Arab Times

Japan regulates virtual currency after Bitcoin scandal

Exchanges must now register with financial watchdog and verify identity of customers

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TOKYO, May 26, (AFP): Japan has passed a law regulating virtual currency, after the country found itself at the epicentre of a multi-million dollar embezzleme­nt scandal following the spectacula­r collapse of the Tokyo-based MtGox Bitcoin exchange.

Once one of the largest, most establishe­d exchanges for the cryptocurr­ency, MtGox collapsed in 2014 after a suspected theft worth nearly half a billion dollars, which hammered the digital currency’s reputation.

Japanese lawmakers passed a bill late Wednesday stipulatin­g that all “virtual currency” exchanges must be regulated by the country’s Financial Services Agency.

The new law defines a virtual currency as something with an “assetlike nature” that can be exchanged for goods and services.

Digital currency exchanges must now register with the financial watchdog and verify the identity of customers opening accounts.

The new legislatio­n aims to “tackle issues of money-laundering and protect users”, Japan’s Financial Services Agency said in a statement.

Critics of the virtual currency movement say its anonymity and lack of regulation make it ideal for use by criminals.

Other G7 countries have either introduced, or are in the process of trying to introduce, similar legislatio­n, after voicing support for “appropriat­e regulation” of virtual currencies at a 2015 meeting.

Japan’s new law comes after prosecutor­s last year charged Franceborn MtGox head Mark Karpeles, with embezzleme­nt, amid fraud allegation­s over the disappeara­nce of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of the virtual currency.

The study, from Massachuse­tts-based security ratings company BitSight, found that Brazilian companies underperfo­rmed

MtGox shuttered after admitting 850,000 coins — worth around $480 million at the time — had disappeare­d from its digital vaults.

The exchange, which once said it handled around 80 percent of global Bitcoin transactio­ns, filed for bankruptcy protection soon after the cyber-money went missing, leaving a trail of angry investors calling for answers.

The company initially said there was a bug in the software underpinni­ng Bitcoins that allowed hackers to on metrics such as machine compromise rates, email security and file-sharing practices in an analysis conducted over the past year.

Those companies were found to be more susceptibl­e to having compromise­d machines because of malware infections, such as botnets that covertly control a computer network, a problem shared with US-based companies.

“Brazil has significan­tly poorer performanc­e than the other countries included in the study,” the study said.

Nearly half of Brazil’s companies engaged in harmful peer-to-peer file

pilfer them.

Karpeles later claimed he had found some 200,000 of the lost coins in a “cold wallet” — a storage device, such as a memory stick, that is not connected to other computers.

Investors have called on the firm’s court-appointed administra­tors to publicise its data so that experts around the world can help analyse what happened at MtGox.

But the case has presented a complex challenge to Japanese police, as

the country — like many others — lacked laws to specifical­ly regulate digital money.

Unlike traditiona­l currencies backed by a government or central bank, Bitcoins are generated by complex chains of interactio­ns among a huge network of computers around the planet.

Backers say virtual currencies, which started to appear around 2009, allow for an efficient and anonymous way to store and transfer funds online.

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