Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Bitcoin The Almighty Buck United States

Coinbase Wants Wall Street To Resolve Its Bitcoin Trust Issues (bloomberg.com) 49

In an effort to use digital money to reinvent finance, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase is trying to legitimize itself by convincing big money managers to trust it enough to trade on its exchange. They need to "reassure regulators that bitcoin isn't a silk road for hackers, money launderers and tax evaders," reports Bloomberg. From the report: Despite the table tennis, Coinbase shows glimmers of maturity. More than 10 million customers have used the company since it began, though it recently quit updating the tally on its website. About $57 billion of digital currency has traded on the exchange so far this year. It doubled its staff in that time and expects to do so again in 2018. Ultimately, Coinbase plans to go public. The firm said it's prevailed against security threats, helping it avoid the fate of Mt. Gox, the world's biggest bitcoin exchange before shutting its doors in 2014 after $480 million of customer funds went bye-bye. Coinbase stores 98 percent of users' digital currencies in offline safe-deposit boxes. The remaining 2 percent, which is vulnerable because it's online, is covered by insurance. The company holds more than $10 billion in digital assets. Developing ties with banks is one of the biggest challenges. Coinbase doesn't publicly disclose its banking relationships, but a person familiar with the matter said the company is partnering with Cross River Bank, Metropolitan Bank and Silvergate Bank in the U.S.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Coinbase Wants Wall Street To Resolve Its Bitcoin Trust Issues

Comments Filter:
  • Interesting (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Friday December 15, 2017 @06:43PM (#55748717)
    because Bitcoin was a currency for Silk Road....
    • by Anonymous Coward

      And fiat cash including USD is currency for buying children's sex, human slavery, etc. So what's your point?

    • by qvazy ( 5193963 )
      ohh this true??? [myvisio.pro]
    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Yeah, it's also the current currency of choice for foreign money laundering and ransomware payments. What's your point?

  • by Jeff DeMaagd ( 2015 ) on Friday December 15, 2017 @06:56PM (#55748795) Homepage Journal

    The headline seems pretty inflammatory and off-base. I'd look at TFA but the link goes to some other story that doesn't mention Coinbase.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Wall streets always looking for new ways to profit. If bitcoin wasnâ(TM)t a giant scam they would have already embraced it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    until after the bubble bursts, then you can see what makes sense and what doesn't.

  • by Nutria ( 679911 )

    Coinbase stores 98 percent of users' digital currencies in offline safe-deposit boxes

    Using external USB drives?

  • bitcoin isn't a silk road for hackers, money launderers and tax evaders,"

    Except when it is.

  • by GlobalEcho ( 26240 ) on Friday December 15, 2017 @08:22PM (#55749147)

    This a dangerous thing for Coinbase to wish for. Once mainstream financial firms are involved, the regulators will want Coinbase to act more like a real exchange, or at least a real crossing network. With lots of regulations. It's a tremendous burden that existing exchanges have already hurdled.

  • I've been dealing in bitcoins since 2010. Let me just say:
    "Traditional investors like crooked, lying, manipulative Wall Street assholes can fuck off and stay out og bitcoin. We don't care what you think." - Sincerely, everyone in the bitcoin community.
  • Coinbase is struggling to keep up with demand. And while that's going on, it's a mess. Wire transfers go missing, and customer support is a joke. Is your $90K in limbo? No problem, just call their... oh wait, the people who answer the phone have zero power to do anything. Anything at all.

    Oh, so just submit a support ticket. Good luck getting a replay. Or, like me, watch your case just vanish into the ether.

    No, Coinbase cannot be trusted with your money. Not at the moment.

  • Oh you mean Coinbase wants wallstreet to legitimize the biggest criminal / ponzi / laundering / terrorist funding outfit in the world? Sure... Sheep to slaughter...
  • Because actual traders (not the amateurs currently pushing the Bitcoin bubble) know what a bubble is and know that Bitcoin is pure hot air and extremely high risk. Sure, they also fall for bubbes, but not when it is this blatantly obvious. So no, "Wall Street" does not have a trust issue here. They just see what is.

  • Rolling up untrustworthy and fluctuating investments with actual valued ones is exactly how the crash in the mid 00s happened. Coinbase wants Wall Street money and doesn't care if they fuck up our economy in the process.

  • Is anybody actually buying anything tangible with them? There was the guy that used two BTC a few years ago to buy a pizza (which is now probably a $20k pizza). This seems like the digital equivalent of beanie babies...

Get hold of portable property. -- Charles Dickens, "Great Expectations"

Working...