C4Cat
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You can trace all transactions from and too that account
My wallet generates a new address for every transaction
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You can trace all transactions from and too that account
My wallet generates a new address for every transaction
Mycelium - https://wallet.mycelium.com/
HD
Hierarchical Deterministic wallets use a 'master seed' to derive all future bitcoin addresses sequentially and need to be backed up once.
Where can I follow the btc price and reasons for it going lower and higher? For example I see on the Luno website that the price took quite a dip in the last 10 days or so of March before starting to rise again. Why was this, what happened, are there upwards and downwards trends?
My wallet generates a new address for every transaction
Keep in mind that it is still early days for crypto-currencies, with mostly speculators it seems. Sometimes the prices spike and dip just because.
If you're going to try to assign a reason for every price movement, you're going to have a bad time. Of course sometimes there really is a reason, but its still the wild west out there, prepare yourself.
FTFY
Bitcoin does provide anonymity though. There is nothing to tie a specific bitcoin address to a specific person.
If I ask you to please donate bitcoins to 17qcceJf1p5StSVQ5pinNU41fsx3CgZeup you still have no idea who you're donating money to and looking at the ledger won't help you with that
Reason why I ask, I got a code of Coinbase and mined a whole to that address, when I went to check again, the code changed. I stopped and am mining to my Luno address, will see on the 22nd what gets paid to where.
Anyone in to cloud mining with Genesis Mining? Is it worthit, how much do you spend and what is your return?
Not really looking for a reason for each movement, more trying to figure out what to look out for, when to maybe expect a few low days and a few high days etc.
It's also been formally recognised as an asset class by the Japanese Financial Services agency, subject to tax etc.
Anyone in to cloud mining with Genesis Mining? Is it worthit, how much do you spend and what is your return?
I am curious as to how they're going to make that work. If I receive money into a wallet how will they know that I should be taxed on it? Assuming it's not a wallet on an exchange where you have to provide identifiable info. I could theoretically, for example, be making a living getting paid in Bitcoin providing a service "off the books". How would any tax authority have a clue?
I am curious as to how they're going to make that work. If I receive money into a wallet how will they know that I should be taxed on it? Assuming it's not a wallet on an exchange where you have to provide identifiable info. I could theoretically, for example, be making a living getting paid in Bitcoin providing a service "off the books". How would any tax authority have a clue?
If you currently receive cash from someone, how does the government know that you should be taxed on it?
Basically Japan is now going to look at regulation - yes, people can still work 'off the books' as it were but it will be illegal to withhold this information from the tax authorities - people can do this now anyway, so introducing regulation is not going to change that. I think you'll find stores and companies that want to operate legally will work through exchanges, so if you want to buy stuff with your bitcoins from a legit company you'll need to be legit yourself - plus it means you can pay your taxes in bitcoin too!
https://cointelegraph.com/news/japan-officially-recognizes-bitcoin-and-digital-currencies-as-money
That article is misleading. Bitcoin is recognised as an asset class, like gold, not as an official currency or money.
https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/bitcoin-in-japan-officially-recognized-in-april-asset-or-expense/As a Japanese Cabinet-signed law recognizing virtual currencies like bitcoin as a legal method of payment goes into effect on April 1, bitcoin companies and adopters are short on answers about accounting standards specific to cryptocurrencies.
In February 2016, Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA), the country’s financial regulator, looked into proposals to consider legislative revisions that would recognize bitcoin and digital currencies as equivalents to conventional currencies. The revision, if approved, would see bitcoin as “fulfilling the functions of [a] currency.”
Come March, the Japanese cabinet passed a set of bills recognizing virtual currencies like bitcoin to contain asset-like-values that can be used to make payments and be transferred digitally. Fundamentally, bitcoin and digital currencies are to be officially recognized alongside fiat currencies, fulfilling a similar purpose.
Amending the Payment Services Act to include digital currencies as payments is related to a separate bill passed by Japan’s legislature in May 2016, one which mandated the regulation of digital currency exchanges by the FSA in Japan. CCN previously reported on an early draft of the proposed regulations in 2015.
Bitcoin and virtual currencies will be officially recognized as payments starting Saturday. However, the accounting framework for the use of digital currencies is still about six months away, leaving adopters and bitcoin companies in limbo.
As reported by Nikkei, the Accounting Standards Board of Japan has, on Tuesday, decided to consider the development of an accounting framework for digital currencies. It is expected to take up to six months to reveal a viable accounting method, the report adds.