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China Bitcoin

China Bans Financial, Payment Institutions From Cryptocurrency Business (cnbc.com) 98

China has banned financial institutions and payment companies from providing services related to cryptocurrency transactions, and warned investors against speculative crypto trading. From a report: Under the ban, such institutions, including banks and online payments channels, must not offer clients any service involving cryptocurrency, such as registration, trading, clearing and settlement, three industry bodies said in a joint statement on Tuesday. "Recently, crypto currency prices have skyrocketed and plummeted, and speculative trading of cryptocurrency has rebounded, seriously infringing on the safety of people's property and disrupting the normal economic and financial order," they said in the statement. China has banned crypto exchanges and initial coin offerings but has not barred individuals from holding cryptocurrencies.
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China Bans Financial, Payment Institutions From Cryptocurrency Business

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  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2021 @12:28PM (#61396890) Journal
    1. They can't track it's movement like they want to track everything else about their citizens
    2. They won't ban citizens from having cryptocurrency so they can use posession/use of it as an excuse to harass and/or detain citizens who are anti-government
    That being said I still think so-called 'cryptocurrency' is a massive troll-meme and it's only real-world use is to support crime, otherwise it's environmentally hostile.
    • it's only real-world use is to support crime,

      This is simply not true. I've bought as number of things recently using crypto that had nothing to do with anything illegal - you can buy gold/silver with it, and I bought something on a European website where I would otherwise have had to work out how to convert my money to euros to make a purchase, crypto was much easier.

      Because of the volatility I don't keep a lot in crypto at any one time, but I find it useful to put some money into crypto every month and m

      • Your so-called 'real world use' of cryptocurrency is incidental and not significant. Otherwise it's only used for criminal transactions, and to help wreck the envrionment via excessive and unnecessary electricity usage, and more lately to worsen the integrated circuit shortage.
        You're either a fool or a criminal to involve yourself with it, or a jackass in your particular case.
        • Your so-called 'real world use' of cryptocurrency is incidental and not significant.

          It's not to me, or to millions of others. As I said, what you think is from the distant past. Many, many people are using crypto in the real world to buy things now. Crypto ATMS are all over the place now allowing for easy cash to bring to local stores. You appear to have no understanding of two space whatsoever; I'll let you have the last response as you can't say anything informed on the subject but I would encourage y

      • You found it harder to convert dollars (I assume) to Euros than it was to convert dollars to crypto to Euros? That doesn't seem quite right.
        • You found it harder to convert dollars (I assume) to Euros than it was to convert dollars to crypto to Euros?

          Not quite like that, your first part is right - as you assumed, I have dollars, would have had to figure out how to to a transfer I think where the amount transferred was in euros. I honestly didn't go look at how that would have to be done with my bank, since they also accepted crypto and I had enough crypto to cover the cost.

          With crypto I could send the crypto I had directly, no conversion to euro

    • Crime is a parasite on society, it requires a host. For crypt-currency that host is legitimate business transactions. So by definition most crypto-currency activity must be legal.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot&worf,net> on Tuesday May 18, 2021 @03:38PM (#61397568)

      1. They can't track it's movement like they want to track everything else about their citizens
      2. They won't ban citizens from having cryptocurrency so they can use posession/use of it as an excuse to harass and/or detain citizens who are anti-government
      That being said I still think so-called 'cryptocurrency' is a massive troll-meme and it's only real-world use is to support crime, otherwise it's environmentally hostile.

      Missed the most important one

      3) Can't restrict transfer for wealth out of the country.

      The amount of capital trying to flee China is immense - because the wealthy realize the government is the impediment in them keeping that wealth and in making more money.

      The Chinese government has an uneasy relationship with the wealthy - because the wealthy know that the only real way to grow would be to overthrow the government and install a democratic one - centralized communist government works until you get so big you're wasting more time managing the managers than actually governing.

      As long as capital export is controlled, the government has power over the people. But once that capital flees the country, the people who own that capital can flee as well when things go south. If you have millions in China, the government can come after you at will and seize it. If you export it out of China, it's a lot harder for China to claim it.

      • Thought of including that also but I figured it was implicit; I was more-or-less right about that since you picked up on it immediately.
      • by Wolfier ( 94144 )

        This. I would vote you up 10x if I had the points.

        The reason China needs total control is power over the people. "Financial stability" is just a pretext - nobody in the Politburo, not Winnie the Pooh, actually cares anyway.

