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Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

With Blockchain technology becoming more prevalent worldwide, particularly as it relates to cryptocurrencies and StableCoins, regulators continue their struggle to develop appropriate legislation that embodies an ideal balance between regulation and innovation.  Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

In an effort to help shape these new regulations and encourage legislation that is favorable to the Bitcoin industry, many Bitcoin leaders have increased their presence in Washington, primarily through lobbying efforts. (Lydia Beyoud, Bloomberg Law). In fact, lobbying efforts increased significantly during 2018 with larger Bitcoin groups spending six-figures per quarter on lobbying alone, and Bitcoin-specific companies filing twice as many lobbying reports in 2018 as 2017. (Id.).

While Congress and other federal lawmakers are still primarily in the information gathering phase, the Bitcoin industries attempt to accelerate the regulatory process through increased lobbying efforts appears to be paying off. (Alex Lielacher, Brave New Coin). The Token Taxonomy Act, for example, was recently introduced to Congress in December 2018. If passed, this Act would provide favorable capital gains treatment for Bitcoin trading and establish that Bitcoin assets and digital tokens are not securities. (Joseph Young, Cointelegraph).

In addition to increasing their lobbying efforts, multiple Bitcoin companies and virtual currency startups have begun banding together to form trade groups and alliances. Such alliances seek to present policymakers with a united voice and primarily focus on encouraging the development of appropriate regulations and investor-friendly tax treatment for Bitcoin industry. (Brian Fung, Washington Post).

For example, the Blockchain Association, which is based in Washington D.C., acquired over nineteen members in six months, including several top digital-currency exchanges and Bitcoin-investment firms. The Blockchain Association aims to educate lawmakers and establish itself as the go-to lobbying organization for the Bitcoin industry. It also seeks to develop legislation and regulations capable of protecting consumers and encouraging innovation. (Jeff Engel, Xconomy).

Lawmakers worldwide are faced with the question of how to regulate Bitcoin. At the same time, various companies and Bitcoin leaders are banding together in an attempt to influence their country’s legislation and regulations. For example, CryptoUK has actively lobbied the U.K. government and the Russian Association of Bitcoin and Blockchain to assist the Russian government in researching, developing, and enacting appropriate Bitcoin legislation. (Maria Lobanova, Bitcoin Magazine).

Blockchain companies in China, India, and Australia have also begun teaming up with financial institutions and banks in an effort to influence the evolving regulations surrounding Bitcoin and blockchain technology. (Jimmy Aki, CCN). In the end, while the Bitcoin industry has been increasing its lobbying efforts both in Washington and abroad, with the approach and impact varying between countries, introducing and obtaining approval for favorable Bitcoin legislation primarily continues to be an uphill battle.

The Congressional Blockchain Caucus was founded in the 114th Congress and is enjoying significant growth and an ever-expanding focus. We are a bi-partisan group of Members of Congress and Staff who believe in the future of blockchain technology, and understand that Congress has a role to play in its development. As a Caucus, we have decided on a hands-off regulatory approach, believing that this technology will best evolve the same way the internet did; on its own.
The Caucus is a platform for industry and government to come together to study and understand the implications of blockchain technology. We’re fascinated with the potential for blockchain technology to significantly improve identity management, asset tracking and ownership, healthcare records management, intellectual property rights, and much more.
We are in the early days of this technology, and we feel it paramount that Congress be a bridge between industry and government to foster collaboration and ensure competitiveness on the global stage. Please feel free ot reach out to any of our staff co-chairs for topics you’d like to see addressed at lunch briefings, or just ideas you have in general for the Caucus.
We look forward to working with you.
Proof of Stake AllianceStaking The Future: The Proof of Stake Alliance serves as a unified voice to support, grow and protect proof of stake-based technologies and innovations that will power the next generation of the internet.

Black Women Blockchain Council: Our mission is to create a safe space that inspires, trains and activates a talent and economic pipeline of black women pursuing professional and entrepreneurial careers in blockchain and fintech; including inspiring and educating the next generation (K-12 and College/University) of diverse and inclusive blockchain leaders.

Coin Center Is The Leading Non-Profit Focused On The Policy Issues Facing Bitcoin.  We engage in research, educate policymakers, and advocate for sensible regulatory approaches to this technology.

Based in Washington, D.C., Coin Center is the leading non-profit research and advocacy center focused on the public policy issues facing Bitcoin and decentralized computing technologies like Bitcoin and Ethereum.

Our mission is to build a better understanding of these technologies and to promote a regulatory climate that preserves the freedom to innovate using permissionless blockchain technologies.

We do this by producing and publishing policy research from respected academics and experts, educating policymakers and the media about blockchain technology, and by engaging in advocacy for sound public policy.



The Chamber Of Digital Commerce Is The World’s Leading Trade Association Representing The Digital Asset And Blockchain Industry

Grayscale Donates $1M To Coin Center, Pledges Up To $1M More In Matched Contributions

Grayscale hopes to build off the success of Kraken’s donate-and-match program from 2018.

Grayscale Investments, the world’s largest digital-asset manager, has pledged $1 million to Coin Center, Washington, D.C.’s most influential Bitcoin advocacy group — a move it believes will help broaden “foundational knowledge” of the industry.

The million-dollar donation was announced Monday in a press release, which also revealed Grayscale’s plan to match contributions to Coin Center through the end of February. Over that period, Grayscale plans to match donations dollar-for-dollar up to an additional $1 million.

Grayscale got the inspiration for the donate-and-match program from Kraken, the San Francisco-based exchange that managed to raise over $3 million for Coin Center in 2018. That included $2 million in direct support from Kraken.

“Coin Center has played a key role in advocating for issues that affect our ecosystem,” Grayscale told Cointelegraph.

The asset manager added that in the past two months, “Coin Center filed two strong comment letters that played a key part in correcting issues in proposed rulemaking by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, that would have had serious negative consequences for self-hosted wallet users and the overall digital currency industry.”

Coin Center is a leading think tank focused on advancing public policy issues in the realm of digital assets and blockchain. In 2017, the advocacy group took to Congress to demonstrate to lawmakers how Bitcoin works. Last year, the organization reached out to the Bitcoin community to help ensure that COVID-19-era lockdown measures don’t encroach on civil liberties and privacy.

When asked about the most pressing advocacy work needed for the Bitcoin industry today, Grayscale said:

“It all comes down to education. Regulators need to have foundational knowledge of a topic to be able to make informed decisions about the bills that cross their desk. Education is both the biggest challenge and opportunity for our industry when it comes to policymakers.”

Neeraj Agrawal, Coin Center’s director of communications, told Cointelegraph he was “blown away by the community and industry’s continued support” of the advocacy group. “We are going to use these funds to continue representing Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Bitcoin in general in D.C.,” he said.

In the coming year, Coin Center plans to remain focused on advancing financial privacy and “more sensible tax policy,” Agrawal said.



Ripple Ran Crypto’s Most Expensive Lobbying Program In 2020

Per the latest in lobbying disclosures, Ripple Labs shelled out for its lobbying on legislation looking to change the treatment of Bitcoin under securities laws.

Ripple Labs spent $690,000 on lobbying in the United States in 2020, which still didn’t save the firm from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Per legally mandated disclosures for 2020, Ripple’s lobbying program dwarfed those of other firms in the Bitcoin industry. Coinbase, which looks to become the first American Bitcoin exchange to issue public shares, spent $230,000 over the same year, while other exchanges like Binance.US, Gemini and Kraken did not report any spending on lobbying.

Ripple’s spending on lobbying is, however, relatively paltry compared with the giants of Big Tech. Facebook, for example, spent well over $5 million in just the fourth quarter of 2020.

The Diem Association, formerly known as the Libra Association, reported no lobbying activity over 2020, despite the prospective stablecoin issuer’s major struggles with regulators. In the past, it had contracted with the Washington, D.C. offices of law firm Skadden.

While the Diem Association has consistently downplayed its relationship with Facebook, Facebook maintained a $200,000 contract with lobbyists at FS Vector over 2020 to focus on blockchain issues.

Ripple was, incidentally, also an FS Vector client. The first half of 2020 also saw Ripple terminate its in-house lobbying team. It now relies solely on contracts with professional firms.

Lobbying activities that Ripple funded were aimed primarily at legislation before Congress like the Token Taxonomy Act and the Digital Commodity Exchange Act. These pieces of legislation set new rules for which digital assets are or are not securities.

Questions of securities law and Bitcoin are obviously critical to Ripple’s business model. The firm had long faced questions as to whether XRP was in fact a security. These questions culminated in the SEC, the securities regulator in the U.S., filing a suit against Ripple Labs near the end of December 2020.

In its complaint, the SEC alleges that “the overwhelming majority of Ripple’s revenue came from its sales of XRP, and Ripple relied on those sales to fund its operations.”

Neither Ripple nor FS Vector responded to Cointelegraph’s request for comment. Representatives for Diem declined to comment.



Updated: 1-28-2021

Bitcoin Industry Jumps Into Lobbying In Response To FinCEN

The Blockchain Association’s ranks swell as firms look to aid its work in keeping Bitcoin transactions peer-to-peer.

The Bitcoin lobby is growing as more firms join the effort to fight rules that attack financial privacy.

The Blockchain Association today announced the addition of five new members, with membership now totaling 30 firms. The new members are Uniswap, Blockfi, Fireblocks, CMT Digital and Blockchain Capital.

In its tweet announcing the news, the Blockchain Association attributed the rise in membership to its work in presenting an industry response to rules from the United States Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, at the tail end of the Donald Trump administration. The association wrote, “Battling back the FinCEN process was an important step, demonstrating what is possible when we speak with one voice.”

FinCEN’s proposal involved extending $10,000 thresholds on reporting all Bitcoin transactions and $3,000 limits on transactions with self-hosted wallets that lack identifying features. The rules, derived from the Bank Secrecy Act, would be a major interference in peer-to-peer transactions. They are, as of this week, in motion again.

The Blockchain Association, as a trade association, unites members of a single industry under a shared umbrella and lobbies Congress on behalf of mutual interests. Many firms in Bitcoin operate their own in-house lobbying operations or individual contracts with established firms.

Other members of the Bitcoin industry lobby have benefitted from the attention that FinCEN has drawn to policymaking. Nonprofit Coin Center recently saw a $1 million donation from Grayscale. A Coin Center representative commented on its coming priorities: “Most of our work in 2021 will likely be continuing to hold to the line for financial privacy and hopefully advancing some more sensible tax policy.”

Coin Center and the Blockchain Association were, indeed, highly visible allies in the fight against FinCEN’s proposal.

The Blockchain Association had not responded to Cointelegraph’s request for comment as of publication.



Updated: 2-9-2021

Amid Hiring Spree, Blockchain Association Adds Token Taxonomy Act Guru To Team

The former aide to Representative Davidson will join Bitcoin’s leading trade association.

The Blockchain Association, a leading trade association and lobbying group, has hired Ron Hammond as its new director of government relations.

The Blockchain Association has been one of Washington, D.C.’s biggest advocates for the Bitcoin industry since its launch in 2018. Executive director Kristin Smith recently appeared on Cointelegraph’s Top 100 list.

Hammond, meanwhile, cut his teeth working on Bitcoin policy for Representative Warren Davidson, most notably the Token Taxonomy Act, which is also the origin of the relationship with the Blockchain Association.

It was at Davidson’s roundtable for Bitcoin industry stakeholders back in September 2018 that the Blockchain Association made its inaugural public appearance, Hammond told Cointelegraph.

Subsequently, Hammond worked as a lobbyist for Ripple before going independent earlier this year.

Hammond is the Blockchain Association’s fourth new full-time hire since the new year, “More than doubling the number of permanent, non-intern employees on the team,” said Graham Newhall, the association’s communications advisor.

The Blockchain Association’s rapid growth has tracked with mass interest in lobbying from the Bitcoin industry, especially in the wake of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network’s proposals to restrict trading with self-hosted wallets. “We’re bursting at the seams with things we’d like to be doing,” Newhall said of the surge. “It’s been a nice confluence of new members and new team members.”

Beyond responses to FinCEN, Hammond noted that the change in presidential administration makes this a critical time to get involved with new decision makers. He said that he aims to focus on “The big issues that are being picked up from the previous administration,” namely “securities law and custody, as well as tax.”

Laws and regulations governing blockchain and Bitcoin have been soaring in the public consciousness, enabling those involved to get more ambitious. According to Hammond, the new goal within financial regulation is “Making sure that the Blockchain Association has not just a seat of the table, but is actually, in some cases, leading the conversation.”

At the end of January, the Blockchain Association announced the addition of 5 new members, bringing total backing up to 30 firms.



Updated: 2-10-2021

Jack Dorsey Commits $1M To Coin Center On Top Of Grayscale’s $2M Donation

The D.C.-based advocacy group just raised millions for its ongoing research and lobbying efforts. Here’s how the numbers broke down.

2021 is shaping up to be a generous year for Bitcoin donations. On Wednesday, Coin Center, the leading Bitcoin nonprofit in Washington, D.C., announced that it had raised millions in additional funding from high-profile names in the Bitcoin industry.

Jerry Brito, Coin Center’s executive director, tweeted that his organization had received enough donations to claim the $1 million in matched contributions from Grayscale Investments, the world’s largest Bitcoin fund manager.

Less than three weeks ago, Grayscale announced that it had donated $1 million to the advocacy group and pledged an additional $1 million in matched contributions. A few days later, digital currency exchange Kraken announced that it was pledging $100,000 to Coin Center.

Perhaps the most noteworthy news item came in a follow-up tweet when Brito confirmed that Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey donated $1 million to the advocacy group. “We were almost to our goal for the matching campaign when he put us over the top and then some,” he said.

 

Dorsey is also behind Square, whose mobile payments app lets users buy and sell Bitcoin. Square is also one of the largest corporate holders of BTC, with 4,709 units of the virtual currency on its books. That’s equivalent to nearly $210 million in today’s value.

Coin Center’s advocacy work is increasingly focused on advancing financial privacy and “sensible tax policy,” according to Neeraj Agrawal, the organization’s director of communications.

The Bitcoin community is known for its generousity, especially in the wake of the 2017-18 bull market where millions of people around the world made a fortune investing in digital assets. Companies like The Giving Block are making it easier for organizations to accept digital currency donations.

The Giving Block recently published three job postings on its website, which reflects the growth of the Bitcoin donations industry.

