Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Fincen's New Regulations Are Choking Bitcoin Entrepreneurs
American Banker
Thursday, April 25, 2013
http://www.americanbanker.com/bankthink/fincen-regulations-choking-bitcoin-entrepreneurs-1058606-1.html
More than a decade ago, regulators nearly suffocated PayPal. Now it looks like they’re trying to squelch another disruptive, innovative payments system.
At least three exchanges in the U.S. that traded the digital currency Bitcoin have shut down, apparently as a result of guidance issued last month by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. That agency has emerged as the top threat, at least in in the United States, to the decentralized Bitcoin network – moreso than the widely reported price volatility and hacker attacks.
"They've been the single biggest factor for stomping out currency competition," says Bradley Jansen, a former assistant to Rep. Ron Paul and director of the Center for Financial Privacy and Human Rights. Speaking recently on The Daily Bitcoin podcast with Adam Levine, Jansen expressed surprise at how little focus bitcoin business leaders are putting on Fincen, especially considering how regulators thwarted earlier emerging payment systems like PayPal and e-gold. PayPal obviously survived and prospered – but only after selling itself to eBay and agreeing to put restrictions on its service. E-gold was not so fortunate.
"Fincen was able to stop currency competition with technical innovations in the 90s even before their expanded powers under the U.S. Patriot Act. And, what we've got now is a Fincen on steroids without clear restrictions from Congress," Jansen says.
The guidance requires certain intermediaries that handle virtual currency to register with Fincen as money services businesses, which entails recordkeeping and reporting responsibilities. And it says some of those businesses may additionally be money transmitters, which would mean fingerprinting of directors and officers and compliance with a patchwork of state licensing requirements.
Jansen postulates that the recent Fincen virtual currency guidance was issued ex post facto as a way to set the stage for potential prosecutions in the future.
"It's a failure of Congress to do its job. We knew that these guidelines and these prosecutions were in the works even last Congress. Ron Paul was the chairman of the House subcommittee that had jurisdiction over Fincen and he never had a single hearing on this."
In a recent speech, Fincen Director Jennifer Shasky Calvery said the new guidance aims "to protect [digital currency] systems from abuse and to aid law enforcement in ensuring that they are getting the leads and information they need to prosecute the criminal actors." She reiterated that the guidance does not apply to everyday users who pay or accept bitcoin for goods and services.
But by saddling startups with compliance requirements, and making them unattractive clients for regulated banks that despair of serving MSBs, Fincen is choking these businesses that facilitate conversion of bitcoins into dollars. Fewer exchanges and more red tape will make it harder for merchants or consumers (who, after all, must still pay the bills with dollars) to take advantage of the Bitcoin payment system’s speed, privacy and competitive costs.
On March 20 – just two days after the guidance from Fincen came out – the bitcoin exchanger bitme.com suspended operations indefinitely. Bitme was a relatively small operation, but it was widely suspected among bitcoin users in online forums that this closure resulted from difficulties related to potential regulatory compliance.
BTC Buy, another bitcoin exchange site, suspended services and closed permanently in early April, specifically citing the legal uncertainty brought up by the Fincen guidance.
Most recently, the largest bitcoin exchange to halt trading was Bitfloor, run by Roman Shtylman, who blamed "circumstances outside of our control." His New York operation had average daily trading volume of about $300,000 (depending on the exchange rate), with U.S. dollar deposits and withdrawals running through a Capital One bank account – which the bank unilaterally closed. "I had very little time to act between receiving the account closure letter and the account being closed," Shtylman told PaymentsSource.
In this case, the regulatory guidance may have had an indirect effect. Bitfloor was registered with Fincen as an MSB but was not licensed as a state money transmitter. Shtylman surmised that Capital One had judged his business to be "not worth the risk."
Across the Atlantic and presumably unrelated to Fincen, Poland-based Bitcoin-24 suspended trading after the government there froze its bank account. It reportedly did so because a bank in Germany complained of compromised accounts transferring stolen money without identification to Bitcoin-24. Also, U.K.-based TransferWise, a foreign currency intermediary, ceased transfers to any bitcoin exchanges at the request of its banking partners. TransferWise had mostly been servicing customers in the U.K., Poland, and Spain.
It will be interesting to watch how Fincen intends to treat one-way, fixed-rate brokers that either buy or sell bitcoin at a fixed price. Since a two-way exchange market is not involved it could be seen as merely a typical commodity purchase or sale.
Tangible Cryptography LLC, which registered as an MSB this month, operates FastCash4Bitcoins for selling bitcoins and Bitcoins Direct for private off-exchange purchases. The two businesses function independently of each other and neither is technically an exchange. Bitcoins Direct is frequently closed to new clients and its cash deposit feature was recently cancelled.
The fact that bitcoin survives at all with so many powerful forces lined up against it is a testament to its resiliency and tenacity. Now, in addition to the vicious press coverage and persistent denial of service attacks on exchanges, the emerging cryptographic money has to contend with onerous and targeted regulation.
With respect to bitcoin and financial regulation, Jansen warns: "I think the lesson from the 90s was that you either become what Fincen wants you to be or you're not going to be."
Not in the U.S., that is. But jurisdictional competition will kick in and overseas exchanges will gain market share and liquidity. They just may not have U.S. customers.
Monday, November 5, 2012
Bitcoin Cryptocurrency: Is "Digital Gold" The Future Of Money?
Jim Puplava, President of PFS Group and host of Financial Sense Newshour, welcomes Jon Matonis, an e-Money researcher and Crypto Economist focused on expanding the circulation of nonpolitical digital currencies. Jon explains the definition of "crypto-currency" and discusses Bitcoin, the first true crypto-currency, which he describes as ''digital gold." Jon and Jim discuss the potential of Bitcoin, if it will eventually compete against government monopoly currencies, and if crypto-currencies could in fact become the future of money itself (10/31/2012).
Jon Matonis on Bitcoin CryptoCurrency: Is "Digital Gold" The Future Of Money? The audio file is hosted below or you can download here.
http://www.financialsensenewshour.com/broadcast/insider/fsn2012-1031-1-insider-i8mw5o3.mp3
Articles referenced during the interview:
Bitcoin Foundation Launches To Drive Bitcoin's Advancement (9/27/2012)
Brainwallet: The Ultimate In Mobile Money (3/12/2012)
Key Disclosure Law Can Be Used To Confiscate Bitcoin Assets (9/12/2012)
The Bitcoin Richest: Accumulating Large Balances (6/22/2012)
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Bitcoin Prevents Monetary Tyranny
Forbes
Thursday, October 4, 2012
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmatonis/2012/10/04/bitcoin-prevents-monetary-tyranny/
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Mel Gibson as William Wallace wearing woad. |
Monetary tyranny can take many ugly forms. It can be deliberate inflation, persecutory capital controls, prearranged defaults within the banking cartel, or even worse, blatant sovereign confiscation. Sadly, those threats are a potential in almost any jurisdiction in the world today. The United States does not have a monopoly on monetary repression and monetary tyranny.
Once the State is removed from the monetary sphere and loses the ability to define legal tender, its power becomes relegated to direct legislative and enforcement measures that do not immorally manipulate a currency. Taxes for wars and domestic misadventures will have to be raised the old-fashioned way — that is to say government money cannot be raised by simply debasing the currency.
Just as the Second Amendment in the United States, at its core, remains the final right of a free people to prevent their ultimate political repression, a powerful instrument is needed to prevent a corresponding repression — State monetary supremacy. That task has fallen to an unlikely open source project that is based on cryptography protocols and peer-to-peer distributed computing. As the mechanism for a decentralized, nonpolitical unit of account, the Bitcoin project uniquely facilitates this protection.
