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Ad Campaign for Winklevoss-Led Crypto Exchange Gemini Raises Eyebrows

Ad campaign for winklevoss-led crypto exchange gemini raises eyebrows

Ad Campaign for Winklevoss-Led Crypto Exchange Gemini Raises Eyebrows


Winklevoss twins bitcoin $btc (btc) [btc] crypto

Gemini has an advertisement on a New York sidewalk that’s got people talking on Crypto Twitter.

Former Coinbase support representative and BTC [BTC] (BTC) enthusiast Nick Foley believes that regulation is necessary. But he says in a later tweet:

Regulations aren’t something to be celebrated, as this ad seems to do. The ad makes the regulators feel a false sense of importance, and encourages and perpetuates the current corrupt system.

The ad is part of a larger campaign around New York by Gemini which promotes its status as a regulatory-compliant crypto exchange.

Chris Roan, head of marketing at Gemini, told the Wall Street Journal:

We believe that investors coming into cryptocurrency deserve the exact same protections as investors in more traditional markets, adhering to the same standards, practices, regulations and compliance protocols.

In our competitive set there are widely varying degrees of adherence to regulatory guidance from people that oversee the more traditional financial marketers[…]Some players are devoted to decentralizing authority over money, a key tenet of many cryptocurrency advocates, while others including Gemini believe there has to be a “bridge” between the old system and a new one.

Gemini’s First Real Advertising Effort

The ad campaign marks one of Gemini’s first real efforts at gaining retail investors. Since 2014, they have primarily focused on large institutional money. The launch of Gemini USD, a less-popular stablecoin, has seen retail investors taking a greater interest in the exchange. They hired a firm called Interesting Development to create and run the campaign.

Other Twitter users responded to Nick Foley’s tweet:

The three slogans of the ad campaign are:

• “The Revolution Needs Rules”
• “Crypto Without Chaos”
• “Money Has a Future”

The Curious World of Crypto Regulations

Gemini Exchange is a New York-based company and is therefore regulated under the BitLicense. They were one of the first recipients. In recent times, complaints about the speed with which the New York Department of Financial Services was processing applications led to the agency picking up the pace. They are likely on track to approve one new licensee every month of 2019.

Regulations in America and elsewhere for cryptocurrencies are still very nascent. Some states have passed very welcoming regulations. States like Ohio seek to become a hub of cryptocurrency innovation and businesses. States like California have flirted with BitLicense-style regulations. At the federal level, some representatives seek to remove SEC authority over cryptocurrency altogether.

Crypto businesses are still very insecure and unsure of their standing with governments the world over. Some jurisdictions badly need and want new financial activity, while others see it as a subversive technology. Even taxation can be a complicated issue for crypto businesses.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

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Published at Fri, 04 Jan 2019 22:51:29 +0000

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NO2X: Breaking Bitcoin Shows No Love for the SegWit2x Hard Fork in Paris

no 2x breaking bitcoin

“There’s no such thing as a safe hard fork,” Electrum lead developer Thomas Voegtlin corrected an audience member at the Breaking Bitcoin conference in Paris last weekend. “I would recommend to have replay protection, of course,” he added.

Community support for SegWit2x, the bitcoin scaling proposal spearheaded by Barry Silbert’s Digital Currency Group, was virtually absent in Paris. Whenever the “2x” part of the New York Agreement was discussed in the French capital, speakers and visitors overwhelmingly considered it a risk to defend against — not a proposal to help succeed.

Electrum users, for example, will not blindly follow hash power in case of a chain-split, Voegtlin explained throughout his talk; instead, they’ll be able to choose which side of such a split they want to be on. And importantly, the lightweight wallet will implement security measures to prevent users from accidentally spending funds on both chains: “replay protection” that seems unlikely to be implemented on a protocol level if SegWit2x does fork off.

“We are ready,” Voegtlin said. “If [SegWit2x] doesn’t include replay protection, the fork detection we have in Electrum will be useful.”

Breaking bitcoin

Inspired by the successful Scaling Bitcoin conference format, the French bitcoin community hosted the first edition of Breaking bitcoin two blocks from the Eiffel Tower last weekend. bitcoin developers, academics and other technical-minded Bitcoiners gathered for a diverse program, but with the common denominator being bitcoin’s security.