 

Bitcoin Core Non-Profit Gets Approved For Tax Exemption, Perks For Donors

501(3)(c) status boosts the project’s legitimacy as well as its efficiency in using donations.

A new non-profit aiming to fund Bitcoin development education and research has been approved for special tax status, conferring benefits on donors.

Brink, which launched in the fall, has been approved as a 503(c)(3) organization according to a Feb. 10 blog post. The status both exempts Brink from federal taxes and provides some interesting benefits to donors, especially considering their use of Bitcoin.

Donations to 503(c)(3) organizations in the U.S. have always been an important tax write-off, but considering the long-term confusion over the IRS seemingly asking for Bitcoin users to pay capital gains taxes on any use of Bitcoin as a payment. In its announcement, Brink says that it offers an alternative:

“Donations of long-term appreciated assets like Bitcoin generally don’t incur capital gains tax and can be claimed as an income tax deduction for the full fair-market value.”

Headed by Bitcoin core developer John Newberry, Brink runs fellowship and educational programs for new devs. Newberry told Cointelegraph that Brink had looked for the designation since its beginning: “We always planned to be a 501c3, and our corporation bylaws are completely consistent with that designation.”

The legal status as a 503(3)(c) non-profit will also open Brink up to new disclosure requirements, which Bitcoin’s innate transparency may make simpler.

However, the BTC address that Brink advertises on its Twitter feed appears to be unused. Newberry told Cointelegraph that the wallet was for a one-time donation, saying that those interested can now donate in Bitcoin and fiat here.

The firm’s Bitcoin donation window actually leads to an Open Node API. Open Node offers instant conversion from Bitcoin to fiat, which raises the question: Does Brink not actually hold BTC donations in BTC?

Newberry did not respond to Cointelegraph’s request to specify a wallet address.

The confusion over having to pay capital gains taxes on any payment in Bitcoin had led many to call for a de minimis on the value of those payments before the IRS can come for them.



Updated: 2-12-2021

Wall Street Embrace Of Bitcoin Grows Closer As Employees Argue On Its Behalf

On a Zoom call with traders in January, co-President Daniel Pinto suggested he was open-minded about bitcoin.

Wall Street giants are facing increased pressure from their employees about accepting bitcoin as a legitimate asset class, CNBC reported Friday.

* Joining a Zoom call with thousands of JPMorgan Chase traders in January, co-President Daniel Pinto suggested he was open-minded about the Bitcoin, CNBC said, citing people with knowledge of the call.

* Pinto was responding to global markets head Troy Rohrbaugh acknowledging that the bank’s own employees are increasingly asking when it will get involved in Bitcoin.

* When subsequently clarifying his comments, Pinto iterated that the decision would be based on demand from clients.

* “The demand isn’t there yet, but I’m sure it will be at some point,” he said to CNBC.

* This news emerges hot on the heels of Goldman Sachs hosting a private forum with Mike Novogratz on Feb. 2, in which the founder of institutional Bitcoin investment firm Galaxy Digital discussed bitcoin, ethereum and more, CNBC said.

* JPMorgan is often seen by Bitcoin enthusiasts as the epitome of mainstream finance skepticism of Bitcoin, CNBC said, thanks largely to comments made by CEO Jamie Dimon in 2017 when he labelled bitcoin a “fraud,” saying he would fire any traders known to be trading it.



Updated: 3-5-2021

Blockchain Association Meeting With Key Biden Staff About Regulations

The Bitcoin advocacy group is going on a charm offensive and meeting with top representatives of the Biden administration.

U.S.-based Bitcoin advocacy group, the Blockchain Association, is lobbying key figures in the Biden administration to advocate for more favorable regulations.

The Association’s executive director, Kristin Smith, told Fox Business the group has already met with or is in the process of scheduling meetings with high-ranking Whitehouse officials including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Deputy Secretary nominee and former BlackRock executive Wally Adeyemo, along with representatives of the Treasury Department.

Citing reported comments from Yellen about how the primary utility of Bitcoin is “illicit financing,” Smith said the association’s key aim was to assist the Treasury chief to “understand the value of Bitcoin networks:”

Our number one priority is helping Yellen understand Bitcoin goes beyond the financing of criminal enterprises.”

Yellen has been criticized by the Bitcoin sector for describing Bitcoin as “an extremely inefficient way of conduction transactions,” and speculating that BTC is not “widely used as a transaction mechanism.”

Despite her apparent hostility toward Bitcoin, Yellen has expressed openness to centralized DLT, with the secretary stating a digital dollar could offer “faster, safe, and cheaper payments” than existing fiat currency last month.

Adam Traidman, CEO of Bitcoin wallet BRD, indicated representatives of the Bitcoin sector are “trying to work as high up the Treasury food chain as we can,” adding:

“We’re not opposed to regulation and compliance, but we need time to spur innovation and grease the skids for adoption of Bitcoin first.”

Traidman emphasized concerns regarding regulations for wallets and Bitcoin transactions, stating: “One of our main goals is to carve out Bitcoin transactions from most regulations. If Bitcoin transfers have to meet wire transfer rules, that will harm the industry.”

Some in the Bitcoin community have also expressed concern regarding Joe Biden’s nominee for chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Gary Gensler — who has previously described Ethereum’s 2014 ICO as an unregistered securities offering.

Earlier this week, Gensler told the Senate Banking Committee the SEC will work to ensure the Bitcoin markets “are free of fraud and manipulation,” accusing off-shore exchanges of having been “rife with fraud.”

The Blockchain Association’s members include Bitcoin heavyweights Circle, Binance.US, Grayscale, and Kraken.



Updated: 3-15-2021

Proposed FinCEN Rule Is A ‘Grave Threat To Personal Privacy,’ Says Coin Center

In its latest comment, the advocacy group goes after the proposed requirement to create currency transaction reports for Bitcoin transactions.

After the U.S. Treasury Department extended the comment period for anyone to express their thoughts on a proposed Bitcoin rule, non-profit Bitcoin policy advocate group Coin Center has made another — and possibly final — argument to regulators.

Coin Center directed its comment to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, over proposed rules that would require registered Bitcoin exchanges in the U.S. to verify the identity of people using “an unhosted or otherwise covered wallet” for a transaction of more than $3,000 and report on all Bitcoin transactions of more than $10,000.

The advocacy group referred to the proposal as “a grave threat to personal privacy, Fourth Amendment rights against warrantless search, as well as a substantial threat to continued responsible innovation.”

Specifically, Coin Center said Bitcoin transactions should not be subject to the same requirements as those facing bank customers moving $10,000 or more in cash. The group claims that requiring institutions to create a currency transaction report, or CTR, for Bitcoin transactions is “automated mass surveillance of innocent transactions.”

“Any transaction over $2,000 that is merely ‘relevant to a possible violation of law or regulation’ will trigger a suspicious activity report (SAR) requirement, which already applies to Bitcoin transactions today,” said Coin Center. “Any CTR report filed without an accompanying SAR is, by definition, a report about an American resident’s entirely innocent and otherwise private financial activities.”

The Group Added:

“If FinCEN insists on further extending the gambit of warrantless mass surveillance, then it should by no account do so in a way that prejudices new technologies and the companies and individuals that use them.”

FinCEN first proposed the Bitcoin wallet rule in December and said its website was open to comments until Jan. 4. The regulatory body later extended this deadline on Jan. 15 for an additional 14 days until its most recent — and possibly final — extension to March 29.

Since the proposed rules were filed last year, Coin Center has urged people in the Bitcoin space to file comments to regulators, and decried the original short window of opportunity to do so.

Feedback from groups like Coin Center and the Blockchain Association could have been responsible for one or more of the extensions, which pushed the proposed wallet rule out of the former administration’s purview to that of recently confirmed Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.



Updated: 4-6-2021

Coinbase And Square Lead New Bitcoin Lobbying Effort

The Bitcoin Council for Innovation is looking to lead the charge for sensible Bitcoin regulations around the world.

Major stakeholders in the Bitcoin scene, like Coinbase and Square, have formed an alliance to better relate with policymakers and regulators on the subject of Bitcoin regulations. They are joined by other major players in the Bitcoin scene, such as Fidelity Digital Assets and Bitcoin-focused investment firm Paradigm.

Dubbed the Bitcoin Council for Innovation, the CCI aims to facilitate constructive dialogue with governments and regulatory agencies about the benefits of Bitcoin, according to the details published on the group’s website.

An Excerpt From The CCI’s Website Reads:

“CCI supports governments and institutions worldwide in efforts to shape and encourage the responsible regulation of Bitcoin in a way that unlocks potential and improves lives.”

According to the CCI, effective communication with regulatory stakeholders will help to separate “fact from perception” as far as Bitcoin are concerned.

Indeed, anti-Bitcoin rhetorics espoused by regulators around the world often echo misrepresentations about the Bitcoin industry. Back in February, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen declared that Bitcoins were being increasingly used for criminal activities.

Yellen is not alone in such assertions despite existing research showing that the criminal share of global Bitcoin commerce is less than 1%.

The CCI is the latest Bitcoin-focused lobbying effort to emerge with groups like the Blockchain Association and Coin Center also working towards sensible Bitcoin regulations.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, Ripple spent the most money in lobbying efforts in the United States in 2020. The company is currently fighting a securities violation lawsuit brought against the firm by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Bitcoin lobbying groups have recorded some successes in fighting harsh Bitcoin laws. In India, a coalition of industry proponents under the aegis of the Internet and Mobile Association of India, or IAMAI led the charge against the central bank ban of 2018 leading to a reversal of the diktat by the Supreme Court in March 2020.

Members of the IAMAI are currently trying to convince government officials to adopt a more nuanced approach to Bitcoin regulations in India.



Bitcoin Lobby Groups Are Gaining Traction In Washington As The Threat Of Regulatory Bottleneck Looms

The blockchain industry is looking to shed the negative association between digital assets and crime as the threat of additional regulatory oversight looms.

Bitcoin-focused lobbying groups in Washington, DC are playing an increasingly vital role in reorienting policymakers away from the view that digital currencies are used primarily for illegal transactions. Now, they are preparing for, potentially, their biggest battle yet.

The Blockchain Association, an industry trade group representing Bitcoin firms, has added 10 members to its brass since December 2020, bringing its total to 34. Kristin Smith, the group’s executive director, told Bloomberg that the association’s members are extremely concerned about federal regulators clamping down on the industry over misplaced fears.

“We in the industry think it’s hugely problematic,” she said, adding that “It misses the entire point of this innovation.”

Smith was commenting on recent proposals by the Financial Action Task Force and Treasury Department to increase surveillance of the Bitcoin market over concerns about money laundering and other illicit activities. The proposals, which could be finalized later this year, would place more burdens on investors and blockchain networks.

Coin Center, a leading DC-based advocacy group, is raising money in preparation for a lengthy lobbying battle or lawsuit over the proposed regulations. Jeremey Brito, the group’s executive director, told Bloomberg:

“Our job is to say absolutely there is a real risk here and that we all need to work together, but don’t throw away the baby with the bathwater.”

Grayscale, the world’s largest digital asset manager, donated $2 million to Con Center earlier this year. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey also contributed $1 million to the advocacy group.

Despite concerns about sweeping government regulations, the threat of an outright ban on digital assets is long gone, according to billionaire investor Tyler Winklevoss. In a recent What Bitcoin Did podcast episode with Peter McCormack, Winklevoss said:

“I think that the U.S. will never outlaw Bitcoin. There’s too much precedent that’s been set in the courts. The Coinflip order, which was a CFTC [Commodity Futures Trading Commission] enforcement action which was upheld in the courts, considered Bitcoin a commodity like gold.”

Digital assets have reentered public discourse over the past six months as Bitcoin (BTC) charted new all-time highs and major institutions like Morgan Stanley and MassMutual got involved. On the corporate side, Tesla and MicroStrategy have added billions of dollars worth of BTC to their balance sheets — moves that many believe will normalize digital-asset exposure moving forward.

JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and BlackRock have all recognized Bitcoin’s emergence as a new asset class and, in some cases, one that could challenge gold for store-of-value supremacy.

Bitcoin have reached several major milestones this year. The collective market capitalization of all digital assets topped $1 trillion in January before doubling less than three months later.



Updated: 4-7-2021

The Accidental Bitcoin Lobbyist

Our reporter contacts state lawmakers for clarification and ends up inadvertently reshaping a bill.

I think I just saved stablecoin issuers in West Virginia.

I know, that’s a bold statement. And especially by a journalist whose job is to report on events, not influence them. For the record: I was NOT trying to influence the legislative process here.

But I think I did. And the episode speaks to the surprising malleability of legislators when, after a year of crafting massive legislation, you catch them off guard. Allow me to explain.

West Virginia’s Legislature is considering a sweeping overhaul to the state’s criminal code – its biggest in decades – with a package delegates have been sharpening for nearly a year. Their 400-page behemoth would strengthen drug sentencing, expand homicide provisions, modernize anti-hacking statutes and establish a tiered system for misdemeanors and felonies.

Pretty normal fare for a criminal code overhaul. But I noticed something strange last week in House Bill 2017. It seemed to ban people from issuing or transacting in Bitcoin not sanctioned by the 38th most populous state in the U.S.

“If any person shall, without authority of law, issue any note, Bitcoin, or other security purporting that money or other thing of value is payable by or on behalf of such person, with intent thereby to create a circulating medium, he or she shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” read the section 61-4-7 of the bill. (Bitcoin, bolded here, was new to the “unauthorized currency” provision).



Huh? Was this a Bitcoin ban? I wasn’t sure. The following section, 61-4-8, only made me more confused:

“If any person … shall knowingly pass or receive in payment any such note, Bitcoin, or security, he or she shall be guilty of a Class 3 misdemeanor.”

Sure looked like a Bitcoin ban to me. But I’m no lawyer. Hell, I haven’t even ordered those LSAT study books yet. (Sorry, Mom!) So I emailed a few real attorneys to hear their take.

‘Very Curious’

Drew Hinkes of Carlton Fields responded first. “This bill would benefit from further clarification,” he began. Not a very promising start.

HB 2017’s “very curious definition” of Bitcoin was unlikely to spell a sweeping ban on digital assets or any Bitcoin with supposed intrinsic value (bitcoin (BTC, -1.18%)), Hinkes explained. Rather, it seemed tailored to “Bitcoin that promise payment to the holder,” or perhaps asset-backed stablecoins with redeemable reserves.