The timing of Bitcoin’s appearance, and subsequent growth, is no accident either. If one follows the relevant sentiments and trends, it’s evident that society was approaching a breaking point. Essentially, bitcoin is a reaction to three separate and ongoing developments: centralized monetary authority, diminishing financial privacy, and the entrenched legacy financial infrastructure. An alternative money provider that was centralized would probably not survive long in any jurisdiction. The emergence of Bitcoin was baked into the cake already.
We can see from the case against digital money provider e-gold that an efficient challenger to the provision of a stable monetary unit will not be permitted… really. In 1996, a humble oncologist named Doug Jackson bravely built an auditable and verifiable system of transferring ownership rights to gold and silver bullion in an online digital environment. Wired’s Kim Zetter described it this way:
"E-gold is a privately issued digital currency backed by real gold and silver stored in banks in Europe and Dubai. Jackson says about 1,000 new e-gold accounts are opened daily, and the system processes between 50,000 and 100,000 transactions a day.
With a value independent of any national legal tender, the electronic cash has cultivated a libertarian image over the years, while drawing the ire of law enforcement agencies who frequently condemn it publicly as an anonymous, untraceable criminal haven, inaccessible to police scrutiny."Where have we heard that before? Then in December 2005, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and Secret Service raided e-gold’s Florida offices. Jackson tells Wired, “They basically raped our computers and also took us offline for 36 hours, took all the paper out of our office.” Jackson says that the government also froze parent company Gold and Silver Reserve’s U.S. bank account but the company survived, “only because its euro, pound and yen accounts are maintained outside the United States.” The physical bullion assets were subsequently seized as well.
With the prosecution resting on a civil complaint charging Gold and Silver Reserve, Inc. with operating as an unlicensed money-transmitting business, Jackson finally acquiesced in July 2008 and plead guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering (a victimless crime) and operation of an unlicensed money transmitting business rather than the alternative threat of 20 years in jail and a half million dollar fine.
Wired magazine, in June 2009, published this excellent account of the e-gold business in the wake of the federal investigation entitled “Bullion and Bandits: The Improbable Rise and Fall of E-Gold”. Also included in the article is probably the most telling photo of all — Doug Jackson sitting on the floor surrounded by file boxes labeled U.S. Secret Service.
Zetter writes, “At e-gold’s peak, the currency would be backed by 3.8 metric tons of gold, valued at more than $85 million.” E-gold founder Doug Jackson wanted to solve the world’s economic woes, “but instead got an electronic ankle bracelet for his trouble.”
Recently, in 2009, Bernard von NotHaus was indicted on counterfeiting charges for manufacturing a private metallic coin that actually contained some precious metals. After 23 years of research and development plus 11 years of operating in the marketplace, Liberty Dollar suspended operations. Following the conviction and for the appeal, the prominent Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee filed an amicus curiae brief in support of acquittal and revolving around the question of whether anyone but the government has the right to issue money. Afterwards, many commentators pointed out the absurdity of penalizing honest money to strengthen the facade of manipulated money.
Further contributing to the disturbing trend against monetary freedom and financial privacy are initiatives like the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), which has been written about many times on these pages and also in The New York Times. Other countries around the world would not even contemplate such a brazen endeavor that imposes a costly withholding and disclosure regime on sovereign foreign entities and financial assets. Furthermore, they see it as American arrogance and American hegemony run amok.
However, society will not be ready to fully embrace the promises of decentralized nonpolitical currency until it can come to terms with the fact that money in a free society should not be used for the purposes of identity and asset tracking. Banks and governments may be concerned with that goal, but it is not the role of our money.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
The Final Days of e-gold: Interview with Doug Jackson
Doug Jackson and E-Gold were also the focus of a 2009 Wired magazine article.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
An Overview of Pecunix

Pecunix, Part 1
Pecunix, Part 2
From the article:
"When e-gold Ltd. began operating, the concept was to create a closed digital system backed by the value of gold. (even the accounts are denominated in grams and ozs.) The operator of the system would not risk dealing directly with any retail customer and thus not engage in any risky financial transactions with unknown parties.
Consequently, the e-gold operation did not accept any direct customer funds. Retail transactions all flowed through a network of third party independent exchange agents. This set up became a sort of ‘defacto’ DGC model for a number of years. Pecunix still operates today as e-gold did in it’s early years.
Similar to the Federal Reserve which creates the currency but only deals with other banks, this DGC model manages the digital gold currency system but never deals directly with any retail customers. Just as you can’t ‘drive through’ the Federal Reserve Bank and cash your weekly paycheck, you could never send a wire transfer or payment directly to e-gold or Pecunix.
Using this original DGC model, no customer information is ever requested or verified when opening & operating a Pecunix account. The checking of ID, the verification of a customer’s real identity and requesting a source of funds on any transaction... these are all non-existent requirements within the Pecunix system just as they were for e-gold during it’s boom years.
Identical to the original e-gold model, the Pecunix operator is simply responsible for the day to day technical aspects of the online payments and the maintaining of the assets backing the digital units. Since they don’t deal directly with any retail customers the concept is that they should not be required to ‘know’ any of them or ask ‘what’ they do with their funds. This is the basic idea of privacy and freedom that digital gold currency pioneered across the Internet. Physical cash like notes and coins have certain anonymous properties and digital currency systems, in particular, digital gold currency was created to mimic those properties.
The Pecunix digital gold currency system continues to operate today exactly as it did from day one back in 2002. However, because of it’s jurisdiction and certain issues with the Federal Government, e-gold has modified it’s model to include strict verification of all account holders similar to PayPal."
Friday, June 11, 2010
Alternative Currencies
The New American
Thursday, June 10, 2010
http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/economy/economics-mainmenu-44/3738-alternative-currencies
The Federal Reserve’s monopoly on money and credit has caused so many problems for average Americans and the nation that addressing this issue is a prerequisite for returning the nation to economic sanity. Congressman Ron Paul has introduced a bill called the “Free Competition in Currency Act” (H.R. 4248), which would end the government-enforced monopoly by repealing “legal tender” laws, allowing private mints, and eliminating taxes on gold and silver coins.
It would definitely be a great start to getting rid of the central bank altogether. But unlike Paul’s proposal to audit the Fed, the free competition legislation has not yet enjoyed much visibility.
In fact, because of the constant loss of purchasing power of Federal Reserve Notes (dollars), various alternatives have already been developed and tried over the years. Many are still in existence. But each one has its drawbacks, and the government has already quashed some of the efforts.
The “Liberty Dollar,” privately issued silver and gold coins as well as warehouse receipts for the metal, was touted as “America’s inflation proof currency” when it was in circulation. It was founded in 1998, but the federal government eventually confiscated what it could of the backing and arrested its founder in late 2007 on ludicrous charges that the Liberty Dollars had a “resemblance” to “genuine coins of the United States.” The legal troubles persist, but a class action lawsuit against the feds is also in progress.
“Digital gold currency” and other “e”-metals are making significant headway. A company called e-gold Ltd, which allows users to trade in gold electronically, claims to have over five million accounts set up through its system. It stores gold and other precious metals and allows account holders to spend or accept electronic gold as payment with each other. GoldMoney, a firm that provides a similar service, says on its website that it is holding nearly a billion dollars worth of gold, silver, and platinum.
