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Topic: Russia Setting Rules for Cryptocurrency Miners (Read 104 times)

legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3015
Welt Am Draht
December 26, 2017, 01:53:30 PM
#3
At this rate by 2020 there will be approximately 51 billion single spaced A4 pages of threats from the Russian government regarding crypto, and not one single page of actual law or regulation.
full member
Activity: 658
Merit: 152
As I have heard today on news they only plan to discuss it in Duma on 28th December, so I would say it is too early to make conclusions about the results of this discussing. Keeping in head all those crypto news from Russia I can just suppose that they will delay with some concrete decisions.
newbie
Activity: 9
Merit: 0
Russia Setting Rules for Cryptocurrency Miners

At a meeting this week in Russia, cryptocurrency miners from 15 countries will show the country’s parliament how

cryptocurrencies are mined and explain how the miners’ home countries regulate mining. The proposed mining regulations are

expected to be sent to parliament by the end of March.

A draft bill to regulate cryptocurrencies (without specific rules attached) and initial coin offerings (ICOs) is expected

to be presented by the end of this week.

According to the chairman of the State Duma financial market committee, Anatoly Aksakov, other draft regulations define

cryptocurrencies as “other property” for tax purposes and ICOs as crowdfunding with a limit on the amount one person is

allowed to invest.

The activity follows orders from Russian President Vladimir Putin, who in October told officials that he wants regulation

of digital currencies, ICOs and cryptocurrency mining. Mining operations are to be registered with the government and

taxed. Officials have a July 2018 deadline for completing their work.

The United States and China currently account for about 75% of all the world’s cryptocurrency mining, but Russian cities

from St. Petersburg to Kaliningrad also host large mining farms. Until about a year ago, mining was primarily a hobbyist

endeavor with technically sophisticated enthusiasts building homemade systems to do the millions of calculations needed to

win a payment in digital currency.

As the price of (especially) bitcoin and most other cryptocurrencies rose, massive mining farms with thousands of

computing devices have sprung up to speed along the process of earning digital currency by tracing a transaction through

the blockchain.

Because Russia is pursuing a strategy to regulate cryptocurrencies in its own country, wondering how that structure would

play in the world is worth some thought. For example, if a Russian mining operation must be registered so it can be taxed,

that implies a central authority that knows who’s doing the mining and the actual value and location of the asset. Those

requirements run afoul of the decentralized structure of a cryptocurrency’s blockchain.

Russia is also considering offering its own cryptocurrency, tentatively called the cryptoruble and backed by the country’s

energy reserves. There are reports that Russia is also talking with Venezuela about the South American country’s plan to

issue its own cryptocurrency (the petro), also based on the country’s energy assets. If the two were to combine their

efforts to back a single new digital currency, it might gain some traction.
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