a template for legislation in other jurisdictions, and it may give outsiders more confidence in the currency.

Bitcoins are created using high-powered computers that “mine” for the currency by solving complex mathematical equations. They are exchanged digitally either for currency, or goods and services. Ownership and transactions are recorded, anonymously, in a so-called blockchain, which backers say reduces the risk of fraud.

Bitcoin grew to prominence in recent years in part because of the ease with which it can be transferred.

Coindesk, which tracks the price of bitcoins, says 82,000 businesses accept the currency, double that of a year earlier, including e-commerce site Overstock.com Inc. and Expedia Inc., as well as many small retailers. The value of all bitcoin is $3.2 billion, according to Coindesk’s price index.

The NYSE invested in Coinbase during a $75 million round of fundraising that closed this month. Other investors include USAA Bank, the venture arm of Spain’s Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, former Citigroup Inc. CEO Vikram Pandit and former Thomson Reuters Corp. CEO Tom Glocer. Venture backers include Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Andreessen Horowitz and Union Square Ventures.

The NYSE’s investment was intended in part to “keep an eye on bitcoin as it matures as a legitimate currency,” President Tom Farley said. “Any currency relies on its acceptance.” The Coinbase exchange “is an important step for the currency to become socially acceptable.”

Coinbase counts about 2.2 million consumer wallets and nearly 40,000 merchants that use its services. The company has about 75 employees and plans to operate in 30 countries by year-end, up from 19 today.

I have been following this for months, if you look at the players and think about what and how they do things USAA Bank Citigroup ect ect and look at how Coinbase operates... you can pretty well kiss annonymity good bye if you use these services its a trade off and totally your decision.

Just the first step for centralization and "regulation" of Bitcoin, although not total regulation and centralization... YET.

This is what I worry about. I have been a long time Coinbase customer since its beginnings and over the years I have seen them slowly integrate more and more tracking with regards to tying your customer profile to addresses you send coins to or asking you about who you are transferring coins.

I suppose, the tax man wants his cut too, but the anonymity of olden days helped build trust between individuals. Regulation should never be a substitute for trust and that is what we have today in the banking world. We (as customers/users) pay companies and banks for "trust" and in return we get secure transactions. In return for giving "trust," banks and companies get unprecedented access and control over its customer base.
full member
Activity: 134
Merit: 100
January 26, 2015, 09:21:58 AM
#57
ah, they have a proper taker/maker pricing system. no more ripping off both sides of a trade to increase income Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
AS8UDRR8Dc4wTyZkMT7Z5vaXtiWK9zh5Hb
January 26, 2015, 09:10:50 AM
#56
This is probably the announcement:

http://www.wsj.com/articles/first-u-s-bitcoin-exchange-set-to-open-1422221641


By GREG BENSINGER
Jan. 25, 2015 4:34 p.m. ET
0 COMMENTS
The virtual currency bitcoin is getting a very real boost on Monday, with the opening of the first licensed U.S. exchange.

Coinbase Inc., a startup backed by $106 million from the New York Stock Exchange, banks and venture-capital firms, said its exchange will offer greater security for individuals and institutions to trade bitcoin and monitor real-time pricing of the cryptocurrency.

The exchange could bring needed legitimacy to the currency, which isn’t backed by a central government and is traded over virtual exchanges, primarily overseas. Coinbase said it has insurance, offering traders some assurance that their money won’t disappear.

Bitcoin enthusiasts have been buffeted by the collapse of Japan-based exchange Mt. Gox last year—taking with it around half a billion dollars of investors’ money—and a security breach earlier this month at Slovenia-based exchange Bitstamp. The value of a bitcoin itself, determined by trading on existing exchanges, has fallen to about $240, from a peak in late 2013 of more than $1,200.

“To have an organized exchange that has the backing of thoughtful venture capitalists and investors addresses one of the main problems with bitcoin: its extreme volatility,” said Campbell R. Harvey, a Duke University finance professor who has studied cryptocurrencies. “Bitcoin has been sorely in need of something like this.”

Coinbase’s founders say they have been working for five months to win licenses from state financial regulators. They have regulatory approval in half of U.S. states, including large population centers like New York and California. For now, Coinbase can do business with account holders only in states where it has approval.

Coinbase will take a small percentage—likely less than 1%—of most transactions, said Fred Ehrsam, 26 years old, a co-founder. The exchange will initially be limited to users in the U.S., but Chief Executive Brian Armstrong, 32, said he plans to expand overseas.