Alternative paper monies are also being used. In several communities across the nation, entrepreneurs have banded together to produce their own currencies, which operate alongside Federal Reserve Notes, but are used only locally by those willing to accept them in exchange for goods and services. Among them are Detroit Cheers, BerkShares in Massachusetts, and Ithaca Hours in New York. “The systems generally work like this: Businesses and individuals form a network to print currency. Shoppers buy it at a discount — say, 95 cents for $1 value — and spend the full value at stores that accept the currency,” USA Today reported last year in an article entitled “Communities print their own currency to keep cash flowing.” The goal is to help local economies in bad times.
But while various routes to set up alternative currencies and expose — and eventually end — the Federal Reserve gather momentum, none of the options currently in existence would offer a viable substitute for the present system if and when it suddenly collapses. And that has one monetary expert very worried.
“We have to start looking seriously at what the practical remedy is going to be as this system comes down,” warned Edwin Vieira, a constitutional attorney and an expert in monetary theory who has litigated cases involving money issues. He compared the central bank’s effect on the economy to having square wheels on a car: “Sooner or later, you’re going to shake something loose and the car will fail. And that’s our situation, we’re driving this car with square wheels — the front end, the rear end and the transmission are about to fall out — and we’re in the middle of Death Valley. Literally!”
Vieira told The New American that “the whole present monetary system is unconstitutional,” but if the scam was exposed and the general population suddenly lost faith in its paper debt money, an economic collapse and chaos would quickly follow without a viable system ready to replace it. “This is frightening to me, because imagine one of these lawsuits [against the Fed] wins, and now it becomes absolutely clear to the general public that this operation is totally permeated, if not entirely based on fraud … the house will come down.”
While Vieira had varying opinions of the different attacks on the Fed’s monopoly and secrecy, he praised e-gold and competition as practical solutions. He also noted that, despite various government barriers, it is possible to negotiate contracts in precious metals. But his main suggestion for now is to start at the state level with a precious-metals-based monetary system in which the state government collects part of its tax revenue from corporations in gold.
Vieira has actually written model legislation that would accomplish this goal, and he predicts that the system would catch on. “If — or rather, when — we have another crisis down the road, at least you already have a system set up and it can immediately expand to take the entire state out from under the collapsing banking structure. So it’s a kind of insurance policy — a really cheap insurance policy,” he said.
Reprinted with permission.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
The Digital Currency Doppelganger

Unfortunately, the author here comes down on the side of regulation, both domestic and international. Financial privacy and monetary freedom are fundamental human rights that have been continually eroded, especially when it comes to the innovation and evolution of digital currencies. It is always amazing to me that the same people respecting the anonymity of a paper $100 bill do not seem to respect that same privacy when it is extended into a 'digital cash' equivalent. A digital bearer certificate, privately issued, would emulate the anonymity and untraceability features of a paper bill just like the ones in use today. The cryptographic technology exists now. Privacy should not be sacrificed simply for the sake of going digital.
Tucker correctly states that digital currencies ultimately are born of market demand. This market demand may be driven by microtransactions, wealth preservation against fiat currencies, confidentiality from merchants, general financial privacy, etc. Also, the commodity backing a private currency must be determined by the market, in accordance with Mises' regression theorem. Exchange agents provide a much-needed function in terms of localizing the service, facilitating rapid growth, and providing a vibrant two-way exchange for multiple digital currency issuers. The exchange agents also provide an additional layer of protection from over-zealous governments that seek to restrict the financial privacy of their citizens. Therefore, I come down firmly on the side of 'harbinger of the new economy' and I hope to play a part in its realization.
From the Introduction:
"You are a doctor, a board-certified oncologist and a founding partner of a lucrative group oncology practice. You enjoy the wealth and prestige that comes with practicing medicine until one day you read a book, Friedrich A. Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom. Long interested in credit theory, you familiarize yourself with the bad boys of economic theory, the Austrian School. You become convinced that the phenomenon of cyclical economics, the peaks and troughs of economic progress that have been observed for centuries, could be almost entirely attributed to the manipulation of money supplies by the federal governments of the world. Steeped in economic theory, you begin to hypothesize that wars and recessions the world over have been fertilized by the noxious manure of monetary manipulation. Although you continue to see patients your hobby, your interest becomes an obsession, a plan. You teach yourself a programming language and begin writing code day and night, often forgetting to eat. You lose weight, stop attending your local church, and finally, you sell your medical practice and liquidate your life’s savings. You launch a private currency on the Internet. You are Dr. Douglas Jackson, the founder of E-Gold Ltd."
"Nine years later, Dr. Douglas Jackson had a bad day. On the evening of December 19, 2005, Secret Service and U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents raided Dr. Jackson’s home and the offices of Gold & Silver Reserve Inc., the parent company of E-gold Inc. The agents copied data from Dr. Jackson’s servers, but did not immediately file charges. However, on April 24, 2007, a federal grand jury indicted both companies, Dr. Jackson, and his business partner on 'one count of conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, one count of conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business, one count of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business under federal law and one count of money transmission without a license under D.C. law.' According to the indictment, Dr. Jackson and his business partner conducted fund transfers on behalf of customers whom they knew to have funded their accounts with moneys gained from unlawful activity, 'namely child exploitation, credit card fraud, and wire (investment) fraud; and thereby violated federal money laundering statutes.' The conspiracy to commit money laundering charge alone carries a maximum sentence of twenty years."
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Digital Precious Metals Consistently Under Attack

"With digital currencies you can move money internationally in a manner that approximates money remittance or wire transfers. Digital currencies are denominated into internationally recognized weights of precious metals, such as gold or silver. You can open an anonymous digital precious metal account online. A digital precious metal account is very much like an online bank account except your funds are held in precious metal and not paper currency. The balance on your statement is denominated by weight in grams of gold and not dollars or euro."
"Anonymity is heavily marketed characteristic of the digital currency industry. Because digital currency accounts are obtained online and are not subject to the customer identification procedures associated with obtaining a traditional bank account, they often can be opened and funded anonymously."Unaware that digital currencies via international exchangers will one day supplant anonymous but cumbersome paper cash to fuel the digital economy, Rietbroek continues:
"To fund the account, you can use wire transfers, money orders, or by making cash deposits directly to an exchanger's bank account. Many exchangers will convert digital currency balances into anonymous prepaid (stored value) cards that can be used to withdraw funds by various methods, including at ATMs all across the world."
"The anonymity and international features are very attractive to a money launderer. Digital currency accounts also allow individuals to execute multiple currency-to-currency exchanges in a short period of time and therefore they can become an ideal layering mechanism."
Friday, January 8, 2010
Doug Casey on Currency Regime Change
International Speculator
Thursday, January 7, 2010
http://www.lewrockwell.com/casey/casey36.1.html
L: Happy New Year, Doug! What's on your mind these days have any new thoughts for the new year?
Doug: Well, the new currencies discussed in the news have caught my attention.
L: Ah, yes. Hugo Chavez is launching a new virtual currency among some Latin American and Caribbean countries called the sucre. It looks like its going to be little more than an accounting fiction among trading partners. But the new currency the Persian Gulf states are talking about launching, the so-called gulfo, that looks more like a serious contender. What do you make of this?
Doug: My first reaction is to say, Monkey see, monkey do. In imitation of the European Union, these people are monkeying around with what should be money. That's gold, of course. But you know, I've been surprised that the first of these Esperanto currencies, the euro, has lasted as long as it has. It was officially adopted in 1999, though not put into actual circulation as bank notes and coins until 2002. It started out with a theft, in that the old currencies that people had were only good for another three years. After that, your deutschmarks, guilders, francs, and what-have-you were good only for wallpaper. If you had any stuffed under your mattress, you found out what their intrinsic value was.
