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Round-up on compliance issues in cryptocurrencies

Cryptocurrencies are secure, usually anonymous digital forms of money. Cryptocurrencies use blockchain, a decentralized technology linked to a public record of all transactions in the currency, to make payments and store money without attaching their identities to the cryptocurrency or needing to use a bank. The first and perhaps best known of these is Bitcoin, created almost ten years ago, but there are now as many as 1,000 cryptocurrencies available and more being added every day.

A payment method that was created to be secretive and operate outside of the banking system, and therefore outside of all its regulatory and legal controls as well, carries obvious associations of being used in facilitating illegal activities. Furthermore, as trading of cryptocurrencies evolves as an investment practice, heightened volatility and uncertainty in the still-emerging markets bring greater risks.

People will certainly continue to turn to cryptocurrencies both as payment methods and as investment opportunities. As this increases, risks for the organizations providing the technology and access in order to transfer, store, and trade cryptocurrencies will also grow. At the same time, users of cryptocurrencies can be seen as consumers deserving of protections, as well as possibly proxies for clients in the decentralised system, subject to some due diligence and markets governance.

Compliance in the cryptocurrencies markets can be a positive influence to ensure the fairness of markets and protect consumers. How to take an uncontrolled market and regulate it smartly, and appropriately for its spirit, without straying into bad or unnecessary regulation which will be the prevailing argument against the proposition for a culture of compliance, is the challenge ahead.

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