(My favorite example of an asset-backed, redeemable Bitcoin is sardine coin. Holders can exchange their tokens for a vintage tin of salty fish. That European initial coin offering is, alas, not available to U.S. residents. More relevant are dollar-pegged stablecoins like USDT (+0.02%), USDC (+0.06%) and DAI (-0.04%), which are backed by fiat currency in a brick-and-mortar bank and/or other assets and boast a combined market capitalization of $56 billion, or 77% of West Virginia’s annual GDP.)

Carol Van Cleef of Bradley was my next stop. She deemed the proposal “disturbing” and said it would render authorized stablecoins “as a nonfactor in payments.”

“When I see something like this – my first question is where did it come from, who is behind and why,” she said.

I agreed. So I found the emails of the bill’s 11 co-sponsors and contacted them en masse.



Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

I did not realize it then, but Wednesday was set to be a banner day for HB 2017. After nearly a year of drafting and committee work, it was headed for final vote on third reading. The Bitcoin rider had been in there from the start and it was just hours away from passing.

‘Your contribution is appreciated’

I woke up to a cordial email from Delegate Bryan Ward. “Good morning, sir,” wrote the first-term member. “This bill was voluminous and technical amendments are forthcoming in an effort to perfect the language.”

“An amendment, specifically addressing your concern relating to Bitcoin will be offered by Delegate Daniel Linville. I’m fortunate to have colleagues here in the house of delegates with broad ranging expertises. Your contribution to the process of crafting the best bill is appreciated.”

What? My contribution to the crafting of a better bill? I am not a constituent of West Virginia nor am I a registered lobbyist. I know how to report, not how to influence. I was not sure what was going on.

Linville, who chairs the Technology and Infrastructure Committee, emailed me the amendment he would propose on the floor of the house of delegates later that day. It would strike all mentions of Bitcoin from section 61-4-7.

“This should be taken up within the next few hours,” he said.

So I tuned into the livestream on YouTube. Indeed, a few hours later, Linville asked his fellow delegates to adopt his amendment. He said he had met with the bill’s co-sponsor that morning and decided to excise Bitcoin from the law. Better to remove a few words than pass a bill suggesting Bitcoin was counterfeit money, he said. Would his fellow delegates sign on?

“Aye,” agreed the chamber by voice vote, adopting the amendment. Nobody stood in his way.

HB 2017 then passed the House by a vote of 76 to 22.

Something Is Amiss

Shortly after the bill’s passage I began reviewing my notes. It sure seemed that I had acted like a last-minute lobbyist for the Bitcoin industry – though I hadn’t meant to do it. I had found a bill confusing, interviewed lawyers who also found the bill confusing, and then dug up the email addresses of 11 politicians who, when prompted, found their bill confusing, too.

“This bill was voluminous and technical amendments are forthcoming in an effort to perfect the language,” Ward had said to me.“Your contribution to the process of crafting the best bill is appreciated.”

(I have emailed Linville and Ward to ask if the amendment was being planned even before I reached out, but have not heard back.)

All this happened in the final moments before the bill’s passage in the house. On the third reading.

But it’s a good thing for the Bitcoin industry I am not a lobbyist because, despite torpedoing the stablecoin provision without even trying, I still wouldn’t be a very effective one. Remember, there were two sections of this bill in question, the first (61-4-7) to make unauthorized stablecoin issuance illegal and a second (61-4-8) to bar the transfer of such Bitcoins between parties.

Also remember: An amendment “specifically addressing my concern” had been offered and approved. I had only mentioned 61-4-7 in my email. Likewise, the amendment only did away with the ban in Bitcoin issuance. Which means that if the bill is enacted into law, it would still … ban Bitcoin transfers?

I’m really not sure. And neither was Hinkes, the lawyer who thought the bill’s previous rendition warranted a rewrite.

“Without ‘Bitcoin’ in [section 7], [section 8] makes less sense,” he told me, pointing out the statute’s “any such” clause references a Bitcoin that’s no longer there. Perhaps the courts could enforce the ghost clause through complicated judicial jiu-jitsu, but probably not.

“Again, this bill as amended would benefit from further clarity,” he said.

The bill is now up for consideration in the West Virginia Senate.

CORRECTION (4/7/21 18:46 UTC): This article has been updated to reflect that Carol Van Cleef’s comments were directed at “authorized” Bitcoin.



Updated: 4-11-2021

Bitcoin Lobby Plans To Shake Reputation As Criminals’ Currency

Even as Bitcoin steadily gain support on Wall Street, they’re still regarded by regulators as a tool for criminals to conceal shady transactions — posing a challenge to the nascent industry as it seeks to win wider respect.

That’s creating a potentially lucrative opportunity for new groups in Washington advocating for digital currencies. Some prominent Bitcoin lobbying organizations say they’ve increased their membership and raised millions of dollars to help improve the industry’s image.

While banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are exploring digital assets for certain clients, recent actions by regulators show an uncertain road ahead. Late last month, an international anti-fraud watchdog proposed regulations that Bitcoin advocates say would squash a large part of their industry.

The recommendations, from the 39-member Financial Action Task Force, would increase surveillance of many Bitcoin transactions. They come on the heels of a similar anti-money-laundering proposal from the U.S. Treasury Department that could be finalized later this year. Many Bitcoin proponents are opposed to increased surveillance.

The Treasury and FATF proposals come as Bitcoin has rocketed into the financial mainstream. On Monday, the virtual currency traded at about $59,000, more than twice its level at the end of 2020 and more than eight times its level last April.

The soaring prices have given ammunition to Bitcoin lobbying groups emerging in Washington. In the past three months, they’ve used the new regulatory pushes to raise millions of dollars in funding and convince Bitcoin firms to establish a Washington presence.

Even as the finance world has embraced Bitcoin and pumped up their prices, they’ve struggled to shake their reputation as a tool allowing thieves and drug dealers to hide illegal transactions. Some Bitcoin advocates say disabusing regulators of that perception is the biggest challenge virtual assets face.

“We in the industry think it’s hugely problematic,” said Blockchain Association executive director Kristin Smith of the proposed rules. She said they would put heavy surveillance burdens on investors and operators of Bitcoin networks and make it difficult for some services to remain decentralized.

“It misses the entire point of this innovation,” Smith said.

Since December, the Blockchain Association, a trade group for Bitcoin firms, has added 10 members, bringing its total to 34, Smith said. The association, which is less than three years old, has more than doubled its employees to seven. She said the association’s members, which include Bitcoin-exchange Binance.US and Ripple Labs, have discussed making large contributions to the association to ramp up hiring and buy advertising to polish Bitcoin’s image.

Coin Center, a Washington-based think tank and Bitcoin advocacy group, since December has garnered more than $300,000 through a fundraising drive with mostly individual donors contributing small amounts of Bitcoin.

It also received $2 million from Bitcoin-investment firm Grayscale Investments LLC and $1 million from Twitter-founder Jack Dorsey, whose other firm, Square Inc., recently made a $30 million investment in Bitcoin.

Coin Center executive director Jerry Brito said that, for now, his group is saving the money as a war chest in case it needs to fight a larger lobbying battle or file a lawsuit over the new regulations.

“Our job is to say absolutely there is a real risk here and that we all need to work together, but don’t throw away the baby with the bathwater,” Brito said.

One of Bitcoin’s earliest uses was as the only accepted currency on a website for drugs and other illicit goods known as the “Silk Road,” which the Federal Bureau of Investigation shut down in 2013. More recently, Bitcoin has been the preferred payment method of hackers locking up computer data in so-called ransomware attacks.

Even January’s riots at the U.S. Capitol had a Bitcoin connection. A month before the attacks, a now-deceased computer programmer in France sent more than $500,000-worth of the Bitcoin to far-right groups that helped stage the assault.

Bitcoin’s defenders say illicit activity has become less of an issue. Bitcoin wallets are only identified by a string of characters, but the “blockchain” ledger that records Bitcoin transactions is public, allowing authorities to follow the money trail when wallet owners attempt to convert Bitcoin into dollars. They can see that a wallet is hosted by Coinbase, for example, and subpoena Coinbase for the owner’s name.

Chainalysis, a Bitcoin forensics firm that works with law enforcement agencies, says illicit activity makes up a decreasing proportion of Bitcoin transactions, though there are still problem areas like the ransomware attacks.

“Law enforcement investigators are becoming increasingly savvy” in tracking criminal activity on Bitcoin’s network, said Jesse Spiro, Chainalysis’ chief government affairs officer.

Still, world governments have remained wary. A government official in India earlier this year said the country would move to ban Bitcoin. Nigeria and China have also cracked down on purchases.

In the U.S., Representative Brad Sherman, a California Democrat, wants to bar Bitcoin’s use by Americans. Though Sherman’s idea hasn’t taken root, in March billionaire investor Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates LP said he viewed it as a high probability that the U.S. would at some point ban its use.

The regulatory threats aren’t stopping some banks from tiptoeing into the market. Goldman Sachs in March said it was close to offering investment vehicles for digital assets to clients of its private wealth management unit. Morgan Stanley is planning to offer its clients access to Bitcoin funds. So far, the largest U.S. banks still don’t let their clients hold Bitcoin directly.

At the heart of the Treasury and FATF proposals are recommendations to expand how much governments monitor Bitcoin transactions. Both proposals would require financial firms to make more frequent reports on large transactions and to identify the counterparties of their customers on certain activities.

Opponents of the FATF proposal say it would make impossible several recent Bitcoin innovations. For example, the past year has seen explosive growth of “smart contracts” built on the Ethereum network, an open-source Bitcoin platform, that allow for the automatic enforcement of transactions without a financial firm ever taking custody of the Bitcoin.

The FATF proposal would require the operators of those networks to keep track of the activity of their users, something many of the networks don’t have the resources to carry out.

The Treasury proposal, for which the official comment period ended on March 29, drew thousands of comments from both small Bitcoin investors and major financial firms. Some lobbyists had said they were optimistic Treasury officials would scale back at least some of the rules.

Now, the FATF proposal is giving them new reason to worry. FATF’s recommendations aren’t binding on members, which include the U.S., the European Union and other major economies, but are considered a blueprint for anti-fraud regulators. In some cases, not following the recommendations can lead to sanctions or trade limits.

The FATF rule would require participants in a Bitcoin network, even if they didn’t have custody of any currency, to register with regulators and report their activities — and those of their users — to authorities.

Such participants could include people like software developers who have created decentralized Bitcoin exchanges or who operate certain kinds of nodes that process transfers over the Bitcoin network, according to Coin Center.

Coin Center wrote that the recommendations amounted to “mass warrantless surveillance.”

FATF is taking comments on its new proposal through Apr. 20 and could finalize it later this year.

Smith said that FATF, which is based in Paris, doesn’t have an open process for its recommendations, which made the proposal more of a surprise to the industry and harder to affect through lobbying. FATF is accepting comments on the proposal, and Smith said the Blockchain Association and some of its members plan to submit comments.

Smith said her group also plans to reach out to officials at some of FATF’s member countries, including the U.S. and Japan, which co-chair a virtual-asset working group at FATF, as well as to Singapore, which has been especially proactive in trying to grow its Bitcoin industry.



Updated: 4-18-2021

Bitcoin Council For Innovation Report: Criminals Will Move Away From Bitcoin

A recent report co-authored by an ex-CIA director has found that criminals will increasingly move away from using Bitcoin.

A recent report published by the pro-Bitcoin lobbying group Bitcoin Council For Innovation and co-authored by former CIA deputy director Michael Morell analyzed the degree of illicit activity associated with Bitcoin and concluded that criminals will decreasingly leverage bitcoin to launder money.

The report, titled “An Analysis Of Bitcoin’s Use In Illicit Finance,” noted the fact that Bitcoin is pseudonymous (as opposed to completely anonymous) as a reason that other Bitcoin that better protect user privacy represent a “far larger” percent of total transaction volume for illicit activities than bitcoin.

Furthermore, it highlighted the fact that fiat currencies are often better tools for obscuring criminal activity than bitcoin is.

“A currently serving official at the [Commodity Futures Trading Commission] added that it ‘is easier for law enforcement to trace illicit activity using Bitcoin than it is to trace cross-border illegal activity using traditional banking transactions, and far easier than cash transactions,’” according to the report.

And, Despite the fact that some regulators and news outlets have highlighted the potential for Bitcoin like bitcoin to be used as media for financing terrorism, this report found the contrary.

“On the key issue of terrorist financing, [a] former CIA terrorism expert was quoted as saying that ‘the hype is much greater than the reality and that Bitcoin is not yet an important platform for terrorist organizations,’” per the report.

Finally, the authors of the report asked themselves the question: “In light of the conclusions we have reached, why do we see such alarmist statements and articles about the threat posed by Bitcoin?”

Firstly, the authors attributed these statements to a lack of understanding of the technology behind Bitcoin, the propensity for “bad” news to drive perception and the fact that “Bitcoin and its decentralized nature seem to pose a disruptive threat to traditional financial institutions.”



Updated: 4-19-2021

Blockchain Association Executive Debunks Rumored Bitcoin Crackdown By Treasury

A United States blockchain lobbying group executive says there is no danger of a Bitcoin crackdown in the country.

Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Association has dismissed fears that the United States Department of the Treasury was close to cracking down on Bitcoin (BTC) and Bitcoin.

Indeed, rumors of the Treasury bringing money laundering charges against some financial institutions using Bitcoin began circulating on social media over the weekend.

The report emerged during a period of massive selloffs in the Bitcoin space, with the market capitalization dropping over $240 million as Bitcoin slid to $52,000.

In an interview with CNBC, Smith debunked the reports, stating that it was the Department of Justice’s remit to charge companies with money laundering.

Janet Yellen, the secretary of the U.S. Treasury, is a noted Bitcoin critic, who in February characterized the apparent misuse of Bitcoin for illegal activities as a growing concern.

Meanwhile, several studies show the criminal usage of Bitcoin accounts for a minute proportion of global Bitcoin commerce. Indeed, Michael Morell, a former acting director of the Central Intelligence Agency, recently published a paper showing that the broad generalization of digital currencies as conduits for criminal financing was exaggerated.

Morell’s paper also concluded that blockchain forensic tools are sufficiently robust to detect illicit Bitcoin transactions.

Commenting on the efforts by Bitcoin stakeholders to remedy the disinformation in Washington regarding the industry, Smith remarked that several market actors are contributing more resources in positive lobbying efforts on the Hill.

