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Zebpay CEO: India Bitcoin Ban Fears Unfounded

Zebpay ceo: india bitcoin ban fears unfounded

Zebpay CEO: India Bitcoin Ban Fears Unfounded

Zebpay ceo: india bitcoin ban fears unfounded

Zebpay CEO, Ajeet Khurana, says he doesn’t believe India would ban bitcoin despite numerous reports in the media that the government is considering a blanket cryptocurrency prohibition. Meanwhile, Khurana’s Zebpay is set to expand operations into Australia, a country currently experiencing increased cryptocurrency adoption.

India Won’t Ban bitcoin

Speaking during the announcement of Zebpay’s move into the Australian crypto market, Khurana characterized the current fears of an imminent bitcoin ban in India as unfounded. According to the Zebpay chief:

“I must tell you that I have heard of this in general business media outlets however over the last year I have talked to all of the top stakeholders in the Ministry of Finance, the central bank, the securities regulator and despite them having a certain amount misgiving around crypto I have never heard them talk of banning it.”

For Khurana, despite having misgivings about cryptocurrencies, regulators have never definitively declared any intention to ban bitcoin completely.

Back in late April 2019, reports emerged that the government was considering a blanket ban on cryptocurrencies. Several government agencies were reportedly already in agreement with the plan.

However, with general elections imminent, several stakeholders proposed taking any decision until after the polls. In the interim, some state officials called for bitcoin to be banned under the country’s money laundering regulations.

The country’s apex bank, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in 2018 banned banks from operating accounts of bitcoin exchanges. There is currently an ongoing legal battle in the Supreme Court, challenging the legality of RBI’s action.

This move forced platforms like Zebpay to shutter their services in India in favor of relocating to friendlier crypto regulatory jurisdictions. As previously reported by BTCManager, the RBI omitted cryptocurrency startups from its recently published fintech regulatory sandbox.

Zebpay Expands to Australia

In October 2018, Zebpay, which at the time was India’s largest bitcoin bourse, was forced to shut down its operations in the country, announcing a move to Malta.

Now in May 2019, the platform is expanding to Australia, having obtained a license from the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Center.

Zebpay would join the expanding cast of bitcoin exchange platforms already domiciled in the country. In recent times, Australian financial regulators have taken steps to create a friendly, yet regulated environment for its emerging cryptocurrency and blockchain technology scene.

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Published at Thu, 09 May 2019 02:00:46 +0000

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Charlie Shrem: ‘It’s Not About The Technology Anymore, It’s About Power’

bitcoin entrepreneur Charlie Shrem shared his views on the scaling debate, stating that “it’s not about technology anymore, it’s about power.”


Shrem: ‘It’s About Power’

Charlie Shrem, bitcoin entrepreneur and co-founder of Intellysis, was present in today’s episode of the  Double Down show, dubbed “Does Block Size Matter?” with the usual hosts Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert.

Hard Fork Wars

During the show, Shrem expressed his thoughts regarding the current state of the scaling debate or as Herbert called it, “the Great Blocksize War of 2017.”

Shrem stated:

In reality, it’s not a technical argument anymore. Everyone on both sides of the table say that SegWit is the best technology that we have.

According to Shrem, the scaling debate is no longer about the most viable technology or solution that can be used to scale bitcoin. Instead, the scaling debate has become a power struggle between two development teams, Bitcoin Unlimited and Bitcoin Core.

“The other side of the debate, which is bitcoin Unlimited, they agree that SegWit is a great technology,” he continued. “But to them it’s not about technology anymore, it’s about power.”

Shrem went on to say:

They want to remove [bitcoin Core’s] ability to work on bitcoin and instead have a closed-membership small group of four to five developers, who they think are the best for the job, run bitcoin going forward.

A Test for bitcoin

However, there is a silver lining in this development, which Shrem considers it as an “extremely bullish situation for bitcoin.” The current block size “drama” is showcasing bitcoin’s ability to resist a malicious attack on the network.

He noted:

Here you have a group of bad actors who are trying to overtake the bitcoin network and essentially fork all of bitcoin and force all bitcoin users to be able to use their developers and their codebase and their everything and it’s not a group of miners that’s preventing this.

Shrem sees the current hash power signaling as a “glorified poll” when it comes to hard fork given that nodes are the ones that validate blocks and they can discard the ones from the hard-forked chain at will, meaning that miners don’t have nearly as much power as they think they do.

This can be observed the UASF proposal, which would bypass the miners completely and leave it up to the nodes to force SegWit into activation.

However, it may not come down to a UASF, as mining pools like F2Pool are beginning to move to SegWit driven by demand from individual users that contribute hashrate to the pool.

Champagne Problem

Not all is gloomy for bitcoin, however. Amidst all the tension and drama, one must also look at the bright side, which is the reason we’re having this heated debate at all: Bitcoin is growing at an exponential rate.

This is, as Shrem puts it, a “champagne problem,” one that gives us as much to celebrate as it gives us to fight about. 

Bitcoin 2016

“It’s a good problem to have. bitcoin has grown really quickly. We never expected this to happen so quickly, to be honest. We’re getting towards what they call a ‘champagne problem,’ how do you scale?” he said.

This means that not only is bitcoin working as intended, but there is also an urgent need for such a currency in the world. Now, it’s only a matter of making sure that bitcoin can become that currency and still maintain its decentralized and immutable characteristics.

Shrem concluded:

There has always been research and conversations on scaling over the past three years but, to be honest, we didn’t think we’d see this exponential growth in bitcoin and now it’s time to have that conversation.

Do you agree? Is the scaling debate actually about power and control? Share below!


Images courtesy of Shutterstock, alchetron.com, coin.dance

The post Charlie Shrem: ‘It’s Not About The Technology Anymore, It’s About Power’ appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.