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    Author Topic: More info [on the legal requirements of a digital currency]  (Read 1607 times)
    DGCmagazine (OP)
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    April 21, 2011, 03:18:29 AM
    Last edit: April 21, 2011, 03:27:03 AM by Nefario
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    The act of exchanging a digital unit for monetary value would be considered the regulated action. The exchange agent would have to be an MSB and be licensed and report as a money transmitter. There is a WHOLE lot more to it than just getting a scan copy of a customer's ID. As an example of how complex this is, you know that for almost a decade we all heard that e-gold was not required to be registered Money Transmitter as they had no bank account and gold was not money etc.  We know how that turned out.  To really explain this point, here is the 19 page judge's opinion on that e-gold case carefully detailing why e-gold was required under law to be registered. http://www.dgcmagazine.com/JudgesOpinion.pdf Good luck understanding it.

    I'm up to date on most all of the Treasuries legal stuff on digital currency, the proposed FinCEN reg changes, including the new ones regarding money transmitters both domestic and foreign. I would like to provide documents and assistance to you in your move to write a report and would be happy to clarify some legal details. email me anytime editor@dgcmagazine.com or skype me IM "digitalcurrency"  I also wrote a pretty cool paper on the Digital Currency Industry late last year which includes legal matters, industry changes, updates and even Bitcoin. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1721076 It's free and you can download it there, sorry it's 56 pages. Or if you want to read it as a flash magazine (it's much faster) get it here: http://www.dgcmagazine.com/index.php/past-issues/2011-digital-gold-currency-magazine-special-industry-issue  The New Systems (including Bitcoin) start on page 48.

    These discussions are excellent and I'm really happy to see stuff like this appearing for Bitcoin, we never had any info the past decade on e-gold or any others. However, it's REALLY important to note that even the most expensive law firms I know, that specialize in online payments don't understand 100% about digital currency...it's new:-) Whatever suggestions or opinions come out of this discussion don't take them to be law.
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