Sunday, 4 December 2016

Titcoin

When currencies meet pleasure

How many of you tried to subscribe to a porno website but was afraid that his/her parents will notice at the end of the month when the credit card bill will arrive?
Now, with titcoin, this is not a problem anymore!
Titcoin is a type of electronic cash that can be discreetly exchanged for adult products and services, and subsequently converted into fiat currency.
Titcoin is an extension of the Bitcoin protocol with enhancements specifically designed for online porn and adult entertainment transactions.
Titcoin already increased the porn's market share by 30%!
Concerning privacy and discretion, banks and other financial institutions are required to keep personal records of all customers. A cryptocurrency system only records anonymous deposit and withdrawal addresses for each transaction without requiring any personal information.
So, now, will you invest in cryptocurrencies ;) ?



Sunday, 20 November 2016

Kraken Investment Case Study

"Founded in 2011 and based in San Francisco, Kraken is the world's largest global Bitcoin exchange in euro volume and liquidity. Along with bitcoin and euros, hundreds of thousands of traders, institutions and authorities trust Kraken to facilitate trading in US and Canadian dollars, British pounds, Japanese yen, and a variety of digital assets like ether."

"Challenge Summary: Bitcoin vs Ethereum: You have $1M to invest across these two blockchain technologies by buying bitcoins and ethers – the digital assets or “cryptocurrencies” that power these decentralized computer networks. You cannot touch your investment for the next 5 years. How much of that $1M do you invest in each? Why?"

Check the article on the link below to know more about this competition related to cryptocurrencies!

Competition Kraken Economist

Thursday, 17 November 2016

Depois de Lisboa, Temos Madrid



Ao longo dos últimos anos, Lisboa tem vindo a destacar-se no panorama internacional de startups, inovação e tecnologia. A cidade tem sido por muitos apontada como o próximo Sillicon Valley europeu e para realçar este ponto, Lisboa recebeu no início do mês de Novembro a famosa conferência de tecnologia e inovação: o Web Summit. Durante este evento inúmeros temas foram debatidos, mas tem sido Fintech que tem atraído maior atenção durantes estes dias. Desta forma, a equipa do Web Summit vai organizar um novo evento: MoneyConf. Este, terá lugar em Madrid durante o mês de Junho e contará com a presença de reconhecidas instituições bancárias e empresas tecnológicas, que juntas irão definir o futuro deste mercado promissor.

Durante esta conferência, as pessoas terão a oportunidade de perceber como os bancos estão a adaptar-se a esta mudança e como as principais startups e empresas tecnológicas estão a mudá-la. Adicionalmente, um dos principais temas recaí sobre cryptocurrencies e perceber a importância que estas terão neste processo e quais os principais agentes responsáveis pelo mesmo.

O painel ainda não está completo mas já conta com representantes de instituições como BBVA, TransferWise, Saxo Bank, Master Card e Balderton Ventures. Este evento será um dos maiores eventos em Fintech deste ano e sem dúvida muito promissor.

Ficamos então à espera de mais informações e que a MoneyConf chegue Madrid 2017!  


Check this post in english here: https://goo.gl/e6s20I

After Lisbon, We Have Madrid



Throughout the years, Lisbon has been gaining its relevance in the startup, innovation and technology international panorama. The city has been considered by many as the new european Sillicon Valley. To highlight this, Lisbon received in the beginning of this month, the famous tech conference: the Web Summit. During the event, several topics were covered, however, Fintech has been the one that has attracted the more interest and relevance during the days. Therefore, the team behind the Web Summit is now going to host a new event: MoneyConf. It will take place in Madrid during the month of June and is going to feature some of biggest international banks institutions and tech firms, that together will the discuss and shape the future of this new promising market.

Additionally, during this conference people will have the opportunity to find out how, in one side, banks are adapting to the changes in the market and how, on the other side, startups and tech companies are disrupting it. Moreover, one of the main topic will be cryptocurrencies and understand the relevant role of these in this change and some of the companies behind it.

The final panel is not yet complete, however it already counts with names from important organizations such as: BBVA, TransferWise, Saxo Bank, Master Card e Balderton Ventures. This event will be one of the major events in Fintech and with no doubt very promising.

