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Poloniex Exchange to be the First to Offer Trading for the Upcoming Bitcoin Cash Hard Fork

CoinSpeaker
Poloniex Exchange to be the First to Offer Trading for the Upcoming bitcoin Cash Hard Fork

CoinSpeaker
Poloniex Exchange to be the First to Offer Trading for the Upcoming Bitcoin Cash Hard Fork

In less than ten days, Bitcoin Cash (BCH) will be experiencing a new hard fork on its network. The upgrade is scheduled to take place on November 15. Regarding this announcement, Poloniex, crypto exchange operated by Goldman Sachs-backed startup Circle, has revealed its plans to support both bitcoin Cash chains: bitcoin SV and bitcoin ABC.

We will support the upcoming bitcoin Cash hard fork. On November 15, 2018, we will pause deposits and withdrawals at 14:00 UTC, and take a snapshot of all BCH balances at 15:00 UTC. Once the network stabilizes, we will make an announcement and re-enable deposits and withdrawals.

— Poloniex Exchange (@Poloniex) November 4, 2018

Poloniex stated:

“We’re doing this to empower customers to demonstrate their support for one coin over the other through trading activity. Poloniex will also support trading markets for both tokens after the hard fork.”

On the threshold of the upcoming hard fork, Poloniex has opened pre-fork trading of bitcoin SV and bitcoin ABC, which makes it the first company to offer trading pairs for a crypto asset prior to a possible fork.

1/ NEWS: Ahead of the bitcoin Cash (BCH) hard fork, we are opening pre-fork trading of the two planned protocol upgrades, bitcoin Cash ABC and bitcoin Cash SV. Learn more here: https://t.co/KitP8N4tCf pic.twitter.com/RcDBke6DLP

— Poloniex Exchange (@Poloniex) November 8, 2018

Pre-fork trading has been made available for USDC/BCHSV and USDC/BCHABC as well as bitcoin trading pairs. Customers can convert their BCH into an equivalent amount of BCHABC and BCHSV and vice versa, but they are not able to withdraw BCHABC and BCHSV before the fork.

Poloniex has also promised to remain neutral during the fork with a view to let the community decide which blockchain will be supported.

Other Crypto Companies to Prepare for Upcoming bitcoin Cash Hard Fork

In the run-up to the upcoming hard fork, top platforms supporting bitcoin Cash have come up with their own plans to help customers and users deal with the upcoming hard fork in the best way.

Coinbase and Binance have officially announced extending the support for bitcoin Cash hard fork. OKEx has already announced the support of traditional bitcoin ABC OS, in contrast to Poloniex which will support both tokens.

According to Coinbase, the platform will be pausing BCH transactions before the hard fork, which means that funds of their customers will be safe during the planned event. Coinbase said:

“We will monitor the bitcoin Cash network during the upgrade. Coinbase cannot predict the duration of this upgrade process. When the upgrade is complete we will evaluate the network and take appropriate next step, including re-enabling sends and receives.”

The company added:

“In the unlikely event that multiple viable chains persist after the fork, Coinbase will ensure that customers have access to their funds on each chain.”

Ledger, popular hardware wallet, will be pausing bitcoin Cash transactions during the next hard fork.  According to the company, if the fork results in separate bitcoin cash chains,  one of them will be the dominant chain, and Ledger will then decide which one to support.

Another company Centbee has decided to support the bitcoin SV proposal after the fork. Trezor, the hardware wallet company, will go on supporting bitcoin ABC.

While bitcoin cash withdrawals and deposits are suspended, users should take care not to deposit BCH before the hard fork to make sure their funds are safe.

Poloniex Exchange to be the First to Offer Trading for the Upcoming Bitcoin Cash Hard Fork

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More Mainstream Use Cases Needed to Secure Bitcoin's Legitimacy

LTB: Coin Center

Blockchain technologies like the one that underpins bitcoin are gaining wide acceptance across industry sectors from finance to healthcare to real estate. bitcoin itself, however, is still struggling with legitimacy and regulation issues. Just this week, the fact that bitcoin was chosen as the payment method for the latest round of global data ransomware attacks, WanaCrypt0r 2.0 malware, has underscored the negative perception that still swirls around the cryptocurrency.

