BitPay Also Issues Remarks on the Proposed BitLicense
Circle Internet Financial isn't the only bitcoin company to issue remarks on the proposed BitLicense regulations put forth by the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) today. Read: Circle Issues Remarks on BitLicense Ahead of Comment Period Deadline. Atlanta, Georgia-based BitPay also issued remarks today, submitting them to NYDFS Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky, just one day before the public commenting period on the proposal comes to a close (Tuesday, October 21st). The five-page document, authored by BitPay Chief Compliance Officer Tim Byun, covers a number of topics relating....
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As the official comment period for the proposed BitLicense regulation comes to a close this month, two of the largest Bitcoin companies in America have revealed their public comment to the New York Department of Financial Services. Circle, a new competitor to Coinbase that provides on and off ramp services for Bitcoin to Fiat and vice versa, as well as BitPay, a leading Bitcoin merchant services and invoicing company, both revealed their official positions on the current BitLicense today. Also read: Bitcoin Foundation Condemns Lack of Transparency in New York BitLicense. Circle's Public....
Circle is joining the ever-lengthening line of bitcoin companies to issue public comments on the New York Department of Financial Service's (NYDFS) BitLicense proposal, it would seem. The Boston-based company's General Counsel/Chief Compliance Offer, John A. Beccia, submitted a lengthy twelve-page letter addressed to Dana. V. Syracuse at the NYDFS (of which you'll find a copy below in PDF form). The following is a small highlight list of the points demonstrated in the letter: The BitLicense "casts too wide a net" on regulated companies in the digital currency realm. AML requirements....
Just in time for the closing of the comment period for New York State's 'BitLicense' proposal today, bitcoin companies Circle and BitPay managed to have the final say on the matter - for now. In their comments, both companies expressed a number of similar concerns over the BitLicense, specifically provisions they perceive as burdensome regulation that could stifle competition and innovation. The BitLicense initiative was launched by the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) earlier this year and has been championed by NYDFS superintendent Ben Lawsky since then. The initial....
Earlier today, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the Internet Archive, and Reddit, all filed public comments to the NYDFS regarding their proposed BitLicense Bitcoin regulation. The EFF first posted about the BitLicense, simultaneously revealing their stance and prompting the populace to send their own comments to the NYDFS, last week. The San Francisco companies have given voice to an opinion about the BitLicense that doesn't require any prerequisite knowledge about Bitcoin. The public comment submitted today represents the opinions of three defining organizations from the....
The BitLicense saga continues: Today, Ben Lawsky took to Twitter to announce that the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) will be extending the official comment period for the proposed BitLicense regulatory framework. The original plan was to allow a 45-day comment period; around the world, this timeframe was criticized as being too short given the magnitude of the proposed regulations. Presumably, as a result of the community's interest, the NYDFS has chosen to extend the official comment period from 45-day period to a 90-day period. The news has been well-received by the....