Earlier in April, prominent organizations in the Bitcoin space like Coinbase and Square announced a new lobbying initiative dubbed the Bitcoin Council for Innovation. Apart from the Blockchain Association, other groups like Coin Center are also pushing for sensible digital currency regulations in America.

For Smith, events such as the Coinbase listing on Nasdaq offer proof of the growing market validation for the Bitcoin industry, a phenomenon that authorities in Washington can hardly overlook.



Updated: 5-30-2021

Bitcoin Likely Won’t Entirely Replace Current Financial System, Coin Center Director Says

Bitcoin may not cause the current monetary and financial system to go extinct, though its usage will likely vary depending on one’s location.

Bitcoin may not mean an end to traditional currency and banking, according to research director of Coin Center Peter Van Valkenburgh

“I think there are folks in the Bitcoin community who probably make too many noises about how Bitcoin is going to dominate all economic systems and nobody will be using dollars anymore, and nobody will be using banks anymore, and I think that’s actually a little foolhardy,” Van Valkenburgh said in a Friday interview with the Washington Journal on C-Span.

“The fact of the matter is that there’s going to be times when a Bitcoin transaction is what you want. Definitely if you are in an oppressive state like Nigeria or Belarus, you might find it more useful to use Bitcoin. In the U.S., we have a pretty stable banking system. We have the rule of law, we have a pretty well-functioning government.”

The way in which Bitcoin is used can depend on users’ geographic location. In some countries, Bitcoin (BTC) is seen as more of a speculative asset, used for trading and investing.

In other regions, Bitcoin can serve as a vehicle of greater freedom, providing users more flexibility and faster payments, as well as an avenue out of inflationary troubles when compared to traditional finance and currency.

“Generally speaking, here in the U.S., you’ll probably still use credit cards and Venmo and things like that, but maybe you’ll want to buy some Bitcoin because it can be a way to balance your investment portfolio against the threat of inflation,” Van Valkenburgh said, subsequently referring to similarity to gold in terms of limited supply.

“So maybe, you know, as part of a balanced portfolio that includes other safer investments, you might have a little bit of Bitcoin to hedge against inflation,” he noted.



Updated: 6-3-2021

Regulators Starting To Take Bitcoin Seriously, CoinShares Exec Says

Regulators don’t want to stifle the growth of Bitcoin industry, CoinShares’ Meltem Demirors said.

The $2.6 trillion market cap peak compelled regulators worldwide to take a serious look at Bitcoin, but they also don’t want to stifle a growing industry, CoinShares chief strategy officer Meltem Demirors said.

Stating that “uncertainty is the name of the game for the industry,” Meltem Demirors noted that it took over the macro environment for the last few weeks. “Gary Gensler, the chair of the SEC, has indicated he wants to get more serious about regulating Bitcoin exchanges,” she added, “Across the world, we are seeing regulators starting to take note.”

Bitcoin started this year with under $1 trillion total market cap, peaking at $2.6 trillion a few weeks ago. Demirors said regulators are starting to take the asset class seriously. “We will continue to see uncertainty why the industry, investors, and speculators alike wait to see how regulation shapes up,” she added.

Speaking on regulators’ perception of the market, Demirors said that regulators want to ensure Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering compliance and ensure market oversight without stifling the growing Bitcoin industry.

Demirors stressed the central bankers’ warnings on Bitcoin have an impact on sentiment. “Sentiment informs demand, and demand informs what takes place in the market,” she explained.

The exec described what we’ve seen over the last weeks as the biggest deleveraging event. Following the May 19 sell-off, which saw the largest daily wick in Bitcoin (BTC) history, nearly 60% of total leverages have been unwound from the Bitcoin derivatives market, she noted.

“We see a lot of investors and traders taking a risk-off approach where they are trying to minimize their directional exposure until we see how these regulations are going to shape up.”

Commenting on the price actions of Bitcoin, Demirors doesn’t believe the Bitcoin prices will stay flat for too long, stating, “There’s over $3 trillion of dry powder on the sidelines in the US institutions alone. It is going to get deployed, and I can’t help but believe some of that will find its way into this market.”

 

Updated: 6-21-2021

Iran Government Reportedly Bans Local Blockchain Association

A Bitcoin warning list is the main cause of the ban, according to the head of the Iran Blockchain Community.

The Ministry of Interior of the Islamic Republic of Iran has blocked the activities of the Iran Blockchain Community (IBC), but the association claims they still haven’t received direct notice.

The Social Affairs Organization of the Ministry required reports on IBC’s financial performance and dealings with Bitcoin exchanges via a notice posted in local newspaper Hamshahri Online last week, according to local sources.

Over the weekend, the ministry blocked the association’s activities, but IBC spokesperson Sepehr Mohammadi, who is also the CEO of one of two Bitcoin exchanges listed as sponsors of the association’s website, said no verbal or written warning was given to the board members.

In an open letter to the Social Affairs Organization, the IBC chairman noted that monitoring the performance of blockchain ecosystem participants is the right of the association. He added that issuing and publishing warning lists for new users to avoid traps is also a mission for the IBC.

High-risk Iranian companies involved in Bitcoin were on the IBC warning list, so Mohammadi believes this is the leading cause of the ban. “Vested interests will do anything to stop IBC’s efforts. They managed to publicize the notice before IBA was informed,” he added.

According to the local media, a member of the parliament accused Bitcoin-related domestic nongovernmental organizations of transferring foreign currency overseas. As one of the NGOs in the Bitcoin and blockchain space, IBC denied the claim and said the association is focused on promoting blockchain technology in the country.

Following a “summer ban” for Bitcoin mining, Iran is seeking healthy regulation for Bitcoin. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said the country needs to legalize Bitcoin activities to preserve and protect national interests. He called for a joint study between different parties to establish a legal framework for Bitcoin.



Updated: 6-24-2021

Major Players Will Speak At A New Bitcoin Event Aimed At Institutional Investors

Featured speakers include Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, Blockstream founder Adam Back and Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood.

The Bitcoin Council for Innovation is hosting a virtual event on July 21 aimed to “destigmatize mainstream narratives about Bitcoin.”

According to a Thursday announcement, Square, Ark Invest and Paradigm are backing “The ₿ Word,” an event on “how institutions can embrace Bitcoin.”

The project, scheduled for launch next month, will offer featured speakers including Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey; Blockstream founder Adam Back; Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood; Michael Morell, former acting and deputy director of the United States Central Intelligence Agency; and John Newbery, director of Brink — a nonprofit focused on supporting Bitcoin (BTC) development.

“The ₿ Word is a Bitcoin focused initiative that aims to demystify and destigmatize mainstream narratives about Bitcoin, explain how institutions can and should embrace it, and raise awareness around areas of the network that need support,” said the project.

Formed in April, the Bitcoin Council for Innovation, or CCI, is an alliance of Bitcoin-friendly firms including Coinbase, Square, Fidelity Digital Assets and Paradigm. The group was created to give companies a better means to lobby lawmakers on Bitcoin and blockchain regulation.

“Bitcoin is a positive force in the world because it increases financial access and opportunity, but the complexity that makes its network so powerful also makes it difficult to understand at first,” said Paradigm co-founder Matt Huang. “We hope this initiative helps the investment community and policymakers better understand how transformative a moment we’re in right now.”

At the time of publication, the event lists five sessions that will be available on July 21, with an additional live panel with Dorsey, Wood and others on “Bitcoin As A Tool For Economic Empowerment.” Coin Metrics co-founder Nic Carter and MIT Digital Currency Initiative director Neha Narula will also be speaking in the online sessions.

Many experts posited that institutional investors would help drive mainstream interest in Bitcoin and other Bitcoin, in addition to potentially helping its price. Data from banking giant JPMorgan Chase in May, however, suggests that retail investors may be purchasing more BTC than institutions, using platforms like PayPal and Square.



Updated: 7-27-2021

Blockchain Australia Association Calls The State For Bitcoin Safe Harbor

The Australian Bitcoin industry “cannot afford to wait years for regulatory clarity,” and consumers require confidence to access Bitcoin services, the Australian blockchain association argued.

Blockchain Australia, a major association representing the local Bitcoin industry, has officially introduced its Bitcoin regulation recommendations to the federal government.

The association filed a submission to the Senate Select Committee on Australia as a Technology and Financial Centre last Friday, calling the government to provide a safe harbor for local Bitcoin service providers.

Pointing out a set of regulatory recommendations, Blockchain Australia stressed the need for a coordinated and graduated approach to adopt a “fit-for-purpose regulatory framework,” ensuring innovation and competition in the country while enhancing consumer outcomes.

The Bitcoin advocates emphasized that local industry “cannot afford to wait years for regulatory clarity,” and local consumers require confidence to access regulated Bitcoin services in the country, stating:

“The government and relevant regulators should provide Bitcoin asset providers a safe harbor until such a time that they introduce guidance or legislation. Any legislation should contain an appropriate transition period and not apply retrospectively.”

As part of the recommendations, Blockchain Australia recommended establishing a regulatory working group that works across industries to facilitate greater communication between the Bitcoin industry and financial authorities. “The first exercise to be undertaken by the group should be a token mapping exercise, examining the work done in overseas jurisdictions,” the association noted.

The organization pointed to cooperation with many Australian authorities, including the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and the Australian Taxation Office.

Blockchain Australia specifically asked ASIC to update the local custodial service regulation, known as RG133, to explicitly state that licensed custody providers can provide Bitcoin asset custodial services.

The news comes after local financial players expressed more concerns over the Bitcoin industry in Australia. In mid-July, the Australia Securities Exchange filed a submission to the Senate Select Committee on Financial Regulatory Technology, warning about security risks of Bitcoin custody on centralized Bitcoin exchanges.



Updated: 8-9-2021

Blockchain Australia Says Gov’t Still Dismissing Industry As A ‘Wild West’

The industry body has accused the government of leaning into narratives about malicious actors and scams rather than engaging with the blockchain space to establish fit-for-purpose regulation.

Blockchain Australia, an association representing the local Bitcoin industry, has warned that the country has fallen behind on the regulatory front due to the undue persistence of a dismissive “wild west” narrative.

The association has been proactive in its engagement with the state in recent months as the government continues to review the future of blockchain and fintech and regulation in the country.

Appearing before the Senate Select Committee on Australia as a Technology and Financial Centre last week, Blockchain Australia CEO Steve Vallas said that the association strongly resists the notion that the Bitcoin space remains “a bit of a wild west” and has been “very deliberately asking for the regulators to engage with us.” Tracing the narrative’s emergence to the 2017–2018 initial coin offering (ICO) boom, Vallas accused the government of responding to the phenomenon with an overly passive “wait and see” approach:

“The landscape […] today is entirely different. We don’t see an appetite within Australia for ICOs, we don’t see the regulators comfortable allowing that to happen again, so we have a new chapter, but the narrative has persisted. […] When people don’t understand the space, the tendency is to lean in on the wild west, to lean in on nefarious and bad actors.”

Vallas’ argument was broadly echoed by Michael Bacina, a partner at the Australian law firm Piper Alderman, who specializes in digital law with a focus on fintech, regtech and the blockchain and digital assets industry. Unlike Vallas, however, Bacina drew a close parallel between Australia’s regulatory lag and the situation in some other jurisdictions, particularly the United States. In the latter, in cases such as Bitcoin exchange-related crimes, he claimed that people are “effectively reading the tea leaves of what prosecutions have occurred to try and understand.”

Following Vallas and Bacina, Chloe White, managing director at Genesis Block, told the committee that the Australian government has focused its energies on the industry only intermittently and largely at times of hype. Instead of continuing to engage with the space during quiet periods, local policymakers have failed to develop “a real understanding of the space and its trajectory” and have remained “in a very reactive position where policy advice and analysis has been concerned,” she said.

Earlier this year, Australian Senator Andrew Bragg argued that Australia must introduce better regulations for Bitcoin assets if the country aspires to “stay ahead of the game” and foster tech and financial innovation.



Updated: 11-9-2021

Climate Chain Coalition Advocates For The Creation Of A Green Economy At COP26

A number of representative and delegates supporting the Climate Chain Coalition group spoke at a dedicated panel on Tuesday at COP26.

Delegate representatives from the Climate Chain Coalition spoke at the United Nations Climate Change Conference, also known as COP26, in Glasgow, Scotland on Tuesday.

The Climate Chain Coalition, or CCC, is a global environmental initiative consisting of 250 member organizations and individuals aligned to utilize blockchain, distributed ledger, or DLT, and other promising digital technology solutions to foster the growth of a climate-focused economy.

Hosted by CCC strategic director Miroslav Polzer, the panel of expert representatives, including Denby McDonnell, Tia Kansara and Cointelegraph editor-in-chief, Kristina Cornèr, among others, spoke unequivocally about the importance of subjects ranging from carbon nonfungible tokens (NFTs) to accountability in corporate practices.

Programme manager at the Blockchain For Climate Foundation Denby McDonnell spoke on the panel about her organization’s endeavor to place the Paris Climate Agreement on the blockchain, specifically mentioning article 6.2, as well as discussing the recent launch of a new Bitcoin-carbon platform, BITMO.

“The BITMO platform enables issuance and exchange of blockchain internationally transferred mitigation outcomes as ERC-115 nonfungible tokens [NFT’s] on the Ethereum blockchain.”

Amid the rising adoption of carbon-credit certifications by tech firms to accurately verify and report their carbon emission data, thought leaders and experts from the field are calling for greater advocation of carbon-negativity, rather than what some have considered “greenwashing” strategies.

Mcdonnell Revealed The Potential Implications Of The BITMO Platform For Facilitating Transparent And Openly Accountable Carbon Data Reporting, Stating:

“BITMO is a secure record of issuance, transfer and retirement for each country’s internationally transferred mitigation outcomes that can be reconciled with national carbon registries and meet future UN requirements.”

Tia Kansara, Chief Executive Officer of Replenish Earth, and special advisor to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), as well as a newly-appointed member of the coalition, spoke eloquently on the importance of embracing an array of technologies such as DLT to realize a net-positive economic model.

Our challenge going forward is two-fold. The first is going transboundary. At some point, we need to go beyond our own egotistical perspectives, our own nationalistic borders, to the means through which we can govern for the global commons.

Citing Former United States President John F. Kennedy’s Vision For A Lunar Landing Mission Back In 1962, As Well As George Land’s Infamous 1968 Study On Child Geniuses Which Determined That “Non-Creative Behavior Is Learned”, Kansara Stated:

The second is a step in consciousness. We cannot transform our lives by thinking and extending linear incremental models of the past, and the way that we do that is by looking at frontier tech.