    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      hat being said I still think so-called 'cryptocurrency' is a massive troll-meme and it's only real-world use is to support crime, otherwise it's environmentally hostile.

      While is has proven, in it's current implementation, of being environmentally hostile, I can't help but think this doesn't have to be the case. With a increase in the use of renewable energy for one. I also wonder if a better system couldn't be establish that didn't require so much energy.

      I also think if crypto was to become more environmentally friendly more people would be willing to use it. The next 10 years in the crypto world are going to be very interesting.

      • It's designed specifically to require investment in resources to 'mine' them, and you spend more on electricity than they're worth -- fluctuations/volatility notwithstanding.
        Besides which all the 'renewable energy' of which you speak could be put to far better uses than this.
        • This is a solved problem that's in a transition phase. The world didn't get rid of all it's incandescent light bulbs for CFLs and LEDs overnight either.

          Current 'proof of work' style cryptocurrencies are going to lose out long term to alternative validation methods like proof of stake. While the electricity cost of PoS block generation isn't zero, it's a far cry from current PoW mining. Conservative estimates say that the eventual switch of ethereum to PoS will reduce the electricity costs of block validati

        • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

          While I've not read the article yet, there it is making it's way across /. this morning about Ethereum cutting its power consumption by 99%.

          https://cryptobriefing.com/eth... [cryptobriefing.com]

          If this is true this will remove the problem crypto has with the environment. This will eliminate one of the two issues I have with crypto. The second being the unstable value each "coin" has. Without an stable market value crypto is worthless as a currency for everyday use.

  • by Meditato ( 1613545 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2021 @12:29PM (#61396898)

    China only reinterated past anti-speculation legistlation. It did not "ban crypto-currency".

  • ie. government control of fiat money (and by extension, corporate control of fiat money, since private interests have such sway over government). This has nothing to do with protecting the property of the proletariat.
  • They can't print their own doge coins, so they forbid it.

    What we should be forbidding is giving the government that much power.
  • Step 1: Ban current cryptocurrency options from the west.
    Step 2: Let usage dwindle to near zero to minimize damage for the next step...
    Step 3: Offer a new Chinese-created version and mandate that it be used for ALL business transactions.

    Seems like an easy, monopolistic way to capture control of the market: Leverage your position.

    • Step 3 feels unnecessary. Every single country has a fiat currency, it works flawlessly and needs to be used for all business transactions. Why complicate it with crypto?
      • Because digital currencies are actually cheaper. Printing money and moving money costs... money and resources which is also money. China is already creating digital currencies, though I do not know how much they employ a digital block-chain but if anything the ledger is more centralized than Bitcoin.

    • Word is that China wants to use its new cryptocurrency to track all financial transactions of its citizens. But this also means they will be able to track the transactions of any use of their cryptocurrency worldwide. China also wants to replace the USA dollar as the worlds reserve currency. Imagine new Chinese cryptodollars as the worlds reserve currency where the Chinese government can track all transactions worldwide. Even if they only partially succeed imagine the advantage this would give them.
  • How often can China ban Bitcoin? I keep hearing this every time around new all time highs.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Great timing.

    https://ca.finance.yahoo.com/n... [yahoo.com]

  • Perhaps they really hope that this pseudo cryptocurrency will take off.

    Banning other cryptocurrencies, I'd say it's expected. Just like how the Ant Group was pressured to change its core business - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • China is right, tulips can kill
  • I can guarantee you the oligarchs rode it all the way up. Now it's time to twist the handle.

    This has always been the potential downfall. Those with the power to muck about with markets happily do so.

    "For the benefit of the people" has always been for the rubes.

  • Banning new disruptive stuff usually results in the entity doing the banning losing the competition for future power and relevancy. Those nations/governments that are the first to embrace blockchain/DEFI/crypto stuff fully will end up being financial powerhouses of the 21st century.
    • I think China is exploring block-chain for a number of uses. I can link you to a Shine.cn article outlining a new blockchain solution in the works for artists which I recently read a small except about (I am happy to link it if you're interested but it was extremely brief). They also are the first to start using blockchain in supply chains, so you can track the authenticity of products. However, this matter is more complex than most any of the posters. The major point is China is supremely embracing the tec

  • Shouldn't they? If they are worried about speculation, economic/financial stability, or even just there being something anonymous or that they don't control, wouldn't they ban its mining and/or possession? Why ban domestic trading of cryptocurrency but not its creation?

    Is it the same reason they locked down domestic travel but still let people fly internationally from Wuhan?

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