But the euro that's replaced them, too, is backed by nothing. Nothing but the good faith and credit of the participating governments which are all going bankrupt. The problems in the EU aren't just with Greece, Italy, and Spain; Britain and France are being downgraded, and its going to get much worse.
L: But wait a minute, is the euro really backed by even that? Well, maybe good faith, whatever that is, but not the credit of the participating countries. What would that mean? Credit in what? You cant take euros to the German government and say, I want deutschmark for these. Certainly not gold. If the dollar is a floating abstraction, the euro is all the more so, trying to stay afloat on a void.
Doug: I agree. If the dollar is an IOU nothing, the euro is a who owes you nothing. When it collapses, a lot of people are going to suffer a big wealth haircut. Bernie Madoff swindled thousands of people out of billions. The euro will swindle millions of people out of trillions.
L: Right but then is it accurate to say that its backed by the good faith and credit of these governments? I don't think it is.
Doug: That's a good point. The average urban peasant in Europe thinks his government is somehow watching out for him. I suppose that's true, at least the way a dairyman watches his cows, or a swineherd watches his pigs. But the euro really is backed by nothing. Though, at the moment, you could say its backed by Mercedes cars and Gucci bags anything you can trade euros for. But that's for a limited time. I'm absolutely convinced the euro is going to fall apart it makes no sense at all. It might be convenient for the national governments to then blame the European Central Bank. There will be recriminations and bad feelings all around.
And yet, its had a period of relative success against the dollar, and since phony economics reigns everywhere in the world, its not surprising to see other countries wonder if they can pull off the same scam.
L: Sure: If it worked for them, why not for us?
Doug: Exactly. The thing is that in the case of the Gulf countries, nobody uses those currencies outside of the issuing countries. They are really non-entities and everyone would like to secure the advantages the U.S. dollar has for their own countries. When other countries use your currency as a reserve, or even as their own currency, you can print the things up by the truckload and ship them overseas in exchange for valuable goods. You can essentially export inflation.
Its a subtle fraud that's worked for the dollar and, to some degree, its started to work for the euro. People see that its backed by big countries that are perceived to still be wealthy, so they accept euros with some confidence. Its a colorful, arty, well-printed currency, which comes in denominations up to 500. Arabs would like to see their currency accepted with equal confidence.
L: Sure, why not?
Doug: Hell, I'd like to have a government and print up my own currency too. And Chavez and his cronies in these nothing-nowhere countries like Honduras and Cuba would love to have a central bank that gets that kind of respect. The Cuban peso has zero value outside of Cuba, and almost zero value inside Cuba. Cubans don't use it if they can possibly avoid it, and never hold it. Its like the Old Maid card. And that's within a police state, where everyone has been indoctrinated over three generations about how their governments paper was actually better than gold. Lenin quipped that it's best used for constructing urinals in an ideal socialist world. And of course if you're very wealthy, or a fool, you can certainly use it that way.
But it's not going to work. I guarantee that where these things don't turn into total disasters, they will come to nothing. Anyone who is holding assets in sucres or gulfos, just like euros and dollars, is going to be left with nothing when the game of musical chairs stops.
Look at the sucre. Its supposed to be for trade between the participating countries. They wont actually issue paper money or coins. If they are just going to use it to settle trade between themselves, its just an accounting gimmick. The whole thing is ridiculous. The first trade in the sucre is supposed to happen between Venezuela and Cuba for a shipment of rice, any day now. What of real value could the Cubans possibly use to pay for this? They produce absolutely nothing but sugar and cigars.
L: So Instead of paying with sugar and cigars, they'll pay with sucres, which they got like imaginary monopoly money at the beginning of a game? And the Venezuelans will take these and use them to buy something really exciting from Bolivia?
Doug: [Laughs] Yes, perhaps a boatload of alpaca wool sweaters. The whole thing is ridiculous. Its really nothing more than a bunch of bankrupts passing IOUs around to each other. They make each other feel as though they've been paid, when in fact they all have nothing.
We have to start by asking: What is a currency?
The answer is that a currency is a government substitute for money.
This originated in the practice of private banks to issue bank notes. You'd take your gold to a bank, and the bank would issue you a paper note attesting to the gold you had on deposit. Why would they do this? Because its more convenient to carry a paper in your pocket than a large amount of gold. That's how this started, with bank notes that represented real money in storage.
And then, as governments took over the function of banking with their central banks every country has a central bank now they, too, printed up bank notes (currencies) that represented gold on deposit. After a while, people seemed to forget that the currency only represented value and had no intrinsic value of its own, and governments were able to stop backing their currencies with anything at all.
That's how the modern financial world works; its entirely based on nothing masquerading as something of value.
L: I guess its a cultural thing, like a witch doctor whose spells are backed by the full faith and credit given him, which is indeed powerful in a society that believes in them. Because everyone believes, when he says certain things will happen, they do, and people accept his powers as real. But he does not, in fact, command any magical forces, and the paper currencies people accept all around the world do not, in fact, represent any real value. At some point, reality asserts itself, as when the witch doctors powers fail in some vital task. That may be what's happening to paper currencies in the world today; if the U.S. dollar follows the Zimbabwe dollar, the whole paper fade may be torn apart, beyond any repair.
Doug: That could be. Although, while inconvenient in the process, it would be a good thing in many ways. These governments labor under the conceit that printing up more paper will create more wealth. The truth is that it does just the opposite, because the inflated money supply sends false signals to the market, and people build things, buy things, invest in things, etc. that they would not do without that false information. That's how governments distort economic decision-making and create massive misallocations of capital.
L: Have you seen that YouTube video on China's empty city?
[Ed. Note: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0h7V3Twb-Qk]
Doug: That's a perfect example.
L: Well, monkey see, monkey do is a pretty negative assessment of these new currency ideas, but isn't there a positive side? Not that they'll actually work, but that they might hasten the collapse of the paper charade?
Doug: It certainly is a sign of the times. It shows that all these other governments, at least, can see the writing on the wall and want to get away from the U.S. dollar. They know that if they keep using dollars and storing them, they're going to end up holding the Old Maid card, or getting burned by the hot potato, if you prefer. That's the economic reason. In the case of people like Chavez and Morales, they want to get away from it for political reasons as well. There's no reason to want to help the enemy by using his currency.
But the Russians are playing it much smarter. They've been consistently and significantly building their gold reserves over the last several years. They seem to add substantially to those reserves every month.
For a long time, I've thought that what will happen is that someone will come out of left field and offer the world a gold-backed version of their currency. It could easily be the Russians, or the Chinese. And if they did it right, making the currency fully redeemable in gold, that currency would become the strongest in the world. As a result, capital would pour into their banking system. And, assuming they made some other reforms, namely cutting taxes and regulation, their economies would become real powerhouses producing sustainable growth.
L: So, back in June of 2006, when we wrote about a credit crisis leading to a currency regime change in the International Speculator (back before it split into The Casey Report to cover the big picture and Casey's International Speculator to cover the junior gold stocks and similar speculations), you weren't thinking that the euro would take over from the dollar?
Doug: No. I meant that this worldwide experiment with fiat currencies is going to come to an end. And its going to come to a bad end. And I suspect that its going to be sooner, rather than later.