Also represented at the COP26 conference on Tuesday was the independent advisory group, Germanwatch, which published and presented its analytical findings in the Climate Change Performance Index 2022.

The composite index investigated the environmental performance of 60 countries worldwide, collating the data into four distinctive parameters aligned with consensus objectives in the Paris Climate Agreement, and then reporting those findings in a corresponding ranking list.

The group determined that greenhouse gas emissions (GGE) should account for 40% of the ranking system, while energy use, renewable energy and climate policy should be equally distributed a 20% share of the total.

Assessing growth over the prior few years, as well as defined targets that governments have publicly expressed, the index outlined the United States, Canada, Russia, Algeria and Australia as just some of the more geographically prominent nations worthy of red scoring, the latter of which being the world’s largest supplier of coal.

A stark admission was within the ‘Very High’ scoring category which lay empty, despite Denmark, Sweden and Norway securing the top three spots.

Of the major industrialized nations, China moved up to 37th as a result of commended advancements in the renewable energy space, while the United States placed further down the rankings in 55th, one position above the Russian Federation.

Co-Author Of The Index Jan Burck Shared His Opinion Of How Readers And Interpreters Of The Report Should Assess The Findings:

“As in the year before, we don’t see any country with a perfect record. Even the countries in the front are not doing good enough for being on track for well below 2 degrees.”

 

Updated: 1-28-2022

Bitcoin Industry Heavyweights Form Political Action Committee For US Midterms: Report

Backers of the PAC include top executives at FTX and SkyBridge Capital.

A group of executives from major firms in the Bitcoin industry have formed a political action committee (PAC) to support candidates running in November’s midterm elections.

  • Backers of the PAC include top executives at crypto exchange FTX and SkyBridge Capital, the hedge fund led by Anthony Scaramucci, who was briefly a White House communications director under President Donald Trump.
  • The “GMI PAC” has attracted $5.3 million in contributions so far, according to a report by Politico. It aims to raise more than $20 million to support “candidates who work to give U.S.-based innovators the opportunity to build next-generation technologies and services here in America rather than doing that valuable work overseas,” according to its website.
  • CMS Holdings co-founder Dan Mastuszewski, a member of the group’s board, said that such a body is “long overdue.”
  • “GMI PAC is the crypto community’s campaign arm and we are here to stay,” Mastuszewski said in a statement Friday.
  • A number of U.S. politicians have been vocal in their advocacy of Bitcoin and opposition to legislation which they believe unnecessarily stymies its growth and adoption.

Updated: 1-31-2022

Coinbase-Backed Bitcoin Lobby Group Gears Up For Regulation With New Leader



Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

* Former WEF Exec Becomes CEO Of Bitcoin Council For Innovation
* Founding Members Include Fidelity, Coinbase, Paradigm, Block

When companies including Fidelity Investments’ digital asset arm, Coinbase and Block (then known as Square Inc.) first formed their trade group last April, the largest Bitcoin token was hovering around $60,000.

Sheila Warren, previously an executive at the World Economic Forum, will be joining the group known as the Bitcoin Council for Innovation with prices across the asset class trending markedly lower and significant regulatory headwinds on the horizon.

Warren and her new team at the Bitcoin Council for Innovation (CCI) intend to shape the narrative around digital assets as the U.S. and other countries move forward on regulations.

“We’re in a critical moment for the Bitcoin ecosystem,” Warren, who starts her new role on Feb. 2, told Bloomberg in an interview. She expects that the next two years will be especially important for the industry as digital assets become more widely adopted and governments seek to take a more active oversight role.

The Bitcoin Council for Innovation’s members include Paradigm, which recently raised a record-breaking fund, as well as venture capital firms Ribbit Capital and Andreessen Horowitz. Prior to joining CCI, Warren held several posts at the World Economic Forum, including head of data, blockchain, and digital assets and member of the executive committee.

She is taking up the CEO post as many Bitcoin firms and advocacy groups are beefing up their presence in Washington, D.C.–motivated in large part by last year’s infrastructure bill, which added new tax-reporting requirements for Bitcoin brokers that many in the industry have called overly broad. “The infrastructure bill was a massive wake up call to a lot of people,” Warren said.

In the short-term, CCI plans to focus on U.S. policy given the level of activity that’s occurring domestically–the White House is working on an executive order to create a government-wide strategy for digital assets. At the same time, the Federal Reserve is mulling a potential U.S. digital dollar and policy makers are examining how best to regulate stablecoins.

The White House directive, in particular, will be key and hopefully provide Bitcoin firms more clarity on how they should be regulated and by which government agencies, Warren said. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler has indicated he intends to more closely scrutinize Bitcoin exchanges and wants them to register with his agency.

But Warren said CCI also wants to focus on global policy and she plans to continue engaging with other countries she developed connections with during her time at WEF.

“Bitcoin is a global phenomenon and so being mindful and aware of what’s happening all around the world is going to be a very important part of what CCI does,” she said.

WEF’s Blockchain Head Will Lead The Bitcoin Council For Innovation

CCI board member Fred Ehrsam cited the WEF executive’s “in-depth knowledge of Bitcoin” in addition to her experience working with governments across the globe.

Sheila Warren, the head of blockchain and distributed ledger technology at the World Economic Forum, will be assuming the position of CEO of the Bitcoin Council for Innovation, or CCI, starting in February.

In a Monday announcement, the CCI said that beginning on Wednesday, Warren would lead the alliance of Bitcoin-friendly firms aimed at supporting lawmakers on Bitcoin and blockchain regulation. CCI board member and Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsam cited the WEF executive’s “in-depth knowledge of Bitcoin” in addition to her experience working with governments across the globe.

“The Bitcoin ecosystem is poised to deliver large-scale economic growth, empower communities and improve lives all over the world,” said Warren. “I am excited to drive CCI’s mission of realizing the transformative potential of Bitcoin through education and advocacy for a responsible, forward-thinking global policy environment that will ensure that Bitcoin’s benefits are accessible to all people, regardless of their current economic privilege.”

Formed in April 2021, the CCI includes supporters like Coinbase, Fidelity Digital Assets, Paradigm, Ribbit Capital, Andreessen Horowitz and Block — formerly Square. In July, the group hosted a virtual event called “The ₿ Word” exploring how institutions could potentially adopt Bitcoin (BTC) and blockchain technology.

As one of the major Bitcoin exchanges, Coinbase seems to have stepped up its efforts to lobby lawmakers in the United States around “sensible regulation.” However, Ripple Labs led an expensive campaign around the Securities and Exchange Commission’s treatment of XRP tokens as securities, spending $690,000 on lobbying in 2020 without any concrete results in this area.

During her time at the WEF, Warren explored central bank digital currencies and promoted the adoption of blockchain technology. She has spoken at a number of events in the Bitcoin space including the Hyperledger Global Forum and Unitize conferences and has written for Cointelegraph previously on the importance of Bitcoin as an educational tool for empowering diversity and financial inclusion.

Sheila Warren Leaves World Economic Forum To Lead Bitcoin Lobbying Group

The Bitcoin Council for Innovation’s founding members include Coinbase, Fidelity and Paradigm.

Former World Economic Forum executive Sheila Warren will become CEO of the Bitcoin Council for Innovation (CCI), the Washington-based lobbying group announced Monday.

* Warren, who is based in San Francisco, will be responsible for leading the discussion of Bitcoin on behalf of the CCI by communicating its benefits to policymakers and regulators.

* The CCI was formed last April by founding members from Block, Coinbase, Fidelity Digital Assets and Paradigm, and it includes Andreessen Horowitz as a board member.

* Prior to joining the CCI, Warren worked as a senior executive at TechSoup, where she built NGOsource, an initiative funded by the Gates and Hewlett foundations. She now co-hosts CoinDesk’s TV show, “Money Reimagined.”

* “We are excited for the organization’s next chapter under her leadership, demonstrating and communicating the transformational benefits of Bitcoin to policymakers, regulators, and people around the globe,” Fred Ehrsam, co-founder and managing partner at Paradigm and CCI board member, said in a press release.

* “We’re in a critical moment for the Bitcoin ecosystem,” Warren tweeted. “The regulations and policies that emerge in the next 18 months – 2 years will shape the trajectory of the entire Bitcoin ecosystem far into the future.”

* Since its start, the CCI has co-hosted a bitcoin-focused virtual event featuring Tesla CEO Elon Musk, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey and noted investor Cathie Wood.

* In April, the CCI published a report with former Central Intelligence Agency Acting Director Michael Morell, explaining how potential money launderers using bitcoin for crime were likely to move away from the Bitcoin because every transaction is recorded and visible to all.



Updated: 2-7-2022

Major Bitcoin Firms And Groups Form Coalition Aimed At Promoting ‘Market Integrity’

“Harmonizing a broad global approach to digital assets and competition in the digital currency space race, can improve U.S. competitiveness, security and lower fundamental costs for basic financial access,” said Dante Disparte of Circle.

Several Bitcoin exchanges and advocacy groups across different countries have banded together to form a coalition intended to fight market manipulation.

In a Monday announcement, market surveillance firm Solidus Labs and exchanges including Bitstamp, Coinbase, BitMEX and CrossTower said they would be launching the Bitcoin Market Integrity Coalition, or CMIC, asking all other companies involved in the Bitcoin space to follow their example.

According to the CMIC, members must pledge to encourage “a fair digital asset marketplace to combat market abuse and manipulation and promote public and regulatory confidence” in Bitcoin.

The group’s 17 founding members includes U.S.-based Bitcoin advocacy group Chamber of Digital Commerce, United Kingdom-based self-regulatory trade association BitcoinUK, and international think tank Global Digital Finance.

In addition, Bitcoin data provider CryptoCompare, Anchorage Digital, the first Bitcoin firm to receive a charter from the national bank regulator in the United States, and Circle, the company behind the USDC stablecoin, have joined the coalition.

CMIC’s pledge includes a commitment to “maintain fair and orderly digital asset markets and prevent market abuse.” The group said it planned to eventually share its own research into Bitcoin as well as establish a dialogue with regulators and consider a data-sharing and shared-surveillance framework.

“Harmonizing a broad global approach to digital assets and competition in the digital currency space race, can improve U.S. competitiveness, security and lower fundamental costs for basic financial access,” said Circle chief strategy officer and head of global policy Dante Disparte. “CMIC’s pledge brings leading industry participants together to advance market integrity standards.”

According To The CMIC Website, The Pledge Asks That Members Agree To The Following:

“Regardless of regulatory requirements, market activity should be reviewed and monitored on a reasonable ongoing basis for purposes of detecting and eliminating market manipulation and unfair market abuses. Clear instances of fraud and manipulation are illegal, and we will commit to preventing these activities to the best of our ability.”

Bitcoin firms and industry leaders have formed other groups aimed at addressing challenges in mainstream adoption and between regulators. In September 2020, Square — now Block — started a consortium aimed at pooling Bitcoin- and blockchain-related patents to “defend against patent aggressors and trolls.” In February 2021, Chainlink, Aave, Messari and others launched the GoodFi alliance to focus on furthering education and research into decentralized finance.



Updated: 2-9-2022

Coinbase Forms A Second PAC To Support Bitcoin-Friendly Candidates

The exchange registered its first PAC in July 2018 but closed it the next year after having received no funds or making no disbursements.

Bitcoin exchange Coinbase has filed for a political action committee reportedly to support “Bitcoin-forward lawmakers” ahead of the 2022 midterm elections in the United States.

According to a Feb. 7 filing with the Federal Election Commission, Coinbase’s chief financial officer Alesia Haas and head of U.S. policy Kara Calvert registered the Coinbase Innovation PAC. The lobbyist/registrant political action committee will likely be required to make disclosures of funds to designated representatives in Congress.

Political action committees, or PACs, are organizations often aimed at raising funds to elect candidates supporting similar causes, implying Coinbase is looking to get behind Bitcoin-friendly candidates ahead of federal and state elections in November. The exchange registered its first PAC in July 2018 but closed it the following year after reporting it had received no funds or made no disbursements.

Though it abstained from forming a PAC to get involved in U.S. politics, Coinbase still made a number of decisions in 2021 suggesting that it was concerned about the possible impact of anti-Bitcoin lawmakers who continued to hold office.

Together with Square — now Block — the exchange formed the Bitcoin Council for Innovation in April 2021 to better facilitate a dialogue with regulators and lawmakers on Bitcoin. Politico also reported Coinbase had spent $1.5 million on lobbying in 2021 with disclosure filings showing that the exchange spent roughly half that amount in the fourth quarter, alone.

“We believe the bi-partisan potential is clear and we intend to support Bitcoin-forward lawmakers who align with our mission to advance economic freedom for all Americans,” said a Coinbase spokesperson, according to Politico.

The formation of the PAC comes roughly nine months prior to election day in the United States — Nov. 8 — with control of both the House of Representatives and the Senate essentially up for grabs. Cointelegraph reported in November that pro-Bitcoin candidate Aarika Rhodes is running to unseat California Representative Brad Sherman, who previously called for a ban on digital assets.

However, Bitcoin is seemingly not the single issue many U.S. voters consider in elections. Morgan Harper is currently running for one of two U.S. Senate seats for Ohio, seeking to replace departing pro-Bitcoin Senator Rob Portman. During his time in office, Portman has advocated for regulatory clarity in the Bitcoin space. Harper has also said she would be “in learning mode” on Bitcoin.



Updated: 2-16-2022

Bitcoin Heavyweights Coinbase, Fidelity And Robinhood Back US Anti-Money Laundering Group

The 18-member Travel Rule Universal Solution Technology (TRUST) initiative addresses AML data sharing requirements prescribed by FinCEN.

A group of well-established firms active in Bitcoin in the U.S., including Coinbase, Fidelity and Robinhood, have joined together to bring digital assets in step with global anti-money laundering (AML) rules.

In total, there are some 18 virtual asset service providers (VASPs) participating in the launch of the Travel Rule Universal Solution Technology (TRUST). Announced Wednesday, the TRUST platform was created in response to AML data sharing requirements recommended by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and prescribed by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).

The current U.S. TRUST membership includes: Anchorage, Avanti, Bitgo, bitFlyer, Bittrex, BlockFi, Circle, Coinbase, Fidelity Digital Assets, Gemini, Kraken, Paxos, Robinhood, Standard Custody & Trust, Symbridge, Tradestation, Zero Hash and Zodia Custody.

