Bitcoin virtual currency breaks $1,000 mark

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Bitcoin virtual currency breaks $1,000 mark

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The value of a single bitcoin has surpassed $1,000 (£613) for the first time, according to MTGox, one of the virtual currency's major exchanges.

Bitcoin's value has been rising rapidly since a US Senate committee hearing earlier this month.

Confidence grew after the committee described virtual currencies as a "legitimate financial service".

Bitcoin has become popular in part due to it being difficult to trace transactions.

The currency is often linked to illegal activity online.

Customers using the Silk Road - a website selling illegal drugs that was shut down last month - would pay for goods using Bitcoin.

Many worried the crackdown would cause the value to plummet, but instead growing confidence that regulators will not imminently seek to ban the currency has seen its price soar.

Enthusiasts say it is a highly efficient way of handling global money transfers.

"For Bitcoin to go from zero to $1,000 in just five years has been amazing to watch," said Mike Hearn, a Bitcoin developer.

"It's easy to forget that Bitcoin's true value is not in an arbitrary exchange rate, but in its ability to enable new applications and services which aren't possible with today's payment networks."

Senate hearing

The US Senate hearing earlier this month was prompted by the closure of the Silk Road.

Representatives from the Department of Justice and financial regulator the Securities and Exchange Commission were asked to provide their views about virtual currencies to the committee, and submissions have been received from the FBI and the US Federal Reserve.

"Virtual currencies, perhaps most notably Bitcoin, have captured the imagination of some, struck fear among others, and confused the heck out of the rest of us," the chairman of the committee, senator Thomas Carper, said in opening remarks.

The FBI, in a letter to the committee, said that it recognised virtual currencies offered "legitimate financial services" but they could be "exploited by malicious actors".

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-25120731
 
Mave said:
The FBI, in a letter to the committee, said that it recognised virtual currencies offered "legitimate financial services" but they could be "exploited by malicious actors".

It is already used by malicious actors! They are make bitcoins what they are today. It's the currency from the Deep Web (I will make a tutorial how to access to it)
They use it like a legal money laundering and currency for illicit drug deals on the web !! xD
 
Mave said:
The FBI, in a letter to the committee, said that it recognised virtual currencies offered "legitimate financial services" but they could be "exploited by malicious actors".

So can normal cash though...
 
Stybar said:
Mave said:
The FBI, in a letter to the committee, said that it recognised virtual currencies offered "legitimate financial services" but they could be "exploited by malicious actors".

So can normal cash though...

Bitcoins are totaly anonymous, that's why no one can controll them, and that's why criminals use this as their new currency.
 
Blubber said:
Stybar said:
Mave said:
The FBI, in a letter to the committee, said that it recognised virtual currencies offered "legitimate financial services" but they could be "exploited by malicious actors".

So can normal cash though...

Bitcoins are totaly anonymous, that's why no one can controll them, and that's why criminals use this as their new currency.
You give a dealer a note of 20, no one can trace it back to you. Pure cold hard cash is pretty anonymous as well, unless you start writing down serial numbers.
 
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