Mr. Armstrong said he expected to attract both individuals and businesses looking to trade bitcoin. “Our goal is to become the world’s largest exchange,” he said.

Others are looking to open U.S.-based bitcoin exchanges, including Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, the twin brothers known for their early feuds with Facebook Inc. founder Mark Zuckerberg .

Financial regulators, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have been scrutinizing bitcoin recently. Benjamin Lawsky , the superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services, is working on a so-called BitLicense for firms looking to offer digital-currency services in the state; Coinbase is operating under earlier regulations. Mr. Lawsky’s plan is seen as a template for legislation in other jurisdictions, and it may give outsiders more confidence in the currency.

Bitcoins are created using high-powered computers that “mine” for the currency by solving complex mathematical equations. They are exchanged digitally either for currency, or goods and services. Ownership and transactions are recorded, anonymously, in a so-called blockchain, which backers say reduces the risk of fraud.

Bitcoin grew to prominence in recent years in part because of the ease with which it can be transferred.

Coindesk, which tracks the price of bitcoins, says 82,000 businesses accept the currency, double that of a year earlier, including e-commerce site Overstock.com Inc. and Expedia Inc., as well as many small retailers. The value of all bitcoin is $3.2 billion, according to Coindesk’s price index.

The NYSE invested in Coinbase during a $75 million round of fundraising that closed this month. Other investors include USAA Bank, the venture arm of Spain’s Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, former Citigroup Inc. CEO Vikram Pandit and former Thomson Reuters Corp. CEO Tom Glocer. Venture backers include Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Andreessen Horowitz and Union Square Ventures.

The NYSE’s investment was intended in part to “keep an eye on bitcoin as it matures as a legitimate currency,” President Tom Farley said. “Any currency relies on its acceptance.” The Coinbase exchange “is an important step for the currency to become socially acceptable.”

Coinbase counts about 2.2 million consumer wallets and nearly 40,000 merchants that use its services. The company has about 75 employees and plans to operate in 30 countries by year-end, up from 19 today.

I have been following this for months, if you look at the players and think about what and how they do things USAA Bank Citigroup ect ect and look at how Coinbase operates... you can pretty well kiss annonymity good bye if you use these services its a trade off and totally your decision.

Just the first step for centralization and "regulation" of Bitcoin, although not total regulation and centralization... YET.
legendary
Activity: 3710
Merit: 5286
January 26, 2015, 09:08:20 AM
#55

Will they add alts?

Will be nice to have altss on there as well. We need a proper regulated legal exchange for alts too.

Doubtful this will happen.  They won't even add Litecoin wallet support, and Coblee works for them.  Adding alts is not part of their current strategic roadmap.
hero member
Activity: 770
Merit: 500
January 26, 2015, 09:07:02 AM
#54
exchange.coinbase.com Cheesy
and Coinbase Exchange is not yet available outside the United States.

Here comes the dump? 295 to 282 on BTC-e now Roll Eyes
Don't bother about BTCe now Tongue Tongue
member
Activity: 65
Merit: 10
January 26, 2015, 09:05:41 AM
#53
The rockets on the moon and its making exciting noises!!!  Grin How bizarre, there's a sell off going on? It's not as if everyone didn't already know what was going to happen....
staff
Activity: 2454
Merit: 1617
Crypto Swap Exchange
January 26, 2015, 09:04:30 AM
#52
exchange.coinbase.com Cheesy
and Coinbase Exchange is not yet available outside the United States.

Here comes the dump? 295 to 282 on BTC-e now Roll Eyes
full member
Activity: 134
Merit: 100
January 26, 2015, 09:02:49 AM
#51
aaand registered Cheesy

waiting for the mail, guess their mail-server just went boom
hero member
Activity: 770
Merit: 500
January 26, 2015, 09:02:40 AM
#50
exchange.coinbase.com Cheesy
and Coinbase Exchange is not yet available outside the United States.
hero member
Activity: 681
Merit: 507
January 26, 2015, 09:01:28 AM
#49
exchange.coinbase.com Cheesy
hero member
Activity: 700
Merit: 500
January 26, 2015, 08:57:56 AM
#48
the link started making noise lmao
sr. member
Activity: 1330
Merit: 289
January 26, 2015, 08:17:49 AM
#47
Well, Coinbase announced their API. It's straightforward REST/JSON. There's a discussion on Hacker News. They're running on Amazon AWS, in the US East zone. They recommend that trading 'bots also run on AWS in that zone for reduced latency. Initially, there will be no fees, but later, fees will be imposed for transactions which "reduce liquidity" (i.e. are executed immediately). Putting up walls is free.