We will wait for more information regarding the event and that the MoneyConf Madrid 2017 arrives!


Wednesday, 16 November 2016

TEDxTampaBay | David Morris | At the Speed of Money: How Cryptocurrency Will Transform Everything

At TEDxTampaBay, David explores how Bitcoin and related technologies will radically change just about everything.
Check it out people! It is incredible!





Tuesday, 15 November 2016

"The Unbanked". How could digital currency help developing countries?





Access to banks is privilege that most people in the world enjoy and take for granted. It enables the use of facilities such as current accounts, credit cards, savings accounts. However, according to the World Bank, approximately two-and-a-half billion people globally do not have such access and are, in effect, disconnected from the global economy and formal financial systems. For these people, referred to as the “unbanked”, accumulating and maintaining any significant wealth is difficult.

Those unable to access bank accounts often are reliant on receiving money from family members in other countries. Remittances totalling nearly $600 billion were sent globally in 2015, according to the World Bank; of this sum, it is estimated that the destination of approximately 75% was developing countries. Such cross-border payments represent one application of cryptocurrency – a means of currency exchange in which transactions are made securely. While there is much still to be investigated about cryptocurrency, it is undoubtedly an application of crypto technology that is generating significant interest.

A recent Wired headline read ‘Bitcoin dead? It goes big in 2016’. The explanation given for this statement was that Bitcoin enabled a more straightforward and cost-effective means of transferring money between locations than traditional methods. This, the article continued, was true both for businesses when accepting payments from customers on the internet and for consumers when moving money between countries.

At London School of Economics (LSE), an expert in cryptocurrencies and their impact on world finance, Dr. Garrick Hileman and colleagues conducted a research concluding that the countries showing the greatest potential for the implementation of cryptocurrencies are to be found in the former Soviet Union, Latin America and Sub-Saharan Africa. The nature of cryptocurrencies makes them particularly suited for such areas. Requiring no credit checks or maintaining balance, being able to potentially grow over time and being resistant to both political and financial corruption, many users in these countries could not reasonably expect to be eligible for other forms of financial services.

The cost-effectiveness of cryptocurrencies is due in part to their not requiring expensive institutions and having negligible costs associated with them. It follows that they may be a catalyst for aid distribution. For example, the transfer of cash by electronic means such as SMS has increased in popularity over the past few years, while Bitcoin services have the potential for changing the ways in which the transfer of money between and to those in need is performed. The benefits of such means of transfer are highlighted by the fact that one third of the food assistance provided by the World Food Programme (WFP) takes the form of vouchers or cash rather than actual food.

One negative aspect of cash transfers is that they are vulnerable to fraud and other difficulties. This is true whatever the nature of the transaction, be it between any combination of individuals, governments, people, etc., as they involve bodies or institutions that may have their own interests at heart more than those of the people with whom they are transacting. Financial inclusion in developing countries can be broadened, according to a Gates Foundation report of 2014, by the fast growth and development of systems for digital payments, as they enable the required transparency, security and rapidity at an affordable price previously described.

Bitcoin services are becoming increasingly widespread across the world. Five examples of the implementation of its developing popularity are given below:

  • Philippines: While most of the population of the Philippines own of have access to a mobile phone and the internet, online shopping is far from easy as nearly three-quarters are unbanked and only one in fifty people uses a credit card. A system named Coins.ph is designed to overcome this problem by enabling transactions with Bitcoin and subsequent cashing out with the local currency. The result is a more straightforward online selling and purchasing process that aims to reduce time delays and transportation expenses.

  • India: A lower proportion of India’s population is unbanked, with around two in five people having no access to traditional financial services and so relying mostly on cash. However, while smaller businesses are dependent on physical currency, larger retailers such as Flipkart and Amazon are driving forward online commerce. The Bitcoin system in use in India is Unocoin, which enables digital payments for smaller companies, thereby allowing them to eradicate chargebacks and to reduce the costs of transactions significantly.  

  • Kenya: BitPesa, provides benefits to the Kenyan population in terms of reduced fees and increased financial protection. Money transfers are free of charge with a guaranteed exchange rate of three per cent – this ensures that both receiver and the sender is protected from the risk of loss from fluctuation in the rate. The system allows shillings to be sent for a three per cent fee between mobile accounts utilising Bitcoin; this is one-third the fee that is more typical of physical currency. The BitPesa system is typically used by clientele such as entrepreneurs, expatriates and migrants.