On the most recent episode of Epicenter, co-hosts Brian Fabian Crain and Meher Roy interviewed  Peter Van Valkenburgh, Director of Research of Coin Center, a nonprofit research and advocacy center focused on the public policy issues facing decentralized financial networks like bitcoin and Ethereum. During the interview, Van Valkenburgh explained how bitcoin is currently dealing with its branding issue; how Coin Center is laying the groundwork for future discussions about bitcoin regulation; and how more mainstream uses of the technology would be helpful for discussions around regulation.

bitcoin’s Branding Issue

Van Valkenburgh noted how Coin Center has struggled with the issues around bitcoin as a brand, as many in the mainstream associate the digital currency with the collapse of Mt. Gox and drug sales on darknet markets.

“We take a lot of meetings with congressional staff, we take meetings with regulators at [the United States] Treasury, and oftentimes we can’t take credit for those meetings because a congressman doesn’t want it, necessarily, to immediately hit the news that he’s meeting with the bitcoin people,” said Van Valkenburgh.

From Van Valkenburgh’s viewpoint, networks like bitcoin are used to “decentralize power” and push security to end users’ devices. “That means you lose the choke point for regulation because the choke point for regulation is the bank, the choke point for regulation is the centralized intermediary,” he explained.

Van Valkenburgh went on to note that, since control over these networks is pushed to the edges, the technology can potentially be used for illicit activities.

Laying the Groundwork for a Future Debate

One of the illicit activities that regulators and journalists sometimes associate with bitcoin is terrorism. Although there haven’t been any major terrorist attacks funded through bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency up to this point, that we know of, Van Valkenburgh pointed out that it’s “possible that one day somebody will use these networks in a meaningful way” to finance that sort of activity.

According to Van Valkenburgh, one of Coin Center’s main goals is to prepare for the potential conversation that would take place within government in the aftermath of such an event.

“What will be the government response when this tool is used in a way that a lot of people get upset about?” asked Van Valkenburgh. “Our metric of success, I think truly, would be a reasonable response to clear evidence of illicit uses of the technology — like dangerous, illicit uses of the technology.”

For Van Valkenburgh, success for Coin Center in such a scenario would mean the prevention of a push for an instant ban of bitcoin and other related technologies, along with software developers not getting arrested as part of the process. Coin Center is effectively laying the groundwork to make sure these future conversations remain reasonable.

“This is a technology and, just like all technologies, it can be used for good and for evil,” said Van Valkenburgh. “We are not, as Americans, in the business of banning technologies. We’re not in the business of banning speech.”

More “Legitimate” Use Cases Needed

Going back to the aforementioned branding issue, one possible way to improve the outlook on bitcoin from a regulatory perspective is to create more mainstream use cases for the technology. This point was originally brought up by Crain.

“If you have stuff where there is 50 million users and they are like, ‘This thing is great. It really makes something possible that I couldn’t do before. It’s a totally legitimate thing, and this is amazing.’ It would be so much harder if it’s still this kind of fringe thing,” said Crain.

Van Valkenburgh agreed with Crain’s assessment and continued, “You need the legitimate use cases to emerge. You need to show that you’re making a positive impact on the world — that it’s not just a bunch of people getting rich off of token sales or people using underground drug markets.”

Van Valkenburgh added that Coin Center hopes to clear the way, at least from a regulatory perspective, for these sort of mainstream applications to appear. “The longer we go without more mainstream, legitimate uses, the more danger we’re in,” he added.

As far as mainstream uses of bitcoin today, Van Valkenburgh pointed to the financial autonomy enabled by the technology, and he identified WikiLeaks’s use of Bitcoin to get around a financial blockade back in 2011 as a specific example. However, Van Valkenburgh also added that this example has become more politically charged since allegations of WikiLeaks working directly with Russia have appeared.

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