It looks like they're setting themselves up for high frequency trading. They may have huge volume, but it will be the same money going round and round.  

They claim to be "licensed" in at least New York and California, but they're not on the money transmitter lists for either state.

Any opinion on this?

https://docs.exchange.coinbase.com/#currencies

Will they add alts?

Will be nice to have altss on there as well. We need a proper regulated legal exchange for alts too.

alts should be traded for btc now and discontinued /
1 international currency is the ultimate goal and btc is where the big money and development  is
alts are just a distraction to new comers who will take long enough to get a basic understanding of btc without having 600 other shitcoins being pumped at the same time

If you have about 3 major coins it gives people a choice. I agree that having hundreds of coins is too much.

In the case of Dogecoin it attracts different demographics and has more users than all altcoins combined.

If you want to learn more about Dogecoin:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=800004.0;all

 Wink
A choice of what, exactly?

Different brands, different cultures.
It's money. They do the same thing. This meme shit won't last.

Yes, but you need to back your arguments with data.  Wink
sr. member
Activity: 1330
Merit: 289
January 26, 2015, 08:17:04 AM
#46
Well, Coinbase announced their API. It's straightforward REST/JSON. There's a discussion on Hacker News. They're running on Amazon AWS, in the US East zone. They recommend that trading 'bots also run on AWS in that zone for reduced latency. Initially, there will be no fees, but later, fees will be imposed for transactions which "reduce liquidity" (i.e. are executed immediately). Putting up walls is free.

It looks like they're setting themselves up for high frequency trading. They may have huge volume, but it will be the same money going round and round.  

They claim to be "licensed" in at least New York and California, but they're not on the money transmitter lists for either state.

Any opinion on this?

https://docs.exchange.coinbase.com/#currencies

Will they add alts?

Will be nice to have altss on there as well. We need a proper regulated legal exchange for alts too.

alts should be traded for btc now and discontinued /
1 international currency is the ultimate goal and btc is where the big money and development  is
alts are just a distraction to new comers who will take long enough to get a basic understanding of btc without having 600 other shitcoins being pumped at the same time

If you have about 3 major coins it gives people a choice. I agree that having hundreds of coins is too much.

In the case of Dogecoin it attracts different demographics and has more users than all altcoins combined.

If you want to learn more about Dogecoin:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=800004.0;all

 Wink
A choice of what, exactly?

Different brands, different cultures.

 Cheesy  Cheesy  Cheesy

 Huh

Money is not a trend, a brand, a culture or a fad.

You cannot slap shiny painting on it, claim it "appeals" to some people and that it makes it relevant or worthy of existing.

All of you "shibes" are going to be very sorry when you're left holding this trendy bag of worthless coins.

Which is of course not true. Money is part of human behavior. Human wants are complex.

Dogecoin already has more users than all altcoins combined - it  already attracted different demographics that use the coin differently.  

While bitcoin is treated as a tool for speculation Dogecoin is actually used.

Don't believe me - just look at the data:  Smiley

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=800004.0;all
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 1278
January 26, 2015, 08:11:20 AM
#45
Well, Coinbase announced their API. It's straightforward REST/JSON. There's a discussion on Hacker News. They're running on Amazon AWS, in the US East zone. They recommend that trading 'bots also run on AWS in that zone for reduced latency. Initially, there will be no fees, but later, fees will be imposed for transactions which "reduce liquidity" (i.e. are executed immediately). Putting up walls is free.

It looks like they're setting themselves up for high frequency trading. They may have huge volume, but it will be the same money going round and round.  

They claim to be "licensed" in at least New York and California, but they're not on the money transmitter lists for either state.

Any opinion on this?

https://docs.exchange.coinbase.com/#currencies

Will they add alts?

Will be nice to have altss on there as well. We need a proper regulated legal exchange for alts too.

alts should be traded for btc now and discontinued /
1 international currency is the ultimate goal and btc is where the big money and development  is
alts are just a distraction to new comers who will take long enough to get a basic understanding of btc without having 600 other shitcoins being pumped at the same time

If you have about 3 major coins it gives people a choice. I agree that having hundreds of coins is too much.

In the case of Dogecoin it attracts different demographics and has more users than all altcoins combined.

If you want to learn more about Dogecoin:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=800004.0;all

 Wink
A choice of what, exactly?

Different brands, different cultures.
It's money. They do the same thing. This meme shit won't last.
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