  • South Africa: In South Africa, there is convenient integration of Bitcoin with the conventional banking system. In Johannesburg, a Bitcoin ATM (the first of its kind on the continent) allows customers to convert physical money into Bitcoin; cash deposited is instantly transferred to their digital wallets. A local company, PayFast, processes payments for online companies in a way that protects them from volatility in the digital currency market. When a Bitcoin transaction is made to one of the 30,000 companies using the system accepting the digital currency, the payment is instantly converted into the local currency.

  • Argentina: BitPagos, provides a means of overcoming many problems associated with the Argentinian financial system for many residents. These include high inflation (which is approaching forty per cent), strict controls on capital and a restricted payment options. The electronic system offers more cost effective finance than the local system in that Bitcoin transactions are free and credit card transactions are made for a fee of just five per cent.

Digital currency technology such as Bitcoin is being implemented in pilots such as these as a means of bringing cheap financial services to regions of the developing world in which the incidence of the underbanked is high. Businesses operating Bitcoin can exploit the ability to transfer money using such decentralized networks in order to benefit from reduced costs in the knowledge that transactions are both secure and instantaneous. For customers, the digital systems provide the opportunity for money management and the convenience that is afforded by the use of mobile phones to access banking facilities.

Thursday, 10 November 2016

Venezuelans are turning to cryptocurrencies after country’s hyperinflation



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President Nicolas Maduro’s regime in Venezuela has seen the bolivar plummet in 2016, losing close to 50 per cent of its value against the US dollar, and inflation spiral, with 15 recorded rises over a 12 month period. An unstable currency has rocked the economy, and reduced people’s faith in wages and prices, since the notes they use devalue almost as soon as they have been pocketed. The future does not look any brighter, for the IMF has forecast a consumer-price inflation rate of 480 per cent by January 2017, rising to a staggering 1640 per cent in 2017.

One of the consequences of this continuous fall in the value of the bolivar is the spiralling rise in the black market exchange rate for US dollars. The official rate, set by the government, is 9.95 bolivar for each dollar; in reality, people are paying around 1800 bolivars for every dollar they buy as of today.
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    Source: www.venezuelaecon.com

Given the fact that the bolivar lost 60 per cent of its value in four weeks in 2016, it is perhaps unsurprising that some Venezuelans have chosen to change their bolivars into bitcoins, considering the latter a relatively stable form of currency - and one which has been holding and indeed increasing in value throughout 2016. This reaction to a failing national currency is not limited to Venezuela, for while bitcoins cannot be classified as a totally non-volatile form of currency, which has prevented them from being used widely worldwide, their fall in value cannot compare with that of the bolivar. However much the bitcoin might fluctuate in value, this will not compete with the radical downward spiral of the Venezuelan state currency.

Diario Bitcoin reports that the first week of August saw 141.7 million bolivar changed into bitcoins, the equivalent of 141 million USD. This was up on the previous week’s figures, which recorded 117.116 million bolivar being changed to bitcoins, the equivalent of 117 million USD.

REMITTANCES:
In 2005, both Moneygram and Western Union reacted to government regulations and sanctions by withdrawing from Venezuela. As a result, many families were no longer able to receive financial support from outside Venezuela. This gap in the market is gradually being filled by three bitcoin exchanges which have been set up: the first was SurBitcoin, and this has now been supplemented by the newer Yabit and Cryptobuyer. Thanks to these payment networks, it is now possible to send funds into the country. Unlike central government in neighbouring Ecuador and Bolivia, the Venezuelan authorities have not regulated the use of bitcoin, mainly because it is not considered a currency, but a form of property. Local legislatures, which deal with money transactions did, however, question SurBitcoin closely once it was launched, to determine whether its function was to launder money illegally.


To date, the Maduro government has not intervened and we can but hope that the introduction of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies will succeed in providing Venezuelans with the financial power and tools people need to safeguard their economic future, nevertheless it provides oxygen to a suffocating economy.
© Cryptomize
Maira Gall