Remember the basics: What is money? Its a medium of exchange, its a store of value, and, if you wish, its a unit of account. It shouldn't also have to serve as a political football. Paper can work for a while, while there's confidence in it, but in the long run, nobody wants to have to trust anyone certainly not a bunch of bureaucrats to maintain the integrity of what you keep your wealth in. So you want some form of money that can serve those three basic purposes and that you don't have to take on blind faith. That means you've got to use a commodity-based money, and the best commodity to use for money is gold.
The reason for that is simple physics, not gold bug superstition. Its not mysticism, and its not barbarism. Its simply because gold has the five characteristics identified by Aristotle we've talked about this at some length before. Gold is durable, divisible, consistent, convenient, and it has utility and value in and of itself. Also, it cant be created out of thin air. That's what makes gold a particularly good money. It has the right characteristics for use as money, just as aluminum is particularly suited for making aircraft and uranium is useful for reactors. Only an idiot tries to put a round peg in a square hole, year after year, trying to make it fit somehow.
L: But that kind of thinking is so alien in the modern world, do you really think a government could adopt a new gold standard? I suppose someone could stumble across the right idea and it could be adopted, not because an enlightened government at last understood the importance of real, sound money, but simply because they had no choice. But it just seems a bit far-fetched.
Doug: Sad but true. Especially when you consider that if a government took its currency back onto the gold standard, it would be, in fact, giving up a lot of power. Paper currencies allow governments to tax in a very subtle way, through inflation, and they wont want to give that up. And the phony economics that are popular today make everyone believe that governments have to stimulate economies another really stupid and counterproductive idea. There are severe limits to how much of that you can get away with if you actually have to have the gold in hand to pay for things. Its a stretch but so is the impossible tight wire they are trying to walk between maintaining some value in the dollar and stimulating the economy now.
L: On the other hand, suppose the Gulf states launch their gulfo and it flops, so they decide to give it some real backing I wouldn't see them reaching for gold first, but they have a lot of oil, and crude oil is pretty divisible, reasonably durable, and valuable. Its not nearly as concentrated a value as gold, so its not very convenient, and its not at all consistent there are numerous grades of the stuff that meld into one another from heavy oil to light sweet crude but it is something in demand all around the world. It just seems like it would be easy for them to think of this.
Doug: Yes, but it would be hard for individuals to take delivery of, say 10,000 dollars worth of oil they're not set up to store it, and even if they were, it'd be hard to truck it to the store.
L: That's true, but this is the 21st century. You wouldn't have to take $10,000 worth of oil with you anywhere, any more than you'd have to take $10,000 worth of gold. There could be trusted warehouses, for example, that issue warehouse receipts, like the old bank notes but transferrable electronically with something like a debit card. I'm not saying it would be better than gold, I'm just saying that, while its hard for me to see any central banker deciding to convince his or her head of state to take the country back onto the gold standard, I could see guys from a bunch of oil-producing countries deciding to back their currency with something real which they have an abundance of.
Doug: Well, anything's possible, and it would be a step in the right direction. Although I could easily put $10,000 of gold in my shirt pocket. Anything commodity-based would be better than the current regime, even if its suboptimal, like oil. Look, the market will decide what works best as money. I don't really care if people decide to go back to salt or cows, or use seashells or bottle caps. The point is that money shouldn't be something controlled by the state, because they will find some way to corrupt it.
The good news is that the nation-state is on its way out (as I mentioned in our conversation on the military). The thing that amazes me, though, is the insane anti-gold psychology that prevails among academics and the ruling classes. Its actually a psychological aberration with these people. But I suspect that's because gold gives them much less control over individuals, and allows individuals much more control over their own destinies.
L: Okay, so, whether they work out or not, the emergence of these new currencies seems to back the idea of currency regime change. But haven't others tried this before? What about the Islamic dinar?
Doug: Yes, that's a very interesting example. I have a lot of problems with all religions, as you know, but Islam is particularly problematic, because its much more than just a religion. It inserts itself into absolutely every area of life socially, politically, economically everything. But, looking at the bright side, in the Koran, Mohamed says excuse me, Allah says, because everything in the Koran is the incontrovertible word of Allah that the dinar is a certain weight of gold, and that the diram is a certain weight of silver. This is what you're supposed to use for money.
So, its a little bit surprising to me that these Islamic theocracies choose to overlook the word of Allah regarding money. Oh well, so much of religion is about hypocrisy. Even when they come up with a good idea, that's the one they find some way around
At any rate, Mohamad Mahathir, former prime minister of Malaysia, floated this idea of going back to using the dinar and diram ten years ago, at least for settlement of trade between Islamic governments. It never got off the ground I suppose that was because those governments knew better than to trust each other to actually deliver on the gold and silver those currencies would have been meant to represent. Every government in the Muslim world is a kleptocracy, even to a greater degree than those elsewhere. Which is strange, in that I believe the average Muslim tends to be more honest than the average Christian in financial dealings.
L: If that's so, then maybe this new gulfo is a necessary missing link. If you could establish an Islamic intergovernmental monetary authority that had credibility, then maybe people would trust in the redeemability of a new dinar and diram it issued.
Doug: Well, it might work, but its still unnecessarily complex and prone to trust problems. Who would guarantee the good behavior of the gulfo authority? Governments get overthrown or subverted all the time. And agreements between governments literally aren't worth the paper they're printed on. Why should anyone trust a cockamamie artificial unit, constructed out of whole cloth by the type of people who are employed by a government?
The ideal would be for people to simply start using gold as money again. There would be no fractional reserve banking, because gold can only be in one place at a time banks would only lend money they actually owned, or that was entrusted to them for only that purpose, and you can bet they'd be a lot more cautious in doing so.
This ridiculous old chestnut about gold not paying interest is baloney paper money doesn't pay interest either. What pays interest is lending money to people who put it to some sort of creative use that generates more wealth, enabling them to pay back more than they borrowed. It would work for rubber balloons too, if you could get them accepted as money and they could be lent out to entrepreneurs to create wealth.
All these ideas people have about money in our world, which has been functioning without real money for decades, are so perverse that it makes me wonder if the presidential palaces in places like Washington and Caracas aren't located in an alternate reality. Frankly, I get rather impatient with people who talk about what the government should do to fix the problems, how the monetary system should be reformed, etc. Its all nonsense. Its all a waste of time. It would all be so much simpler and sounder if governments could be completely banned from having anything to do with money. We should just let the market decide, and if the market had to deliver a money, it would almost certainly be gold, because its the commodity most suited to it.
L: To some degree, the market is responding to governments failure to produce reliable money. There have been several gold-backed currencies established in recent years, though they have to be careful what they call it. There was NORFED, which went to great pains not to call itself a money, nor its silver tokens coins but was still getting its gold and silver warehouse receipts accepted as payment by all sorts of businesses, including some Walmarts until it got shut down by Uncle Sam. E-Gold was the first digital gold currency that saw fairly widespread adoption until it, too, got shut down by the U.S. government. Now there's GoldMoney.com, which seems to be pretty open about competing with governments in the currency business What do you make of all this?
Doug: I've got to say that I have a lot of confidence, personally and professionally, in Jim Turk and GoldMoney.com. Im a very small shareholder, as is Casey Research, actually, though I admit that might be thinking with our hearts a bit as well as our heads. But I think GoldMoney.com is going to grow, because it allows you to store your gold at very low cost and settle transactions with other account holders. Its not actually a bank, because it doesn't lend gold. Its simply a gold storage mechanism and a transfer mechanism.