“For the past two years, the bitcoin community has been obsessing with scale and scalability,” Kevin Loaec, managing director at Chainsmiths and co-organizer of the event, told bitcoin Magazine. “But I’m not so worried about scale, I’m worried about mining centralization, a lack of privacy and fungibility … these kinds of things. As an industry we need to recognize there are more challenges than just scalability; hopefully this conference reflects that.”

Whereas the first Scaling bitcoin conference two years ago was a very specific reaction to a looming block size limit increase hard fork — then put forth by Bitcoin XT — this wasn’t necessarily the motivation behind Breaking bitcoin. Yet, once again, a controversial hard fork is looming on the horizon. This time imbedded in the BTC1 implementation developed by Bloq co-founder Jeff Garzik, the New York Agreement’s SegWit2x is scheduled to increase bitcoin’s “base block size limit” to two megabytes by November — an incompatible protocol change that could split the bitcoin network in two.

And it did not take much to recognize how unpopular the proposal was in Paris. Perhaps most vividly, Italian bitcoin startup ChainSide led a protest campaign by distributing NO2X stickers; the Twitter hashtag was proudly added as a piece of flair to the by now well-known Make bitcoin Great Again and UASF hats. And voices critical of the project — like Voegtlin and his call for replay protection — could consistently count on rounds of applause. From a technical perspective, the proposal is often considered — quite frankly — to be reckless.

“Unfortunately, SegWit2x […] was designed to effectively be as disruptive to the minority chain,” MyRig engineer and BIP91 author James Hilliard said on stage during the miner panel.

SegWit2x: The Arguments

Arguments against the 2x hard fork are diverse.

Perhaps its biggest problem, SegWit2x currently lacks basic safety measures to prevent unsuspecting users from losing funds. This includes, most importantly, the aforementioned replay protection, but a new address format would be similarly helpful.

Additionally, the three-month lead time for this specific hard fork is considered extremely short — assuming the goal is to prevent a chain-split in the first place. “If you ask any of the developers, they will typically want to see 18 months or two years lead time, for something with as wide an impact on all the software and hardware out there as a hard fork,” Blockstream co-founder and Hashcash inventor Dr. Adam Back noted during a Q&A session.

And if the chain does split into different networks and currencies — one following the current bitcoin protocol and one adopting the hard fork — the question becomes which of the two gets to use the name “bitcoin.” So far, proponents of the SegWit2x hard fork have shown no willingness to pick a new name.

This branding issue, Bitcoin Core contributor and Ciphrex co-founder Eric Lombrozo pointed out, provides yet another point of controversy.

“My personal opinion is that whomever is proposing the change, the onus is on them to demonstrate widespread support,” Lombrozo said during his talk on protocol changes. “The people that want to keep status quo don’t need to show anything. It’s the people who want to change the stuff that actually need to demonstrate there is widespread support.”

And for now, not everyone is convinced that SegWit2x does indeed have this level of support — or anything close to it. While several large mining pools, as well as a significant number of companies, have signed on to the New York Agreement, this agreement was itself drafted without any feedback from bitcoin’s technical community nor — even more important — a reliable gauge of user sentiment.

And while some bitcoin companies claim to represent their customers, this is — once again — not taken for granted by everyone.

“One debate I want to draw attention to,” venture capitalist Alyse Killeen pointed out, “is the debate whether businesses speak for their users. I think this is probably a debate you would only see now in this space because it’s pretty well established that businesses outside of this space do not speak for users, but it’s a debate we still have in our community. Of course they don’t.”

NO2X

If Breaking bitcoin in Paris can be considered at all representative of SegWit2x’s community support — which, it should be noted, is not necessarily the case — the proposal will face an uphill battle to be widely accepted in November.

Indeed, some signatories of the agreement are not so sure about the hard fork anymore: Bitwala and F2Pool have publicly backed out of the agreement. And, during a mining panel in Paris, Bitfury CIO Alex Petrov ever so slightly opened the door to potentially withdrawing support as well, if both the original and the 2x chain manage to survive.

In fact, it’s not just that contentious hard forks are considered a threat to be defended against by bitcoin’s technical community. It goes beyond that.

In the words of bitcoin developer Jimmy Song, at the conclusion of his opening talk of the event:

“What doesn’t kill bitcoin makes it stronger. And conferences like this prove that we’re getting better at this. We’re getting immunized to all these hard forks, and it’s creating a better bitcoin as a result, and that’s a very good thing. We’re securing against a lot of these attacks, and figuring out ways to mitigate these threats.”

Image courtesy of Federico Tenga

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