Brussels Terror Attacks Revive Terrorism-Crypto Connection, Fueling European Push To Control Bitcoin
This week’s terror attacks in Brussels has caused French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve to cite the darknet as a terrorist tool and call for measures to improve intelligence expertise in technologies terrorists use, according to a French ministry website. Because cryptocurrency is used for darknet transactions, efforts to control the darknet could fuel government efforts to control cryptocurrencies in Europe. Cazeneuve told The National Assembly that terrorists use the darknet. He made his remarks in the context of a wide-ranging discussion about what the government must do to....
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March 22nd’s morning saw an attack on Brussels, Belgium killing at least 34 people. Will virtual currencies be increasingly under the scanner as a result? Will terrorist attacks destroy the virtual currency? Frequent attacks on Europe seem to be an unfortunate reality, given that the attack on Brussels Airport and the Maalbeek Subway Station came just four months after the Paris attacks on November 13, 2015. Terrorism is now a global phenomenon with global connotations. These type of terrorist attacks mean that terror financing is a deep concern of security agencies, governments and the....
Interior and justice ministers from the European Union have organized a crisis meeting this Friday to plan an effective crackdown of anonymous payment method and virtual currencies to curb terrorism funding. In a direct reaction to the recent Paris terror attacks, European Union countries have planned an emergency meeting this Friday in Brussels, Belgium, to convene and collaborate on ideas to implement and strengthen controls over electronic and anonymous payment methods. A draft conclusion obtained by Reuters notes that EU ministers will urge EU's executive arm - the European Commission....
The European Council of the EU has set forth guidelines in which it will seek to regulate virtual currencies and curb terrorist funding opportunities. In light of several high terror attacks within the EU in 2015, many regulators and citizens called for tighter surveillance and anti-terrorism operations. Calls for tighter control over virtual currencies after reports were released when it was suggested that some terrorists might have benefited from using Bitcoin to fund their activities. While such claims that terrorists have a unique advantage in using Bitcoin, the European Council is....
The Chamber of Digital Commerce (CDC), based in Washington, D. C., has urged the Group of Seven (G7) nations not to enact virtual currency regulations that will stifle innovation in seeking to prevent future terror attacks like the one in Paris last week. The CDC is concerned that the G7 countries want to restrict virtual currencies because they suspect Islamic State terrorists used and continue to use bitcoin. Stifling digital currency innovation would be counterproductive for law enforcement, according to the CDC. It claims the block chain offers law enforcement an important tool for....
Triggered by the Paris and Brussels attacks, the proposed EU directive seeks to introduce stricter rules on the use of virtual currencies and prepaid cards. How will this affect Bitcoin and digital payments in general? CoinTelegraph spoke to Siân Jones, Founder of European Digital Currency and Blockchain Technology Forum, about the proposal and its possible outcomes. Anti-Money Laundering Directive. As Siân Jones told us, EU officials had been working on the new law since February, talking with virtual currency and prepaid card stakeholders and others, to draft the proposed new directive....