Incidentally, to the best of my knowledge and I'm no tax attorney, so you should check with a good one but to the best of my knowledge, gold stored with GoldMoney.com is not reportable under current U.S. law. So, its a very convenient way to diversify your assets internationally and out on the Net, without the onerous reporting requirements that come with actual bank accounts.
L: So, GoldMoney.com is your preferred digital gold currency. Can you say a bit more about how that works, for those not familiar with it? Can they go down to the local Safeway and use it to buy groceries?
Doug: They could if the local store had a GoldMoney.com account. That wouldn't be a Safeway, probably, but a local store might have an account. Then you could use computers to transfer X grams of gold from your account to the stores account, and they'd give you your rice and beans, or champagne and caviar, or whatever you were buying.
L: Most stores don't have computers with Internet browsers at their check-out stands.
Doug: No, its not widespread in commerce yet, but as it becomes so, someone will probably find a way to make a buck distributing dedicated hardware to take care of the transactions, just as stores have adopted credit card terminals. But as individuals, you and I could agree that you'll buy my car for X grams of gold. You'd log on to your GoldMoney.com account and transfer the gold to my account, and Id log on to verify the transfer, then Id give you the keys to the car. There are scores of thousands of individuals you can do business with in this way today.
I think everyone ought to have a GoldMoney.com account. Although the first thing is to have a bunch of gold coins in your own possession.
L: Why do you think this one will be any more government-proof than E-Gold or NORFED? I've got to say that I was an early E-Gold adopter and had accumulated some gold on my account. After the feds moved in and shut them down, I'm a bit hesitant
Doug: First of all, E-Gold was run entirely from within the United States, which made them a sitting duck. I also understand that their accounting systems were not so great, which led to many problems. GoldMoney.com stores its bullion in vaults in London and Zurich, and they are very, very careful to work within the bounds of the law although the law is an arbitrary thing at best, and governments feel no need to obey it when an issue is important to them. At any rate, to open a GoldMoney.com account, you have to identify yourself as a real person, etc., whereas E-Gold allowed anonymity. Basically, the GoldMoney.com guys are trying to stay as pure as the driven snow, to avoid problems with the government.
And they are growing rapidly.
But who knows? Like I said, these governments can do anything they want, including break down your door in the middle of the night. For the time being, GoldMoney.com looks like a very good way of conducting transactions digitally, especially for transferring money without going through the banking system or the Federal Reserve. That might be what gets them in trouble in the end, because the government is keen to see all transactions.
L: Wait are you saying that GoldMoney.com will eventually suffer the fate of the others already crushed by the government? Is this an idea that will have to wait until government as we know it collapses?
Doug: My first reaction is to say Good riddance, although I wont because that would scare Boobus americanus, who thoughtlessly conflates government with society. But anything can happen what do you think?
L: I think that threatening the governments monopoly in the money business is like trying to hold a knife to its jugular. It would be simply intolerable to any nation-state in the world today. If GoldMoney.com, or any other such system ever started seeing seriously widespread adoption that threatened the governments death grip on money, I think government would respond with force. I think it would do so overwhelmingly, and without regard to domestic or international law, nor with any regard to human decency.
I wouldn't want to be in GoldMoney.coms offices when the storm troopers came crashing in, and I wouldn't want to have any significant portion of my net worth in such an account at that time. Until society has achieved genuine separation of economy and state, I'd be hesitant to trust wealth to any private competitor to the government money monopoly.
Doug: I'm afraid you've got the realistic view on this. On the other hand, its just as dangerous to trust your wealth to some instrument of the state, which all the banks and brokers are in today's world.
L: Where does that leave us?
Doug: Well, remember that leaving too much of your wealth in any of these fiat currencies is also very risky at this point. There is no single safe currency, and diversification can help. Id think of GoldMoney.com as being like a gold checking account; I wouldn't put all my wealth into it, but its a good place to park gold for near-term transactions.
As for the paper currencies, the euro is probably the worst of them, but the U.S. dollar is not far behind, nor are any of the others. They will all eventually trade at their intrinsic value, and I expect eventually will turn out to be this decade.
And as we've said before, you want to have a significant amount of gold in your personal possession but not in a safe deposit box in your home country. In addition to GoldMoney.com, there's Canada's Central Fund, the ETFs, and Perth Mint Certificates for handling larger amounts of gold without having to build your own Fort Knox.
Switzerland is still a relatively good place to store things in Europe. In South America, Uruguay is the best, in Central America, Panama, and in the Orient, Singapore.
L: Okay then any other investment implications to currency regime change, besides battening down the hatches, buying gold (and silver), and diversifying the political risk to your assets by spreading them across different countries?
Doug: I hate to sound like a broken record, but there are times when the best solution is also the most obvious solution. When it comes to cash money, the answer is gold. Its the only way to go. For details on how to play this, investors should try out Casey's Gold and Resource Report.
L: Got it. And while none of the new currencies on the horizon inspire much confidence in you, if one were launched that was genuinely commodity-backed, would that get the nod from you?
Doug: Yes, it would. If the Panamanians, for instance, decided to put their original currency, the colon, back on the gold standard, that would greatly enhance the value of having a bank account in Panama, in colons. They've dollarized their economy, but the colon still exists, so this is not unrealistic. It would draw in a huge amount of capital, because a lot of people would still trust a currency, even a gold-backed one, more if it were issued by a nation-state. Atavism is ingrained in the human psyche.
It's possibilities like this that make me optimistic about a gold-backed currency in the future. I think somebody's going to do it. I think that gold will be reinstituted as money in day-to-day use within 20 years. That's my bet.
L: So noted Doug Casey's guru-vision for this week. I look forward to seeing if you're right.
Doug: Yeah, 20 years go by in the blink of a cosmic eye. Till next week.
Doug Casey is Chairman of Casey Research and a highly respected author, publisher and professional investor who graduated from Georgetown University in 1968.Tuesday, November 10, 2009
e-gold Closer to Unblocking Frozen Accounts
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
http://www.ecommerce-journal.com/node/25170

In the blog e-gold states that in the near future it may finalize a Value Access Plan that satisfies the requirements of the Florida Office of Financial Regulation following which the company plans to engage with other jurisdictions where e-gold Owners reside.
e-gold says: “Value Access Plan will allow account Users on accounts with Owners residing in jurisdictions in which the Plan is not prohibited or otherwise restricted by law to direct the exchange of value in the e-gold accounts they control for US dollars.”
The prerequisite to participation in e-gold’s Value Access Plan is full compliance with e-gold’s Customer Identification Program (CIP), Customer Due Diligence (CDD), and Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) requirements for the accounts you control.
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Digital Currency Firm Fined $3 Million over Iranian Accounts
Associated Press via Yahoo News
Thursday, October 1, 2009
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091001/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_iran_florida_co...
WASHINGTON -- A Florida company has been fined nearly $3 million for activating thousands of electronic currency accounts for customers in Iran, the Treasury Department said Thursday.
The company, Gold & Silver Reserve Inc. of Melbourne, exported financial services without a license, violating federal regulations governing transactions with Iran, the department said.
Between September 2003 and December 2006, more than 56,700 of the company's e-currency accounts were opened by persons located in Iran, according to the announcement, and Gold & Silver Reserve did not voluntarily disclose the violations to the department's Office of Foreign Assets Control.
Carol Van Cleef, an attorney representing the company, said her client has overhauled its internal procedures to be in compliance with Treasury's regulations. "This deals with past issues and the company has put it behind them," she said.
