Challenging
the dollar’: Bitcoin total value tops $1 billion
Already
bigger than many sovereign currencies, Bitcoin has broken the $1
billion in value mark this week. In the wake of continuing economic
crises and liquidity shortages, this new virtual currency is poised
to challenge the euro and US dollar.
RT,
31
March, 2013
By not being tied to any
particular financial institution and independent from world
governments, Bitcoin will become a safe haven for anyone trying to
save their money from the crippled international banking system,
claimed Max Keiser, the host of RT's Keiser Report.
“It is inevitable
that Bitcoin will become a multi-trillion dollar enterprise because
every other currency in the world is tied to dying central banks that
are encumbered with impossible-to-pay debts and bankrupt
counter-party risks,” Keiser said.
Crypto-currency
Bitcoin emerged in 2009
amid the global financial meltdown. The digital currency was created
by someone who identified himself as Satoshi Nakamoto. It is based on
open-source software, and uses peer-to-peer connections for monetary
transactions to avoid centralized authorities.
Bitcoin aims to provide
safe and secure exchange by verifying transactions with encryption
that is used in military and government applications. And unlike bank
services, the Bitcoin network is free, except for a voluntary to
speed up transaction processing.
Bitcoins can be bought for other currencies, virtual or real, and are accepted as payment for goods or services. They can also be won through gambling, received as gifts or donations, or simply 'mining' – the process by which new bitcoins are introduced into the system.
Bitcoins (BTC) are bought and sold for other currencies at online exchanges. The Japan-based Mt. Gox is the largest of its kind, where BTC have recently traded at an average exchange rate of $90 per bitcoin.Issuance of the currency is completely automated, with 25 new bitcoins generated every 10 minutes; inflation is set to be halved every four years, until a total of 21 million bitcoins is reached. In theory, the currency would not lose its purchasing power unless individuals and businesses refused to use bitcoins.
With numerous financial
companies already exchanging bitcoins into any of the world’s
currencies, the founder of the Swedish Pirate Party, Rick Falkvinge,
estimated that Bitcoin could capture between 1 and 10 percent of the
global foreign exchange market. This implies that the price of each
and every bitcoin would rise to between $100,000 and $1 million, Max
Keiser explained.
“I have stated that
myself,” Keiser said. “I think bitcoin's price
will reach $200,000 per bitcoin before Warren Buffett's Berkshire
Hathaway's stock.”
Ten years ago, few
predicted that Facebook would have more than 1 billion users
worldwide/ By the same token, few today imagine bitcoin could take on
the G20 nations, but Keiser believes this may soon take
place: “Bitcoin's valuation, already bigger than many
sovereign currencies, will challenge the most-traded currencies
today, including the US dollar, the euro, the yen and the renminbi.”
Regulatory hand
reaches out
Because the virtual
currency bypasses authorities and cannot be taxed unless the person
deliberately reveals his transactions, the US government and
the Treasury Department are seeking to enact stricter regulations and
new money-laundering rules.
Bitcoins are vulnerable to being stolen by hackers, thieves and fraudsters, though the Bitcoin community has made efforts to curb such crimes.
The largest Bitcoin scam reportedly ran in 2012, and was structured like a classic Ponzi scheme. Investors lost at least 200,000 BTC worth $2.2 million at the time, according to the Bitcoin Forums. The high estimate puts the number at 500,000 BTC, or 5 percent of the total number of bitcoins in circulation at the time.
The largest Bitcoin hacking heist, in March 2012, robbed the victims of 46,653 BTC ($230,468). The perpetrators exploited a vulnerability in the customer service of Bitcoinica exchange to get access to users' wallets.
Satoshi Nakamoto, who created Bitcoin in 2009, left the system to develop on its own in 2011; his true identity was never revealed.
One popular theory among Russian bloggers speculates that Nakamoto is Grigory Perelman, a reclusive Russian mathematician famous for solving the Poincaré conjecture and receiving the Fields Medal – the 'Nobel prize of math,' – for the achievement.It is difficult to predict this new policy would play out: Patrick Murck, a legal counsel for the Bitcoin Foundation, a trade group promoting industry standards, said the framework “would be infeasible for many, if not most, members of the Bitcoin community to comply with.”
Keiser believes that
Bitcoin users and the currency itself have little to worry about,
unlike most of Internet startups feeling themselves suddenly
vulnerable to government oversight. Bitcoins are not issued by a
central body, and rely on a network of verification nodes to regulate
transactions; in the future, Bitcoin users may achieve enough
political clout to defend itself in traditional arenas.
“As Bitcoin's price
increases, the new Bitcoin millionaires and billionaires will use
their economic clout to rewrite laws in favor of Bitcoin, the same
way banks like JP Morgan or Goldman Sachs lobby government to write
laws that favor them,” he explained.
Web 3.0?
Bitcoin could also offer relief to debt-stricken countries such as Cyprus. “Cyprus was Bitcoin's 'come to Jesus' moment and it's fitting it happened around the Easter Holiday,” Keiser said.“For millions of people around the world who have been victimized by banksters and their corrupt politician friends, the light bulb went off and they suddenly realized they could save their wealth by parking it in Bitcoin and no government or bankster could stop them.”
After the initial rush of
interest in the Internet in the mid-1990s, and the follow-up boom of
Web 2.0 and the growth of social networking, Bitcoin is the third and
“perhaps the most disruptive wave of all,” Keiser said.
“This is Web
3.0,” he said. “For me it's extremely exciting
since I pioneered the idea of virtual currencies back in the mid
1990s and have four US patents in my name covering virtual trading
and virtual currencies. Most people I talked to back then about these
ideas and the possibility that something like Bitcoin could exist
didn't think it was possible. They were wrong.”
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