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What Venezuelans Are Saying About Their New National Cryptocurrency

What venezuelans are saying about their new national cryptocurrency

What Venezuelans Are Saying About Their New National Cryptocurrency

What venezuelans are saying about their new national cryptocurrency

Social media has been abuzz since Tuesday’s official launch of the Venezuelan government-backed cryptocurrency, the petro – though the reviews are very mixed.

On Tuesday, Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro claimed that the country had collected a whopping $735 million during the first day of its presale for the new cryptocurrency. In spite of a lack of proof, the claim came amid a splashy, nationally-televised broadcast where Maduro himself declared that “we have taken a giant step into the 21st century.”

Venezuela’s government first unveiled the petro back in December, setting up a dedicated government agency to oversee the development of the cryptocurrency as well as an ecosystem for it within the South American nation. In anticipation of the sale, the government published a white paper, a buyer’s guide and, most recently, newly crafted rules for creating cryptocurrency exchanges within Venezuela.

The initiative has sparked a range of tweets in support – and in opposition – to the idea, buoyed by a dedicated hashtag, #AlFuturoConElPetro (which translates to “to the future with the petro”).

For instance, one advocate tweeted, “The new economic era for Venezuela begins. The newborn criptomoneda called el petro has many challenges ahead, but its armoring will be the potential for the progressive regularization of the economy.”

Perhaps unsurprisingly, members of the country’s National Assembly – which is controlled by political parties in opposition to Maduro – have blasted the move, including in statements issued just hours after Tuesday’s broadcast event.

Among those taking a public stance against the petro is Marialbert Barrios, a National Assembly deputy who asked: “Who in their right mind buys a [cryptocurrency] from a government that does not pay the foreign debt, with an economy in hyperinflation?”

She also warned:

The pushback from the Assembly comes amid an acute political standoff between opposition forces and the Maduro government. According to Reuters, opposition parties are expected to boycott an upcoming presidential election in April, which they argue is rigged in Maduro’s favor.

Deputy Rafael Guzman called the cryptocurrency “fraudulent,” reiterating past arguments that it will fuel illegal activity.

“[The] petro is a fraudulent, illegal and invalid mechanism for the government to continue its shady business and money laundering, because it is not known where those resources will come from,” he wrote.

Base of support

In contrast with the denunciations from the opposition-controlled Assembly, various offices within the Venezuelan government have used their social media presences to boost agencies that promote the petro.

Among those is SENIAT Venezuela’s tax and revenue authority, which claimed that residents can use the petro to pay their tax liabilities, among other things:

“The state will accept the payment of national taxes, duties, fees, contributions and public services in petro,” the agency wrote.

Mariana Ribera of Infocentros, which operates a network of IT centres throughout Venezuela, also celebrated the move on Twitter.

“This initiative, this new South, gives us an endless range of options and opportunities in the national and international market, opening new Horizons that have no limits,” she wrote.

Other tweets in support of the move include those from the Venezuelan consulates in Hong Kong and Vancouver.

Maduro’s official Twitter account has seen a number of related posts in the past day, including one from Wednesday afternoon that played back footage from Tuesday’s broadcast.

Local bitcoiners raise concerns

Yet, turning back to the opposition, politicians in Venezuela aren’t the only ones pushing back against the idea.

While the skepticism voiced by Venezuelan opposition lawmakers could be seen through the lens of the ongoing political crisis in the country, the critiques put forward by members of the local bitcoin and cryptocurrency community are more nuanced and focused on the fact that the Maduro government will likely wield significant control over the cryptocurrency it’s creating.

In a post on the “BitcoinVenezuelabtcven” Facebook group, one commentator wrote that it is “really worrying” that the government would exercise such a large degree of control, especially considering the wide-reaching push for people to start using it.

The fear, he said, is that the government will have “the absolute power to manipulate and adulterate the blockchain at will over petro”.

Through that lens, others said, the petro isn’t much of a decentralized cryptocurrency at all. “That’s what makes the petro a debt bond and not a crypto in itself, plus the danger of these guys behind that project,” one community member wrote.

Yet another observer offered a broader take, posting in the Facebook thread:

“Tyranny is that: [a] monopoly of power in the hands of a political class that only cares about its space.”

Editor’s Note: Statements in this report have been translated from Spanish.

Image Credit: Ink Drop / Shutterstock.com

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Published at Wed, 21 Feb 2018 19:05:36 +0000

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Investors Hoping to Make a Killing off of Bitcoin May Not Get Rich After All

The value of bitcoin continues to dominate the headlines as prices climb ever higher. This has attracted even more investors to venture into bitcoin mining, looking to make a killing off the digital currency.


If you’re thinking about getting rich by mining bitcoin, though, think again. Much like panning for gold in the Yukon River was a waste of time for more than 100,000 prospectors looking to find their fortunes during the Klondike Gold Rush of the 1890s, so too is mining for the popular cryptocurrency.

In simplest terms, in order to mine bitcoin, computers running special mining software mine ‘blocks’ that reward them with bitcoin. bitcoin Wiki explains:

Each block contains, among other things, a record of some or all recent transactions, and a reference to the block that came immediately before it. It also contains an answer to a difficult-to-solve mathematical puzzle – the answer to which is unique to each block. New blocks cannot be submitted to the network without the correct answer – the process of “mining” is essentially the process of competing to be the next to find the answer that “solves” the current block. The mathematical problem in each block is extremely difficult to solve, but once a valid solution is found, it is very easy for the rest of the network to confirm that the solution is correct. There are multiple valid solutions for any given block – only one of the solutions needs to be found for the block to be solved.

Sounds easy, right? Wrong. The difficulty to mine each block and the power required to do so have increased to such an extent that only those who have invested enough in mining rigs and computing power have any real chance to mine enough bitcoins to be considered ‘rich’. The rest are lucky to break even, and most end up spending more in equipment and electricity costs than they ever actually earn.

Bitcoin mining

Should Investors Be Worried About the Turn of Events?

With more and more people joining the mining community, two questions still linger – one, should you be worried about the abrupt turn of events? Two, will bitcoin mining be remembered in history as just an investment that got only a few people rich?

The tremendous increase in the price of bitcoin in the last year or so has seen many speculators sucked in, with many of them being ordinary investors without much know-how about bitcoin mining. It is also likely that more have been drawn in because of news from mainstream financial exchanges announcing that they plan to make bitcoin a tradable asset by offering Bitcoin futures and derivatives.

Satoshi Nakamoto’s original idea behind the digital currency was that it would become purely a store of value, just like gold. But over time it has come to be viewed by many as a replacement of currencies like the pound, euro, and dollar – one that is fully decentralized therefore incapable of being altered or controlled by any central bank. This has led to many people in the banking industry to consider bitcoin as a big fraud, with big names such as Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs and Jamie Dimon of JP Morgan describing it as a bubble that would eventually pop.

The Bank of England’s deputy Governor Sir Jon Cunliffe also added his view, saying that bitcoin is just a sideshow and that it is not big enough to pose a threat to the larger global economy. He has also cautioned investors, asking them to first “do their homework” before they put in money into it.

bitcoin is enjoying a free ride, as of now, but with regulators getting closer to regulating this freshly minted industry, it is not certain what the future holds. Investors feel that they have done their homework well, while regulators, on the other hand, feel that they have more work yet to do.

Do you bitcoin a worthy investment now that mainstream financial exchanges are considering it as a tradable asset or a risky one considering regulators are likely to move in soon? Let us know in the comments below.


Images courtesy of AdobeStock

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