BitLicense Blowback No Surprise to NYDFS Officials
Just as it seemed like the dust was settling around the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) BitLicense regulations released last week, Erik Voorhees of ShapeShift.io raised new criticisms of the NYDFS, calling them "Orwellian" and making comparisons to North Korea. NYDFS's Matt Anderson was not surprised, telling Bitcoin Magazine: "We....
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Barry Silbert, CEO of SecondMarket, has posted an official letter requesting that the NYDFS extend the deadline for filing public comment by 45 days, on their "BitLicense" proposal. He urges affected companies and individuals to sign. Currently, the list of signatures includes many A-Listers such as Elizabeth Ploshay, a board member of the Bitcoin Foundation, Erik Voorhees, several prestigious universities such as Harvard and Stanford, and of course Barry Silbert himself. The more signatures the letter receives, the greater the chances we have to help shape or oppose the NYDFS BitLicense....
After an aborted closure of BTCGuild, when BitLicense was first announced, the company’s owner has now decided to close it for good on June 30, 2015. With NYDFS using BitLicense to try and regulate businesses inside and outside of NY, the closure comes as no surprise; the owner has stated before he will not put miners and himself through the invasive and vague regulatory hassles. Even after the release of the final BitLicense draft — revised based on a round of public comments — BTCGuild’s owner feels that there is still enough “gray area” the NYDFS can use to intervene in the company’s....
The BitLicense is continually evolving; today, the NYDFS has clarified that Bitcoin software developers do not need to apply for a BitLicense. Additionally, the official comment period on the proposed BitLicense regulations by the NYDFS has again been extended to accommodate the anticipated revised proposal. The NYDFS has promised to have a revised proposal for the public by the end of October. Lawsky spoke today at the Benjamin N. Cardoza School of Law in New York City with a panel of digital currency experts. By admitting the areas that the NYDFS does not wish to over-extend into,....
The Bitcoin Foundation has again commented on the 'BitLicense' proposal put forth by the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) to regulate bitcoin businesses in the state. In a statement released today, the foundation highlights the need for public access to the "extensive research and analysis" cited by the NYDFS when the BitLicense was first proposed. This data, it says, is essential to examine the rationale used by the NYDFS in substantiating its regulatory proposal. The foundation further points out that the NYDFS has failed to produce these materials. Despite an....
Since the New York Department of Financial Service released their BitLicense proposal for a public commenting period, there's been a lot of chatter surrounding the topic. One one side you have the people that think this could be a very good start to regulating bitcoin, and then you have the folks who have crossed their arms and are shaking their heads vigorously with disappointment. I wanted to see what the visitors of this website thought. So I put together a poll last week that was pretty straightforward: The proposed NYDFS Bitcoin Regulations... Respondents were provided with two....