There have been a number of proposed ways to accommodate “travel rule” requirements within the pseudonymous-by-design Bitcoin space. Prior to its official launch, TRUST was known among Bitcoin AML specialists as the U.S. Travel Rule Working Group, where the lead engineering firepower was provided by Coinbase, alongside a founding member group that included Gemini, BitGo, Kraken, Circle and Fidelity.

How It Works

“There are two components to this solution,” said Gemini’s Chief Compliance Officer Elena Hughes in an interview. “There’s the ability to identify who’s on the other side of the transfer prior to initiating it. Secondly, there’s no centralized storage of personal data. So we don’t send it via a centralized repository; instead the information is exchanged on a bilateral basis.”

The plan, said Hughes, is to expand to other global jurisdictions, with building currently taking place in Canada, Singapore and Germany. The group’s goal is also to become an industry standard for complying with the travel rule. (Until now there has been only one standard agreed upon by the Bitcoin industry, the Inter-VASP Messaging Standard, known as IVMS 101.)

Some jurisdictions, including Singapore, have chosen to go a step beyond the FATF travel rule recommendations for identifying beneficial owners of transactions between VASPs to include those with private or unhosted wallets – a point of contention among many in Bitcoin.

With regard to the inclusion of unhosted wallets within the TRUST architecture, Hughes said: “We are working toward ensuring that we have a compliance solution in those other jurisdictions. What it will ultimately look like is going to be a bit of a ‘time will tell.’”

‘A Tool In The Compliance Arsenal’

The TRUST solution’s compliance capabilities will be reinforced by a partnership with Exiger, a technology platform focused on regulation and financial crime, according to a press release. The TRUST protocol could also bolster the world of blockchain analytics, those firms that follow the money in the case of nefarious actors transacting in Bitcoin, according to Paxos Director of Compliance Christel Chan.

“I do see the TRUST travel solution as a tool in the compliance arsenal with regard to being able to give signals to VASPs as to, is this a wallet of concern?” said Chan in an interview. “And also as a complementary tool when it comes to blockchain monitoring firms’ capabilities.”

Interoperability between the range of solutions on offer (Fidelity Digital Assets is a member of both TRUST and the institution-focused Travel Rule Protocol, for example), as well as across different regions, is another hot topic in the Bitcoin travel rule space.

“I think a year or two down the line, interoperability will be a core requirement,” Chan said. “I know the different solutions are thinking about this with regard to the various partnerships they’re discussing today.”

The concerted effort behind TRUST is an achievement in itself, given how directly competitive these firms are with one another. Robinhood Chief Operating Officer Christine Brown via an emailed statement called it “an innovative compliance solution, while also persevering the integrity of private customer data.”

“Just as it takes a community of Bitcoin investors and enthusiasts to democratize finance, we believe it takes a community of Bitcoin businesses and platforms to work together to find a solution to preserve customer privacy while meeting the legal requirements of the Travel Rule,” she said.



Updated: 2-25-2022

Gemini Joins Coinbase And Block At The Bitcoin Council For Innovation

The Bitcoin exchange declared it spent $120,000 on lobbying activities in the U.S. in the third and fourth quarters of 2021.

The Bitcoin Council for Innovation, or CCI, has announced that Gemini will be joining its list of Bitcoin-friendly firms aimed at supporting lawmakers on related regulation.

In a Thursday announcement, the CCI said that effective as of this week, Gemini has joined Coinbase, Block, Fidelity Digital Assets, Paradigm and others in an effort to “help accelerate [the group’s] growth and global leadership,” according to CEO Sheila Warren.

Gemini head of policy and regulatory affairs Ji Kim said the exchange will work with lawmakers and regulators to help further the adoption of Bitcoin worldwide.

Formed in April 2021 by Coinbase and Square — now Block — the CCI aimed to open a dialogue with governments and regulatory agencies on the benefits of Bitcoin. The group hosted a virtual event in July 2021 on Bitcoin (BTC) adoption called, “The ₿ Word,” featuring speakers including Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Jack Dorsey.

Warren, the former head of blockchain and distributed ledger technology at the World Economic Forum, assumed the position of CEO at the CCI in February.

In addition to its efforts with the CCI, Coinbase has emerged as one of the biggest spenders in the United States lobbying for Bitcoin-friendly legislation in Congress. The exchange reportedly increased its lobbying expenditures by more than 460% from 2020 to 2021, from $230,000 to roughly $1.3 million, respectively.

Before joining the CCI, Gemini did not report any spending on lobbying activities in the U.S. in 2020. However, public records through the U.S. Senate show the exchange declared $120,000 spent in the third and fourth quarters of 2021 contracted with the Sternhell Group.

Alex Sternhell, a former senior policy adviser for the Senate Banking Committee, is the principal behind the D.C.-based public relations firm.



Updated: 6-11-2022

Coin Center Takes US Treasury To Court Over Alleged Financial Spying

Coin Center filed a lawsuit against the Treasury Department in federal district court — challenging the enforcement of Section 6050I’s reporting mandate.

Coin Center, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit blockchain advocacy group, filed a lawsuit against the United States Department of the Treasury for allegedly provisioning an unconstitutional amendment in the controversial infrastructure bill.



Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

In an official announcement, Coin Center revealed the filing of a suit against the Treasury Department in federal district court — challenging the enforcement of Section 6050I’s reporting mandate within the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. The lawsuit read:

“In 2021, President Biden and Congress amended a little-known tax reporting mandate. If the amendment is allowed to go into effect, it will impose a mass surveillance regime on ordinary Americans.”

The 6050I amendment requires individuals and businesses to report information related to all incoming transactions worth $10,000 or more, which includes the sender’s name, date of birth and Social Security number.

Coin Center, in its announcement, highlighted how the amendment affects the entire Bitcoin community, including the NGOs that receive anonymous donations and nonfungible token (NFTs) artists who will have to reveal their client’s personal information to the government.

In the first claim of the lawsuit, Coin Center alleged that the 6050I provision is not aimed at collecting information about the third parties but rather focuses on the information about the general public participating in Bitcoin transactions.

“The second claim is about our freedom of association,” the company added as it pointed out a Supreme Court ruling that forbids the government from forcing organizations to keep and report lists of their members.

On An End Note, Coin Center Reached Out To The Bitcoin Community For Support, Stating That:

“We are considering adding additional co-plaintiffs to this suit, so if you might fit this description and are interested, please get in touch.”

Last week on June 7, Cointelegraph came across a leaked copy of a United States draft bill concerning Bitcoin doing the rounds on Twitter.

Further investigations revealed the regulators’ concerns around user protection across the decentralized finance (DeFi), stablecoins, decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) and Bitcoin exchanges ecosystems.

 

Updated: 5-13-2024

MoonPay Donates To Stand With Bitcoin Campaign

Bitcoin payment firm MoonPay is among the first Bitcoin advocates to support Coinbase-initiated pro-Bitcoin PAC related to the upcoming U.S. election.

Bitcoin payment firm MoonPay has contributed an undisclosed amount to nonprofit Bitcoin advocacy project, Stand With Bitcoin.

“This morning, we made a donation on behalf of everyone here at MoonPay to Stand With Bitcoin,” MoonPay CEO Ivan Soto-Wright announced on May 13. The donation went to Stand with Bitcoin’s c4 effort to help build and mobilize Bitcoin advocates.

The executive emphasized that the upcoming United States presidential election will define the future of the Bitcoin industry in the country, and it’s people’s responsibility to step up to advance Bitcoin. He stated:

“In solidarity with Stand With Bitcoin, we are supporting elected officials to create a clear regulatory framework for Bitcoin that fosters innovation while protecting consumers.”

The donation by MoonPay, the details of which were shared with Cointelegraph, comes just a few days after the Stand With Bitcoin project — which Coinbase helped launch in August 2023 — revealed it had launched a political action committee (PAC) for roughly 450,000 members to contribute to candidates running in the 2024 U.S. elections.

“The goal is to endorse candidates and support candidates that are protecting the rights of our advocates of Stand With Bitcoin throughout November,” Stand With Bitcoin chief strategist Nick Carr reportedly said.

 

 

Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

 

 

Stand With Bitcoin’s latest PAC on pro-Bitcoin political candidates comes a few months after Coinbase launched the project in November 2023.

Coinbase’s decision to launch such an initiative was natural, as the company has been actively trying to find a dialogue with financial regulatory authorities in the United States.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sued Coinbase in June 2023, alleging that the Bitcoin exchange violated federal securities laws by listing 13 tokens it argues are securities. After achieving some success in its long-running legal battle with the SEC in April 2024, Coinbase faced a new lawsuit over alleged investor deception in May.

Coinbase’s growing efforts to support Bitcoin-friendly politicians have reached another milestone in the company’s developing relationship with politics.

Back in 2020, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong expressed the company’s stance on global politics, praising the “apolitical culture” at Coinbase.

“We don’t advocate for any particular causes or candidates internally that are unrelated to our mission, because it is a distraction from our mission. Even if we all agree something is a problem, we may not all agree on the solution,” Armstrong wrote about four years ago.

 

Updated: 5-30-2024

US Pro-Bitcoin Super PAC Fairshake Gets $25M From Andreessen Horowitz

The major contribution comes a day after the PAC received an equal amount from Ripple.

Fortune continues to smile on United States pro-Bitcoin super political action committee (PAC) Fairshake, with the second big-buck contribution in two days. A16z managing partner announced on May 30 that the Andreessen Horowitz Bitcoin and Web3 venture fund has donated $25 million to Fairshake and its affiliated PACs Defend American Jobs and Protect Progress.

Andreessen Horowitz is thus running practically nose-to-nose with Ripple, which contributed $25 million on May 29 to bring its total giving to $50 million for this year and in 2023. The new contribution brings a16z’s total giving to $47 million in two years, Dixon tweeted. He said:

“This contribution along with others from the industry will be used to further Fairshake’s mission of supporting candidates from both sides of the aisle to promote American entrepreneurs and recognize the need for clear rules of the road for digital assets.”

Bipartisanship has been a keyword for the Bitcoin industry as it eyes Democratic support in the November U.S. elections.

Venture Capital Gets Political

Andreessen Horowitz announced its entry into the political arena in December when it promised to support pro-Bitcoin and pro-AI candidates in the elections. Ben Horowitz, a16z co-founder, said that the venture capitalists supported “high quality regulation can enable an industry to thrive while protecting consumers.”

Andreessen Horowitz has invested at least $7.6 billion in the Bitcoin industry, beginning with an investment in Coinbase in 2013.

Fairshake Is Poised To Act

Fairshake has most of its contributions still on hand. According to nonprofit Open Secret, it has spent $11.3 million as of May 29. The organization has raised $135 million in contributions, according to Bloomberg. Its largest expenditure by far, at $10 million, has been on negative advertising aimed against Democratic candidates.

 

Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

 

Most or all of that money went to defeat U.S. Representative Katie Porter, who was running for a California Senate seat. The Sacramento Bee stated that the ad campaign against her was “mostly false.”

Observers are waiting to see whether the super PAC will support Bitcoin lawyer John Deaton in his Senate race against vocal Bitcoin opponent Elizabeth Warren in Massachusetts.

Fairshake spokesman Josh Vlasto confirmed the May 29 Ripple and May 30 a16z contributions to Cointelegraph, but declined to comment further.



Updated: 6-3-2024

Flood Of Cash From Coinbase Gives Bitcoin One Of The Biggest Campaign War Chests

 

Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

Coinbase followed Ripple and a16z in each giving a new $25 million to their political action committee, Fairshake, as the general election approaches that may shift Bitcoin’s destiny.

* The Bitcoin industry has so far gathered about $161 million after Coinbase became the latest company to donate $25 million to its political action committees for this election, which potentially makes it among the most formidable campaign-finance operations in the U.S.

* That kind of cash could have allowed the PACs to spend well over $300,000 on every seat of Congress up for grabs in November.

The Bitcoin industry has – with the addition of another $25 million from Coinbase Inc. on Monday – amassed one of the largest stockpiles of campaign cash in U.S. politics.

U.S. digital assets exchange Coinbase (COIN) announced that it was following in the footsteps of its two major campaign-finance partners, Ripple and Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), in throwing another $25 million each into the pot that has taken in about $161 million to spend on the 2024 U.S. elections.

The other two companies announced their new commitments last week.

The money is specifically bolstering the coffers of the industry’s Fairshake political action committee (PAC) and its affiliate PACs, which have been combing through state primaries to find congressional candidates who’ve left their political platforms open to pro-Bitcoin positions.

The committees have flooded some little-known politicians with millions in off-book support. So-called super PACs like these typically buy ads for or against candidates, but they aren’t allowed to have any official connections with the candidates’ campaigns.

“When it comes to our mission of increasing economic freedom by growing the adoption of Bitcoin, we are deeply engaged in policy efforts,” Coinbase said in a company statement. “The House and Senate help determine what Bitcoin legislation gets passed, amongst other things, so growing the number of pro-Bitcoin members is critical.”

U.S. regulations represent the massive remaining hurdle for the industry to win more significant global acceptance, which could translate to many more mainstream investors and users embracing the technology.

U.S. lawmakers are showing recent signs of shifting toward wider acceptance of Bitcoin, and the next congressional session could see all that come to a head in legislation that establishes tailored rules of the road for digital assets.

Super PACs allow corporations to plough unlimited cash into steering elections, and the Bitcoin industry’s stockpile of campaign cash now rivals the scale of the massive war chests assembled by the political parties themselves to dole out to House and Senate races.

The digital assets businesses are also rivaling the most historically political and deep-pocketed industries.

But the actual management and strategies of Fairshake — including its ongoing level of involvement with the donors backing it — remain opaque, because its main supporters decline to answer management questions and the PAC’s organizers won’t comment on such details.

House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.), who has run the House GOP’s campaign operations in the past, pushed back on narratives that the PACs suggest Bitcoin is trying to buy Congress.

“This is no different than the healthcare industry; this is no different than the airline industry,” he told a crowd at CoinDesk’s Consensus 2024 last week in Texas. “This is all about: I want to get to know you. I’m going to invest in you, because I want to see you being the representative, because your views are in alignment with mine.”

All three companies – Coinbase, Ripple and a16z – may crowd into the top five individual company donors ranked by OpenSecrets.org, if other companies among the biggest political donors don’t make similar short-term additions to surpass their spending.

