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I'm trying to spread the taint.You know cryptocurrency has officially jumped the shark when okies start investing in it.
The order is expected to describe what government agencies, including the Treasury Department, need to do to develop policies and regulations on digital currencies. It is expected to include a request for the State Department to ensure that American cryptocurrency laws are aligned with those of U.S. allies and will ask the Financial Stability Oversight Council — which monitors the stability of the U.S. financial system — to study illicit finance concerns.
Additionally, the order will explore the possibility of a new central bank digital currency. The Federal Reserve issued a paper on the topic in January that explores the risks and benefits of U.S.-backed digital currency.
Implicit in the order will be that cryptocurrency will remain a part of the U.S. economy for years to come. The White House's plans to move forward with the executive order were first reported by Bloomberg News.
If Congress doesn't act, Treasury will. And if you own crypto, that may or may not result in what you want. We are going to a CBDC for sure. The question is who makes the rules.The Biden Admin is expected to release their the US first guidance on Crypto currency regulation. The US is behind in regulating Crypto currencies compared to places like Russia and China.
https://www.usnews.com/news/busines...ve-order-on-cryptocurrency-expected-this-week
If Congress doesn't act, Treasury will. And if you own crypto, that may or may not result in what you want. We are going to a CBDC for sure. The question is who makes the rules.
All I will say is that signing a law saying they will regulate crypto is much different than actually controlling. Cryptos have been built to be unregulatable. I'm sure that isn't 100% true but it will be a battle back and forth.
As long a real $$ is exchanged for Crypto to buy and sell it can be regulated.
The fact that Crypto has evolved from everyone storing their own keys on their private PC to the safety of Crypto "banks" makes it easier to regulate. Popular exchanges like Coinbase and Crypto.com are public meaning they'll bow to whatever rules the Treasury puts in place.
Could exchanges flee offshore? Yes, there are already some shadier less safe exchanges. If you have lots of $$ in crypto do you want to keep it in a shady exchange or more secure (and regulated) exchange?
You can buy things with crypto today. The more that expands the more it is to regulate. The infrastructure is growing.
You act like that has to gone into the future. Exchanges are used for convenience. That goes away once the government sticks their hand in it.
Ooo. Offshore means shady. Very biased and discriminatory of you. I guess you wouldn't want ferners to handle your money, huh? But what would actually happen is people would pull their money out of the exchanges.
So you agree that Crypto currency can be regulated?
Convenience equals consumer. The exchanges have made crypto currency accessible to consumers. Take those away and all you have are hackers and those with a desire to live off the grid. It also means less overall investment in crypto with vastly reduces the value of said currencies. Investors need some measure of safety.
Please don't put words in my mouth. There have been multiple instances of exchanges getting hacked or simply taking the crypto. This is what regulation should be geared to prevent.
Given how often we swap out our computers, nobody but those fearful of government wants to have large sums of wealth at the mercy of their personal PC. It's the modern version of putting your money in a coffee can and burying it in the backyard. Forget where you buried it (or your crypto keys) and your wealth is gone.
You don't understand how this worksnobody but those fearful of government wants to have large sums of wealth at the mercy of their personal PC. It's the modern version of putting your money in a coffee can and burying it in the backyard. Forget where you buried it (or your crypto keys) and your wealth is gone.
I think there is a misunderstanding here. You said crypto can be regulated because people can't buy things with it. I was pointing out you can buy things with crypto today, so that makes it very difficult to regulate.
You are missing a big part of the picture. That is a factor. But it most likely will be a diminishing factor.
Regulation doesn't change that. It just gives government power to tax and take away your money when they want to. See Canada.
Not surprised you'd take issue with that given your espouse libertarian roots. There is a reason your views are a minority. They are more idealist than reality based.Not sure the Venn diagram of the statement and reality has much overlap.
You don't understand how this works
Hardware wallets (eg, Trezor, Ledger) are one way (among others) to gain exclusive control over digital assets, and this also requires a little strategic thought on how to secure one's private keys, succession/inheritance planning, etc
Any reasonably intelligent person can do it or get qualified professional assistance
I fully understand how hardware wallets work. They aren't much different than hiding your cash in the mattress or backyard. Ask yourself who is typically trying to hide their $$, what is the volume and therein lies the answer to whether it's restricting to the growth of crypto or not. Compare the barrier to entry of setting up a hardware wallet vs. using an exchange. Coinbase setup took minutes when I did it.
I can only speak for myself but I use a HW wallet to secure and manage digital assets, not "hide" them although that is part of the security equationAsk yourself who is typically trying to hide their $$
Not your keys, not your coinsCoinbase setup took minutes when I did it.
Some things of value require time and effort, yesCompare the barrier to entry of setting up a hardware wallet vs. using an exchange
More and more people will want to set up wallets "in their back yard" if you can buy things with crypto and you want to avoid regulation. It is small now, but it will grow. Especially if governments keep seizing people's assets. I mean, people pull their money out of a bank when it is failing. People change behavior all the time.
I can only speak for myself but I use a HW wallet to secure and manage digital assets, not "hide" them although that is part of the security equation
Your phrasing seems to suggest guilt or some sinister intent with buyers
Not your keys, not your coins
Nobody who is serious about it leaves their assets on an exchange
Somewhat related, thinking about crypto exchanges.. I don't own any gold but I wonder about those who buy gold and take physical custody of it themselves versus having a custodian hold it and give them essentially a paper claim on it. Can you feel confident that you "own" the gold if you don't have physical control over it? Does the custodian actually have the reserves they claim to hold, and can you verify this?
Anyone watching Bitcoin right now???
Will the cycle repeat until the value is 0? History and fundamentals say, Yes.
I guess having the value of their money drop 41.7% in a year surprised El Salvador. Thank goodness for that country's stabilizing effect on bitcoin. I'm sure the citizens are thrilled with their cabbage patch dolls.The cycles have been up long term so this is a false statement. It won't go away because El Salvador is using it and many other countries in South America and Africa are working towards using it. That will make it more stable.
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