With a Gold & Silver Reserve account, U.S. dollars or other currencies can be converted into digital cash that is backed by gold bullion, according to the company's web site. That allows for international transactions of goods and services at set rates among customers from different countries.
The company has temporarily suspended the creation of new accounts, the Internet site indicates.
In a separate case, the owners of Gold & Silver Reserve, who also own E-Gold Ltd., were indicted by a federal grand jury in April 2007 on charges of money laundering, conspiracy, and operating an unlicensed money transmitting business.
The Justice Department said people who wanted to use the company's gold payment system were required to provide only a valid e-mail address to open an account. Customers could access their account through the Internet and conduct anonymous transactions anywhere in the world.
The indictment alleged that E-Gold was a favored method of payment by operators of investment scams, credit card and identity fraud, and sellers of online child pornography.
The owners initially denied the allegations, but eventually pleaded guilty.
The Treasury Department said it could have fined Gold & Silver Reserve $5 million, but reduced the amount because of the forfeitures and penalties the company paid in the criminal case.Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Issuer Market Update - September 2009

Additionally, I have included each issuer's date of founding and the legal jurisdictions for administrative, operational, and guarantor entities, if applicable. Certain companies below will be the focus of issuer highlight studies in the future. Please bear in mind that not all issuers are forthcoming about the full details of their legal and control structure -- a fact that I believe puts them at a relative disadvantage.
- c-gold (2007) - Seychelles, Malaysia
- e-dinar (2000) - Dubai, Malaysia
- e-gold (1996) - Nevis, USA
- EuroGoldCash (2008) - Panama
- GoldExchange (2006) - Costa Rica
- GoldMoney (2001) - British Channel Islands
- GoldNowBanc (1999) - unknown jurisdiction
- Gold-Pay (2008) - Panama, Costa Rica
- iGolder (2009) - Belize
- Liberty Reserve (2005) - Costa Rica
- Pecunix (2001) - Panama, Vanuatu
- Perfect Money (2007) - Panama
- WebMoney (1998) - Belize, Lithuania, Russia, Dubai
Interviews with Issuers:
"Interview with c-gold", DGC Magazine, June 19, 2009
"Interview with iGolder", DGC Magazine, April 16, 2009
"Interview with e-gold", DGC Magazine, March 20, 2009
"Interview with Gold-Pay", DGC Magazine, March 20, 2009
"Interview with Perfect Money", Ecommerce Journal, January 23, 2009
"Interview with e-dinar", DGC Magazine, October 22, 2008
"Interview with WebMoney", DGC Magazine, October 22, 2008
"Interview with GoldMoney", DGC Magazine, October 22, 2008
"Interview with Liberty Reserve", Planetgold.com, May 20, 2002
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Virtual Cash Meets the Real World
CNN
Thursday, July 9, 2009
http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/06/22/digitalbiz.ecurrency/index.html
There's gold in them there screens: Real-money transactions in virtual worlds are finding new legitimacy.

On June 24, 2009, the role-playing game 140 Mafia launched on Twitter, following in the footsteps of highly lucrative games Mob Wars and Mafia Wars on Facebook (and now iPhone) to link virtual-currency exchanges to real-money transactions.
In March 2009, MindArk -- creator of the MMORPG (massively multiplayer online role-playing game) Entropia, where one player famously bought an island for US$26,500 in 2004 -- saw its wholly owned subsidiary Mind Bank granted a banking license from the Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority.
The new license allows Mind Bank to be the first bank to directly incorporate real-money transactions with virtual-world activities. Selling virtual assets directly between players for real-world cash has been strictly prohibited by most game publishers, which find themselves looped out of the profits.
What has been profitable in the meantime to some hardcore players of World of Warcraft and EverQuest (and other games) is "gold farming" -- accumulation of "gold," weapons and other status symbols of a seasoned player -- followed by the online auction of such assets or user accounts.
Since games publishers began policing eBay for this type of unauthorized activity, several Web sites such as PlayerAuctions have adopted a PayPal-like approach in order to broker the trading legally, acting as an open marketplace for player-to-player exchange of digital assets.
Dual-currency economies
However younger games (often aimed at younger audiences) are ditching the conventional subscription-based model of the above games to adopt the "freemium" model, which lets users play for free, but allows them to enhance their experience by purchasing accessories or other premiums through micropayments.
Frenzoo, a "3D fashion game for girls", is one game that has adopted this model. CEO Simon Newstead explains: "The idea with dual currencies is that there is a paid currency [Gold Coins], which is paid for using real money and exchanged between sellers and buyers. In addition, there is a second currency -- a free or so-called 'earned' currency [Silver Coins] -- which is gained through activity and progression in the world or game."
"In this way," he continues, "the economy can recognize different forms of contribution, and in newer economies these can also be traded between each other. For example, people earning currency and selling it to people who have less time but have real money."
Mirrored economies
As one of the first successful virtual economies, Second Life's huge marketplace includes objects and services for sale, as well as a real estate market.
In 2008, more than $100 million worth of the world's Linden dollars were bought and sold on Second Life's official LindeX exchange, according to its Web site.
"In Linden Exchange, the U.S. dollar part of the transaction is via PayPal, a well-known entity, so there's a certain amount of trust that comes with it," says Darrly Chang, co-founder of D&D Dogs, a two-man freelance venture that sells virtual dog pets and avatars to Second Life residents.
Recently, however, business has slumped along with the real-world recession.
"We'll continue to see a proliferation of alternative currencies associated with specific platforms and communities, much as frequent-flier miles are associated with individual airlines or even networks of airlines," says Dan Jansen, CEO of Virtual Greats, which specializes in creating branded, copyrighted material for virtual worlds.
"In the longer term we may see a global standard for virtual currencies, but it will take some time."
Golden e-currency?
James Turk, chairman of digital-gold company GoldMoney, agrees.
"But," he adds, "inevitably digital gold currency will make significant inroads in global commerce because it lowers the cost of transacting with one another. Reducing transaction costs creates more opportunities for global commerce."
In March 2009, GoldMoney launched a dedicated iPhone application allowing its account holders to exchange gold and silver units within minutes.
Putting a trendy iPhone application that allows people to manage their own digital gold on par with other popular banking applications branded by well-established banks brings e-currency a step closer to the modern mobile end-user.
Furthermore, GoldMoney is firmly anchored to real-world assets and individuals, notably strictly forbidding anonymous accounts -- unlike the former incarnation of the pioneering company E-Gold, whose founder this month ends his six-month house arrest in Florida after pleading guilty to money laundering-related crimes.
So how realistic is the prospect of a single, global, digital currency?
"It all comes down to trust," says senior economist Frederic Neumann.
"We trust the government to guarantee our 'virtual' money for real currency. [With digital gold] the gold standard is guaranteed by a private company. Governments already have several hundred years of sovereignty engrained in people's minds, so that trust is very difficult to establish."For further reading:
"Exploration on Operation of Online Virtual Currency", Hong Wu, Hui Peng, and Youwei Zhu, May 23, 2009
"Two-Way Exchange of Virtual Currency: Future Tendency and Inherent Risks", Hui Peng and Linyu Niu, March 7, 2009
"Real Currency Economies: Using Real Money in Virtual Worlds", Billy Harris and Andy Novobilski, January 2008
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Interview with e-gold CEO

Sunday, June 28, 2009
Regulators Worry About Digital Gold Currency's Potential as Tool for Criminal Activity
Mineweb
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
http://mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page34?oid=53714&sn=Detail
Could digital gold currencies or e-currencies denominated in gold weight be utilized as a tool by terrorist groups? Law enforcement agencies fear the worst may occur.