By comparison to the $161 million for Bitcoin causes, the Congressional Leadership Fund – the conservative PAC associated with House Speaker Mike Johnson – had tallied $84 million, and the Senate Leadership Fund – the equivalent for Republican efforts in the Senate – had taken in $64 million, as of the most recent disclosures two months ago.

The House Majority PAC, which seeks to put Democrats in the House, announced it intends to spend $186 million on advertising this year, though it’s only showing $86 million in contributions so far, according to Federal Election Commission records.

Though Fairshake has already spend tens of millions on targeted races, its fundraising level would have theoretically allowed it to spend well over $300,000 on every contested House and Senate seat – a total of 468 – in the November 5 general election.

 

Updated: 6-5-2024

‘Stand With Bitcoin’ PAC Hits 1 Million Advocates

The Stand With Bitcoin political action committee claims that nearly nine in 10 Americans believe the financial system needs an overhaul.

The Stand with Bitcoin Alliance political action committee (PAC), launched by Coinbase in 2023, recently announced that over 1 million Americans have signed on as advocates to make their voices heard in Washington, D.C.

According to the pro-Bitcoin PAC, 52 million Americans hold some form of Bitcoin, and 87% of Americans surveyed believe the current financial system needs an overhaul. Stand with Bitcoin also claimed that 45% of respondents would not vote for an anti-Bitcoin candidate.

Passage of the “Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act” (FIT21) continues to be a core focus of the Stand with Bitcoin PAC. The bill, which would begin the process of developing a robust regulatory framework for Bitcoin and digital assets in the United States, passed in the House of Representatives by a 278-136 vote.

The bill received more support from Republican lawmakers, 200 of whom voted for it, compared to the 70 Democrats who voted yes on FIT21. These numbers still represent a rare moment of bipartisan support in D.C.

However, the bill must still pass in the Democrat-controlled Senate, where some of Bitcoin’s staunchest critics, like Elizabeth Warren, hold seats.

Pressure from the Bitcoin community and the blockchain industry has propelled Bitcoin into a hot-button political issue that has ramifications for the 2024 presidential election and beyond.

Recent support for Bitcoin and blockchain innovation in America from former President Trump shows that support for Bitcoin has gone from a niche topic to one of national attention.

The 2024 presidential candidate explained that he had no problem with the Bitcoin industry continuing to grow and stressed that innovation must be embraced in the United States or it would be embraced elsewhere. That would put the U.S. at a significant disadvantage when it comes to the future of money and finance.

Trump’s comments are in stark contrast to his previous positions against Bitcoin (BTC) and Bitcoin, potentially reflective of a broader reversal of government attitudes toward digital assets in the United States.

Following the former president’s comments and support for the Bitcoin industry, opponent Joe Biden’s campaign reportedly reached out to industry players to request their input for the administration’s future Bitcoin policy.

 

Updated: 6-19-2024

Bitcoin Super PAC Raises $169M Following $10M Donation From Jump Crypto

A Fairshake spokesperson told Cointelegraph that the political action committee would “have the resources to affect races in 2024 and beyond.”

Fairshake, a political action committee (PAC) that has been backing attack ads against different United States lawmakers, announced that it had raised $169 million ahead of many primaries in the country.

In a June 19 notice to Cointelegraph, a Fairshake spokesperson said Jump Crypto, the digital asset arm of Jump Trading, had donated $10 million to the Super PAC, making its total donations roughly $169 million since its launch.

The group has received millions in contributions from Bitcoin firms, including Coinbase and Ripple, an earlier $5 million donation from Jump Crypto, Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz of Andreessen Horowitz, and Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss of Bitcoin exchange Gemini.

Money In politics

Fairshake may have already impacted the outcome of certain key races in U.S. elections and continues to purchase media buys as Election Day approaches on Nov. 5.

In the United States, money from Super PACs can be used to support specific candidates and political parties, but the groups are not supposed to coordinate with the campaigns.

In March, California Representative Katie Porter lost a primary race for the U.S. Senate.

A Fairshake ad launched before the vote claimed Porter took campaign contributions from “big pharma, big oil, and the big bank executives” — claims the news outlet Sacramento Bee rated as “mostly false.”

 

Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

Jamaal Bowman, running for reelection as the U.S. Representative for New York’s 16th Congressional District, will face off against fellow Democrat George Latimer in a June 25 primary. Fairshake funded a $2-million media buy in June, claiming Bowman had pushed “dangerous conspiracy theories.”

The ad did not specifically attack his record opposing major Bitcoin legislation in the House of Representatives.

A Fairshake spokesperson told Cointelegraph that the Super PAC would “continue to support candidates who are committed to getting things done and working with the industry to pass responsible regulation.”

He also hinted that regardless of the outcome of the U.S. elections, the committee would “have the resources to affect races in 2024 and beyond.”

Presidential Candidates Assemble

With less than five months before voters decide on the next U.S. presidential election, the candidates from major political parties are becoming more apparent.

U.S. President Joe Biden and former President and convicted felon Donald Trump are expected to meet for a debate before their official nominations at the Democratic and Republication National Conventions.

The Libertarian Party nominated Chase Oliver as its presidential candidate, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is running as an Independent. It’s unlikely Kennedy will appear in enough state ballots to win the election.

 

Bitcoin Community Backs Tornado Cash Devs With $2.3M Legal Fund

Tornado Cash’s founders and developers are in the legal crosshairs, but the Bitcoin community argues merely writing code shouldn’t be a crime.

The Bitcoin community has rallied behind the developers of former Bitcoin mixing service Tornado Cash, who have been charged with money laundering, sanctions violations and operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business — with one already having been convicted and sentenced to jail.

Following the arrests of Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm and developer Alexey Pertsev, the Bitcoin community came together to establish JusticeDAO, an advocacy group that aims to raise money for the arrested individuals’ legal defense.

The group has raised over 654 Ether (ETH), worth $2.3 million at publishing time, through a fundraiser called “Free Alexey & Roman” on the decentralized platform Juicebox. The fund also raised 70 ETH via the JusticeDAO page.

Juicebox released a publicly available spreadsheet tracking the expenses of the Free Alexey & Roman fund. According to the data, the fund spent $1.39 million in legal fees between December 2023 and May 2024.

The fund expects to spend another $2.8 million in the next five months and an additional $400,000 in expert research and additional legal fees, with the total fees for 2024 anticipated to reach nearly $3.35 million in 2024.

The fund includes significant contributions from Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin, himself a privacy advocate who has published numerous papers and suggestions on enhancing privacy on Ethereum.

Advocates within the Bitcoin community claim that creating the means to protect financial privacy — e.g., through a Bitcoin mixer — is not a crime.

However, regulators disagree.

Despite the help from the Bitcoin community, the founders of Tornado Cash face serious charges.

Tornado Cash Founder Appeals To Dismiss

In 2022, The United States Treasury Department alleged that notorious criminals used Tornado Cash to launder more than $7 billion in Bitcoin assets for nearly three years.

A year later, in August 2023, the platform’s co-founders, Storm and Roman Semenov, were accused of money laundering and sanctions violations. Storm was arrested by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation that same month, while Semenov was put on the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanction list.

Storm is facing three charges: conspiracy to commit money laundering, conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money-transmitting business and conspiracy to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. He has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

Storm’s legal counsel appealed to dismiss the money laundering charges, arguing that they are “fatally flawed” and must be dismissed, given that Storm can’t control or prevent sanctioned entities from using the Bitcoin mixer.

Storm’s lawyers argued that Tornado Cash was developed and publicly available before sanctioned hackers had the opportunity to use it.

In May 2024, a Dutch court found Tornado Cash developer Pertsev guilty of money laundering and sentenced him to five years and four months in prison for allegedly laundering $1.2 billion worth of illicit assets on the platform.

Developers Should Be Wary About End-Use

The case has raised questions about how coders are held legally responsible for the end-use of the tools they create.

Josh Garcia, a partner at Ketsal — a law firm focused on fintech, Web3 and consumer financial services — believes that while it is wise to make developers think about the consequences of their code, it is burdensome for a small group of developers to chart out all foreseeable criminal uses of their software.

Gracia told Cointelegraph that the Dutch court’s decision would force developers in the Netherlands to stay anonymous or pseudonymous rather than risk criminal liability for building software.

“Some developers may even quit entirely out of fear the U.S. will take the same approach. For developers who are doxed and want to continue development efforts, the Dutch approach might force them to go underground,” he added.

Garcia believes the consequences of the Dutch approach may extend beyond blockchain. He questioned whether the CEO of a 3D printer manufacturer should worry about criminal liability if one of its users prints a firearm in a jurisdiction where guns are prohibited.

“If the Dutch sentiment carries over to the U.S., and free speech advocates cannot argue code is protected speech under our First Amendment, many developers will go underground, not just in blockchain but in any field with a potential threat of criminal liability. This will be a massive step backward for the blockchain community at large,” he said.

Rebecca Liao, co-founder and CEO of Web3 developer platform Saga and a Harvard Law School graduate, believes the case isn’t merely about writing code.

She told Cointelegraph that the U.S. legal system requires more than just the “act of writing code” to constitute a criminal offense — it necessitates that individuals demonstrate criminal intent.

“In the case of Tornado Cash, the prosecution aimed to prove that the developers knowingly facilitated illegal activities, and the court ultimately agreed with this argument.

These court actions indicate, in general, that developers must be vigilant about the potential misuse of their creations and implement safeguards to prevent legal repercussions, and the organizations they work for have to put processes in place to support them,” she explained.

Storm’s upcoming trial will be a pivotal case for the Bitcoin industry, especially for privacy-focused services. The Dutch court’s prosecution of Pertsev has already sent ripples through the Bitcoin developer community, and legal experts predict it will put unprecedented pressure on developers who work on similar projects in the near future.

Jamie Wright, founder of the Wright Law Firm, told Cointelegraph that historically, cases involving tech and criminal intent often result in severe penalties because of the “perceived threat these technologies pose to financial and regulatory systems.”

He noted that in the case of Tornado Cash, the future will largely hinge on whether the courts see the actions as “neutral technological advancement or as knowingly enabling illegal activities.”



Updated: 8-12-2024

Super PAC Focuses On Unseating Sen. Warren, Spends $850K On John Deaton Who Has 82% Net Worth In Bitcoin



Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

The Commonwealth Unity Fund has disseminated more than $1 million in Massachusetts to support Republican John Deaton’s bid for the US Senate.

A political action committee (PAC) that accepted donations from Bitcoin industry players, including Ripple, has spent $850,000 to support Republican John Deaton in a Massachusetts primary.

According to records from the Federal Election Commission (FEC), the Commonwealth Unity Fund Super PAC reported disseminating roughly $450,000 in a direct mail buy to support Deaton on Aug. 7 and more than $500,000 in a media buy on Aug. 6.

The purchases followed the Super PAC spending more than $300,000 on a media placement in July.

Deaton, one of three Republicans running to represent Massachusetts in the United States Senate starting in 2025, has the support of many in the Bitcoin industry.

In July, Ripple announced it would be donating $1 million to the Commonwealth Unity Fund to support Deaton in his battle to replace Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, who has served in the role since 2013.

In April, Gemini co-founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss donated $6,600 directly to Deaton’s campaign — the maximum amount allowed by an individual for both primary and election bids.

The Winklevoss twins announced in July that they would be contributing $1 million combined to Deaton, but at the time of publication, it was unclear whether the funds would go directly to the Republican’s campaign or supportive PACs.

Flush With Cash

According to FEC records, as of July 31, Deaton had raised roughly $1.7 million in his bid for the US Senate in 2024, with roughly $1 million in cash on hand. Senator Warren had raised roughly $6.4 million since January 2023 and had roughly $4.9 million in cash on hand as of July.

The Massachusetts primary, scheduled for Sept. 3, will likely be one of the next proving grounds for money from Bitcoin interest groups in US elections.

On Aug. 6, candidates for the US House of Representatives for four districts across three states backed by the Fairshake Super PAC and its affiliates won their respective primaries after more than $4 million in media buys.

Deaton is a lawyer who has filed amicus briefs supporting legal actions by some Bitcoin firms against the US Securities and Exchange Commission. He launched his Senate campaign in February.

Support for Deaton is not universal across the Bitcoin industry. Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lummis, a Bitcoin holder and digital asset proponent in Congress, endorsed Republican Ian Cain over Deaton in July. The Republican senator cited Cain’s understanding of the “digital economy” and his embrace of innovation.

As of June, many polls had Senator Warren leading by at least 20 points against Cain and Deaton. She is running unopposed in the Democratic primary.



Updated: 9-2-2024

Super PAC Spends $70K On Bitcoin-Focused Senate Race As Primary Looms

In November, Massachusetts voters will likely have to choose between incumbent Elizabeth Warren and Republican John Deaton or Ian Cain for the US Senate.

On Sept. 3, voters in Massachusetts will decide which political party candidates will advance to the November general election, a race that could have significant repercussions for the Bitcoin industry.

In the 2024 United States Senate election for Massachusetts, three candidates across party lines have expressed staunch pro- or anti-Bitcoin views, attracting financial support from the industry and criticism from others.

According to polls conducted in May, incumbent Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren was still highly favored above all potential Republican candidates, only one of whom will likely face off against her in November.
John Deaton

A lawyer who has penned many amicus briefs on behalf of Bitcoin firms facing litigation from the US Securities and Exchange Commission, John Deaton has the support of many high-profile figures in the digital asset industry.

This includes Ripple, which donated $1 million to a political action committee (PAC) supporting Deaton’s campaign, Gemini co-founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, Kraken co-founder Jesse Powell and Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson.

Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings showed that, as of Aug. 14, Deaton had raised roughly $1.8 million from donors. However, this amount did not include expenditures with PAC money from groups like the Commonwealth Unity Fund, which raised more than $2.5 million to support the Republican’s campaign.

On Aug. 29, Commonwealth reported that it had spent roughly $70,000 on direct mail and digital advertising for Deaton’s Senate run — likely some of the last expenditures the PAC will report before the Sept. 3 primary. Altogether, funded by Bitcoin industry figures and companies, the PAC has spent more than $1.3 million to support Deaton.
Ian Cain

Deaton is not the only Republican challenger to Warren. Ian Cain, co-founder of Qubic Labs, has made many statements on his personal X account suggesting that he supports Bitcoin and blockchain technology.

Though FEC records showed the Republican candidate had only raised $390,000 for his campaign as of Aug. 14, he does have the endorsement of Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lummis, one of the more outspoken pro-Bitcoin voices in Congress. It’s unclear why the Wyoming Senator backed Cain over Deaton.

“From the border to blockchain, Ian Cain understands the issues facing his community, and he will fight hard every day for the Commonwealth,” said Senator Lummis.



Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

Elizabeth Warren

Elizabeth Warren, who has served in the US Senate since 2013, does not have a Democratic primary challenger for Sept. 3 and, according to polls, is favored to defeat any Republican candidate in November.

There are other candidates, including Republican engineer Robert Antonellis, but all seem to be coming up short in terms of voter support and fundraising.

According to FEC records, Warren had raised more than $18 million for her reelection campaign as of Aug. 14. At the time of publication, there was less than 24 hours until ballot boxes opened in the Massachusetts primary and 64 days until the general election.

During her time in office, the Massachusetts senator has openly criticized Bitcoin for any association with illicit activities, including money laundering and drug trafficking.

She introduced the Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act, a bill “to require the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network to issue guidance on digital assets,” but support for the legislation seems to have ebbed and flowed in Congress as Bitcoin becomes more of an issue in an election year.

Other lawmakers in the Democratic Party, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, have pledged to vote in favor of legislation promoting innovation in the digital asset industry. The move came as many Democrats are pushing back against the public perception of the party as “anti-Bitcoin,” in contrast to some Republicans like Donald Trump.

 

Updated: 9-23-2024

Hard-Money Talks! Bitcoin Dominates Corporate Election Contributions Surpassing Oil And Banking Sectors!

According to a recent report by the non-profit watchdog group Public Citizen, the Bitcoin industry has contributed around $119 million to various political campaigns.

The report said that Coinbase and Ripple led the charge. The companies contributed more than 80% of the total donations.

The funds were primarily directed towards super PACs supporting pro-Bitcoin candidates.

The Fairshake super PAC, a bipartisan group heavily funded by leading Bitcoin companies, has emerged as one of the top spenders in this election cycle.

The PAC has raised approximately $169 million, with contributions from Coinbase, Ripple, venture firm Andreessen Horowitz, and Jump Bitcoin.

The Bitcoin industry has thrown its weight behind Bernie Moreno, a Republican candidate in the crucial Ohio Senate race, as part of a broader effort to influence U.S. legislative decisions that could shape the future of digital currencies.

Moreno, a former entrepreneur and blockchain advocate, has received over $38 million in contributions from major Bitcoin companies, executives, and investors, according to federal records analyzed by The Washington Post.

The donations have fueled a wave of advertisements in Ohio promoting Moreno’s candidacy.

The ads, funded by a network of super PACs linked to the Bitcoin sector, highlight Moreno’s commitment to job creation, combating illegal immigration, and protecting local families.

Despite the absence of any direct mention of the Bitcoin industry’s involvement, these ads aim to sway Ohio voters in what has become a pivotal Senate contest.

Moreno Advocates For Responsible Regulation

Moreno, 57, has been a vocal supporter of digital currencies.

He has also made appearances at industry events across the country, pledging to be a defender of the industry in Congress.

“Today, in the United States Senate, you don’t have people who know how to use email, and we’re asking them to regulate digital currencies,” Moreno told attendees at a Bitcoin conference in Austin earlier this year.

He emphasized the need for lawmakers who understand the technology to avoid being swayed by special interests.

Ohio’s Senate race has become a flashpoint for the Bitcoin industry, not because of widespread local interest in digital currencies, but due to Moreno’s opponent, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D), who currently chairs the Senate Banking Committee.

Brown has been a proponent of stricter regulations for the industry, making him a significant adversary for Bitcoin advocates.

His position has drawn the ire of many in the Bitcoin community, who view his regulatory stance as a threat to the industry’s growth.

Moreno’s campaign, while benefiting from the Bitcoin industry’s support, has focused on broader issues.

The surge in spending by Bitcoin-funded super PACs comes after the collapse of FTX, a major Bitcoin exchange, in 2022, which spurred calls for increased oversight of the industry.

Bitcoin advocates argue that the sector is still nascent and requires a regulatory environment that fosters innovation rather than stifles it.

Bitcoin PAC Throws In $1 Million To Back Ohio Rep. Shontel Brown Over Nina Turner



Ultimate Resource For Pro-Bitcoin Lobbying And Non-Profit Organizations

Politicians are confronting a new obstacle as big spending from the Bitcoin industry reshapes the electoral calculus.

Hopeful congressional candidates are waking up to a new variable that is upending the electoral calculus of races across the country: Bitcoin.

Some candidates are finding it advantageous to take Bitcoin-sympathetic positions, while others are facing an onslaught of Bitcoin spending that is reshaping their primaries.

Some have run the gauntlet by simply saying yes to the Bitcoin agenda. State Rep. Jasmine Crockett, running in a Texas district to replace Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, had no history as either an outspoken advocate for Bitcoin or an opponent of regulation but facing the question in the campaign, she sided with the policy positions favored by Bitcoin PACs.

The two major Bitcoin super PACs came in with $1 million each, helping to put her over the top.

In a 2021 special election, former state Sen. Nina Turner faced a new obstacle, a super PAC bankrolled by a Bitcoin super-PAC spenting more than $1 million backing Brown, according to Federal Election Commission reports.

The 2011 Citizens United decision, implemented on a 5-4 party-line vote, legalized the spending of unlimited money in congressional campaigns. The result — an explosion of cynicism that has threatened democracy itself — was predictable, even if the pace of collapse has been surprising.

For the last generation, progressive candidates looking to challenge the Democratic power center knew they had to run a gauntlet of obstacles, most of them connected to the big-money interests they were up against.

Protect Our Future PAC, the one linked to Bankman-Fried, has also spent $2 million boosting Georgia Rep. Lucy McBath in her member-on-member contest forced by redistricting. The PAC is also backing Nikki Budzinski in Illinois and has endorsed New York Rep. Ritchie Torres, a Bitcoin supporter.

One of the most outspoken Democratic critics of Bitcoin in Congress is California Rep. Brad Sherman. This cycle, he’s being challenged by Aarika Rhodes, a school teacher organizing her entire campaign around the defense of Bitcoin and opposition to Sherman’s critical approach, and has drawn support from Bitcoin advocates.

Whether the spending against Sherman will unseat him or not, other incumbents and challengers are observing the dynamic: Opposition to Bitcoin risks an onslaught from the industry, and support of Bitcoin invites a tsunami of supportive spending.

Yet the reverse is not true: Opposition to Bitcoin is not rewarded by any organized constituency, and support of Bitcoin is not punished by any organized constituency. That type of asymmetry has long shaped niche policy debates in Washington.

Supporters of agricultural subsidies, for instance, spend heavily to get their issue noticed, but there is little in the way of organized opposition to those subsidies — because nobody cares enough — so the subsidies sail through Congress.

It’s also reminiscent of a previous relationship Democrats built with a constituency that could be by turns hostile or supportive. In the early 1980s, as Democrats transitioned toward big-dollar corporate fundraising, the party eyed Wall Street cash in ways that both parallel the relationship with Bitcoin and in some ways are fundamentally different.

Prior to the S&L crisis of the late 1980s, banking had become a boring industry, one that didn’t attract much public ire. Whereas unions would object to Democrats getting in bed with auto industry executives, and environmental groups would complain about polluting industries, there was little political cost in taking money from the banking industry.

Ironically, the public is now highly skeptical of the path the economy is on and thus it seems the voters are demanding a change in direction!

 

 

 

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Venezuela Sets New Bitcoin Volume Record Thanks To 10,000,000% Inflation (#GotBitcoin?)

Newegg Adds Bitcoin Payment Option To 73 More Countries (#GotBitcoin?)

China’s Schizophrenic Relationship With Bitcoin (#GotBitcoin?)

More Companies Build Products Around Crypto Hardware Wallets (#GotBitcoin?)

Bakkt Is Scheduled To Start Testing Its Bitcoin Futures Contracts Today (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Network Now 8 Times More Powerful Than It Was At $20K Price (#GotBitcoin?)

Crypto Exchange BitMEX Under Investigation By CFTC: Bloomberg (#GotBitcoin?)

“Bitcoin An ‘Unstoppable Force,” Says US Congressman At Crypto Hearing (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Network Is Moving $3 Billion Daily, Up 210% Since April (#GotBitcoin?)

Cryptocurrency Startups Get Partial Green Light From Washington

Fundstrat’s Tom Lee: Bitcoin Pullback Is Healthy, Fewer Searches Аre Good (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Lightning Nodes Are Snatching Funds From Bad Actors (#GotBitcoin?)

The Provident Bank Now Offers Deposit Services For Crypto-Related Entities (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Could Help Stop News Censorship From Space (#GotBitcoin?)

US Sanctions On Iran Crypto Mining — Inevitable Or Impossible? (#GotBitcoin?)

US Lawmaker Reintroduces ‘Safe Harbor’ Crypto Tax Bill In Congress (#GotBitcoin?)

EU Central Bank Won’t Add Bitcoin To Reserves — Says It’s Not A Currency (#GotBitcoin?)

The Miami Dolphins Now Accept Bitcoin And Litecoin Crypt-Currency Payments (#GotBitcoin?)

Trump Bashes Bitcoin And Alt-Right Is Mad As Hell (#GotBitcoin?)

Goldman Sachs Ramps Up Development Of New Secret Crypto Project (#GotBitcoin?)

Blockchain And AI Bond, Explained (#GotBitcoin?)

Grayscale Bitcoin Trust Outperformed Indexes In First Half Of 2019 (#GotBitcoin?)

XRP Is The Worst Performing Major Crypto Of 2019 (GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Back Near $12K As BTC Shorters Lose $44 Million In One Morning (#GotBitcoin?)

As Deutsche Bank Axes 18K Jobs, Bitcoin Offers A ‘Plan ฿”: VanEck Exec (#GotBitcoin?)

Argentina Drives Global LocalBitcoins Volume To Highest Since November (#GotBitcoin?)

‘I Would Buy’ Bitcoin If Growth Continues — Investment Legend Mobius (#GotBitcoin?)

Lawmakers Push For New Bitcoin Rules (#GotBitcoin?)

Facebook’s Libra Is Bad For African Americans (#GotBitcoin?)

Crypto Firm Charity Announces Alliance To Support Feminine Health (#GotBitcoin?)

Canadian Startup Wants To Upgrade Millions Of ATMs To Sell Bitcoin (#GotBitcoin?)

Trump Says US ‘Should Match’ China’s Money Printing Game (#GotBitcoin?)

Casa Launches Lightning Node Mobile App For Bitcoin Newbies (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Rally Fuels Market In Crypto Derivatives (#GotBitcoin?)

World’s First Zero-Fiat ‘Bitcoin Bond’ Now Available On Bloomberg Terminal (#GotBitcoin?)

Buying Bitcoin Has Been Profitable 98.2% Of The Days Since Creation (#GotBitcoin?)

Another Crypto Exchange Receives License For Crypto Futures

From ‘Ponzi’ To ‘We’re Working On It’ — BIS Chief Reverses Stance On Crypto (#GotBitcoin?)

These Are The Cities Googling ‘Bitcoin’ As Interest Hits 17-Month High (#GotBitcoin?)

Venezuelan Explains How Bitcoin Saves His Family (#GotBitcoin?)

Quantum Computing Vs. Blockchain: Impact On Cryptography

This Fund Is Riding Bitcoin To Top (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin’s Surge Leaves Smaller Digital Currencies In The Dust (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Exchange Hits $1 Trillion In Trading Volume (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Breaks $200 Billion Market Cap For The First Time In 17 Months (#GotBitcoin?)

You Can Now Make State Tax Payments In Bitcoin (#GotBitcoin?)

Religious Organizations Make Ideal Places To Mine Bitcoin (#GotBitcoin?)

Goldman Sacs And JP Morgan Chase Finally Concede To Crypto-Currencies (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Heading For Fifth Month Of Gains Despite Price Correction (#GotBitcoin?)

Breez Reveals Lightning-Powered Bitcoin Payments App For IPhone (#GotBitcoin?)

Big Four Auditing Firm PwC Releases Cryptocurrency Auditing Software (#GotBitcoin?)

Amazon-Owned Twitch Quietly Brings Back Bitcoin Payments (#GotBitcoin?)

JPMorgan Will Pilot ‘JPM Coin’ Stablecoin By End Of 2019: Report (#GotBitcoin?)

Is There A Big Short In Bitcoin? (#GotBitcoin?)

Coinbase Hit With Outage As Bitcoin Price Drops $1.8K In 15 Minutes

Samourai Wallet Releases Privacy-Enhancing CoinJoin Feature (#GotBitcoin?)

There Are Now More Than 5,000 Bitcoin ATMs Around The World (#GotBitcoin?)

You Can Now Get Bitcoin Rewards When Booking At Hotels.Com (#GotBitcoin?)

North America’s Largest Solar Bitcoin Mining Farm Coming To California (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin On Track For Best Second Quarter Price Gain On Record (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Hash Rate Climbs To New Record High Boosting Network Security (#GotBitcoin?)

Bitcoin Exceeds 1Million Active Addresses While Coinbase Custodies $1.3B In Assets

Why Bitcoin’s Price Suddenly Surged Back $5K (#GotBitcoin?)

Zebpay Becomes First Exchange To Add Lightning Payments For All Users (#GotBitcoin?)

Coinbase’s New Customer Incentive: Interest Payments, With A Crypto Twist (#GotBitcoin?)

The Best Bitcoin Debit (Cashback) Cards Of 2019 (#GotBitcoin?)

Real Estate Brokerages Now Accepting Bitcoin (#GotBitcoin?)

Ernst & Young Introduces Tax Tool For Reporting Cryptocurrencies (#GotBitcoin?)

Recession Is Looming, or Not. Here’s How To Know (#GotBitcoin?)

How Will Bitcoin Behave During A Recession? (#GotBitcoin?)

Many U.S. Financial Officers Think a Recession Will Hit Next Year (#GotBitcoin?)

Definite Signs of An Imminent Recession (#GotBitcoin?)

What A Recession Could Mean for Women’s Unemployment (#GotBitcoin?)

Investors Run Out of Options As Bitcoin, Stocks, Bonds, Oil Cave To Recession Fears (#GotBitcoin?)

Goldman Is Looking To Reduce “Marcus” Lending Goal On Credit (Recession) Caution (#GotBitcoin?)

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