RENO, NV -- The concept of digital gold currencies (DGC) or e-currency, digital currency or e-money denominated in gold weight is now being offered by such reputable organizations as the London Gold Exchange.
However, digital gold currency has regulators in the United States, Canada and France concerned that it may use a tool favored by ordinary criminal and more sophisticated forms of organized crime to launder money, or utilized in the commission of crime, or even finance terrorism.
In a report originally intended as intelligence for a law enforcement agency, but made public this week by the Globe and Mail through Access to Information requests, Canada's financial regulator, the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, FINTRAC, found Digital Precious Metals Operators "have achieved critical mass on the web."
‘As financial institutions and non-financial businesses increasingly deter money laundering and terrorism financing, adaptable and technology-savvy criminals and terrorist financiers will likely see other unregulated, exploitable avenues to further their nefarious purposes. Digital precious metals may become one of them," FINTRAC warned.
The system works thusly:
1. A user opens an online account with a Digital Precious Metals Operator (DPMO), which are Internet Payment Systems (IPS) providing the user with a digital currency that is allegedly backed by precious metals, which can be used for e-commerce, bill payments, person-to-person payments and other transactions.
2. Most DPMOs often require a username, password and e-mail address to set up a DPM account.
3. Once the account is set up, the user purchases digital currency units via a Digital Currency Exhanger (DCE) to find the user's Digital Precious Metals (DPM) account. DPM accounts are denominated by precious metals weight, rather than cash. The DPM account value fluctuates with the price movements of precious metals.
4. Precious metals e-currencies can be used to purchase goods and services if a merchant will accept them. They can be transferred to another DPM account holder. They can be converted back into national currencies, often paid through wire transfer. And they can be redeemed into physical gold.
"Exploitable weaknesses such as user anonymity and the existence of a network of exchange services-some accepting cash deposits to fund DPM accounts-may facility the placement phase," according to FINTRAC. The anonymity associated with opening the DPM account is maintained through the whole transaction process.
In the layering phase a launderer can ‘cash in' and ‘cash out' his DPM account but does not have to use the same exchange service. Therefore, FINTRAC fears a greater potential exists to "disguise the origin and the destination of funds than with other forms of Internet Payment Systems.
"Moreover, the recent introduction on the market of so called ‘digital gold ATM cards' offers the potential for launderers to re-integrate proceeds into the convention financial system." FINTRAC asserted. The agency fears that the digital gold cards may also allow launderers to "cash out" proceeds, "thereby reintegrating them into the conventional financial system."
G7'S FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE
In October 2006 The Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering (FATF), an intergovernmental body founded by the G7 nations to combat money laundering and terrorist financing, also raised concern about "new and innovative methods for electronic cross-border funds transfer" which are emerging globally.
The FATF referred to digital precious metals as a relatively new online money transfer value system that involves the exchange of options or the right to purchase an amount of precious metals at a specific price.
"The oldest and best known of the digital precious metals dealers is e-gold Ltd., which claims to have almost 2 million accounts. ...Transactions involving digital precious metals have immediate finality, which may appeal to on-line merchants that must pay high credit card fees due to high fraud rates. Some precious metals dealers also allow users to maintain anonymous accounts. These traits are concerning to U.S. federal law enforcement agencies," FATF noted.
The task force identified the following as potential risk factors for digital precious metals:
· Anonymous accounts
· Anonymous funding and receipt of funds
· High or nonexistent account funding limits
· Offshore service provides may not observe laws in other jurisdictions
However, FATF also suggested several current and potential strategies to mitigate possible DPM risks:
· Identify account holder
· Maintain transaction record with payer and recipient
· Monitor transactions and report suspicious activity
· Limit funding options
· Implement account book
· Limit access to service
U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT INVESTIGATIONS
The U.S. Justice Department has prosecuted several cases where convicted criminals allegedly utilized E-gold accounts and wire transfers reportedly during the commission of their crimes.
An internet investment company founded and established a website at www.ee-bizventures.com (EBV), which claimed to be a Christian-based humanitarian organization that helped individuals to improve their financial situations. The FBI, the Postal Inspection Service and the SEC said participants were required to set up an e-gold account and reportedly transfer their funds from their e-gold account to various EBV and e-gold accounts. The FBI estimated that 26,000 persons throughout the world lost a total of $50 million as a result of the fraud. Two individuals have pleaded guilty.
Six men who administered and operated the Shadowcrew.com website--which the USDOJ said was "one of the largest online centers for trafficking in stolen credit and bank card numbers and identity information"-each pleaded guilty to conspiracy in November 2005. One defendant also pleaded guilty to a second count of unlawful transfer of identification to facilities criminal conduct.
The men said they sent and received payment for illicit merchandise and services via Western Union money transfers and reportedly through digital currencies such as e-gold and Web Money. A moderator for Shadowcrew said site members would send him sums of cash and asserted that he would convert the cash into e-gold electronic currency. He claimed that ‘Shadowcrew members used e-gold to avoid traditional banking systems."
A Mashpee Massachusetts man, David Burgland, told a federal court that he used e-gold to purchase child pornography. The U.S. Department of Justice charged that by June 2006, e-gold "became the only available means of purchasing membership into web sites supplying child pornography."
By April 27, 2007, a Washington, D.C. federal grand jury indicted e-gold and sister company Gold & Silver Reserve with one count each of conspiracy to launder monetary instruments; one count of conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business, one count of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business under federal law and one count of money transmission without a license under D.C. law.
The indictment alleged that "e-gold has been a highly favored method of payments by operators of investment scams, credit card and identity fraud, and sellers of online child pornography."
E-GOLD REBUTS JUSTICE DEPARTMENT
However, In an April 30, 2007, news release, Douglas Jackson, Chairman and Founder of e-gold, said both companies vigorously denied the charges "taking particular exception to the allegations that either company ever turned a blind eye to payments for child pornography or for the sale of stolen identity and credit card information."
"With regard to child pornography, the government knows full well that their allegations are false, yet they highlight these irresponsible and purposely damaging statements in order to demonize e-gold in the eyes of the public," he declared, adding that e-gold was a founding member of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children's Financial Coalition to Eliminate Child Pornography.
Jackson insisted that the government has been confronted with overwhelming evidence that the U.S. Secret Service "had made a horrible mistake in its attack on the e-gold system and its repeated defamatory claims in the media that e-gold is anonymous, untraceable, and inaccessible to U.S. law enforcement."
Along with its attempt to knock e-gold and Gold & Silver Reserve, Jackson asserted that the government has also attacked other prominent exchange services that deal in e-gold type systems including IceGold, the Bullion Exchange, Gitgold, Denver Gold Exchange, AnyGoldNow and Gold Pouch Express. "All of the listed exchange services also follow stringent Customer Identification Program congruent with what would be required of a currency exchange business, if the law supported such a classification," Jackson advised.
"As a direct and immediate result of the seizures, these companies, all of who had built a reputation for honoring their obligations, have been disrupted," according to Jackson.
Most recently, on May 8th, Montanan Jimmy Ray Jones was sentenced to home confinement for nine months in connection with his guilty plea to money laundering and importation of steroids. The U.S. Attorney's Office said Jones had used an e-gold account, along with Western Union wires, Money Grams and other methods to receive payments for his steroid sales.
Dorothy Kosich is the Americas Bureau Chief for Mineweb.