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Business Insider, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST The rise of 26-year old Charlie Shrem was swift. So was his fall. The self-professed computer geek turned divisive digital currency entrepreneur won notoriety as the founder of BitInstant. The firm took off, attracting investors like the Winklevoss twins, and helping popularize bitcoin. Then, his whole world came crashing down. He was charged with operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. He pled guilty, and was given prison time. He had "knowingly transmitted money intended to facilitate criminal activity– specifically, drug trafficking on Silk Road," according to a press release by the United States Attorney's Office, Southern District of New York. Shrem got of prison earlier this year, and his experience there hasn't deterred his faith in bitcoin and blockchain, the technology behind it. In fact, an incident with a prison guard and mackerels, the currency of choice in prison, only confirmed his belief in an alternative currency system. A computer geekShrem opened up about his prison experience and his past on Wall and Broadcast, a podcast hosted by TABB Group COO Alex Tabb, TABBForum producer Anna Stumpf and Vested CEO Dan Simon. Raised in a deeply religious orthodox Jewish household, Shrem describes himself as an "outcast" at Yeshiva high school. "I just loved computers," he said in the podcast. "I would hang out in the internet chat rooms and all of the places where all socially awkward people hang out." Shrem first heard about the concept of Bitcoin from a friend in an internet forum he was a part of. "There was no website or anything," he said in the podcast. "Only a white paper," referring to the research paper released under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakimoto that unveiled the concept. Bitcoin is a digital currency in which transactions occur peer-to-peer, meaning no government or third party is involved. Shrem was immediately interested and purchased a few thousand bitcoin - at the time worth very little.
In his mind, something clicked. "I realized that bitcoin was taking all of that Austrian economic theory and putting it into practice," he said in the podcast. It was on Bitcointalk.org that he got the idea for a way to make the purchasing of bitcoin faster and more accessible to the every day consumer. He launched BitInstant, which partnered with payment processors that had physical locations at CVS, Duane Reade, Walmart, Walgreens and 7-11, among others. The site allowed people to buy small amounts of bitcoin (with an average ticket size of $300-500) and charged customers a small fee for each transaction. "Within a few months, we enabled people to be able to buy bitcoin at almost a million locations in the US," Shrem said in the podcast. "And overnight volume exploded." The company achieved an average growth rate of 1.5x per month, according to Shrem, with advertising limited to word of mouth. At one point, the company was facilitating transactions worth a million dollars a day, he said. The growth of BitInstant attracted investors like the Winklevoss twins and angel investor Roger Vere. They moved into bigger offices, shrouded in secrecy. "We needed an army security guard, our own floor, and shaded windows," he said. Soon the two man band become a 30 person office, and he admits in the podcast interview that he let the success get to his head.
The fall of BitInstant was just as quick as its rise. The fall of BitInstantIn March 2013, regulators enforced a ruling that outlined what type of companies were now considered money transmitters. Suddenly, BitInstant was operating without a license. "We couldn't take the risk of operating illegally," Shrem said in the podcast, "so we shut down...It was heartbreaking." Eight months later, Shrem travelled to Amsterdam to speak at a conference. It was when he returned to JFK airport that he was confronted by a dozen law enforcement officials, a joint task force of the FBI, IRS, DEA and other officials, he said in the podcast. Shrem had knowingly facilitated transactions to a re-seller, Robert Faiella, whose customers were using the Silk Road, an underground bitcoin only marketplace where people buy and sell illegal drugs. The re-seller was also trying to deposit more money than the new money transmitter laws allowed for, and these transactions were done behind the scenes to get around reporting requirements. On September 4 2014, Faiella and Shrem both pled guilty in connection with the sale of approximately $1 million in bitcoins for use on the Silk Road website. “Robert Faiella and Charlie Shrem opted to travel down a crooked path – running an illegal money transmitting business that catered to criminals bent on trafficking narcotics on the dark web drug site, Silk Road," Prett Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a statement at the time. Shrem, who was also Chief Compliance Officer of BitInstant and thus in charge of compliance with federal anti-money laundering (AML) laws, was fully aware that Silk Road was a drug-trafficking website and that he was operating a Bitcoin exchange service for Silk Road users. Nevertheless, he "knowingly facilitated Faiella’s business with the company in order to maintain Faiella's business as a lucrative source of revenue, " according to the court report. "Even though it was Shrem’s job to enforce the Company’s AML restrictions...[he] failed to file a single suspicious activity report with the US Treasury Department about Faiella's illicit activity...and deliberately helped Failla circumvent the Company’s AML restrictions." Shrem knew what he was doing, he said in the podcast, and he admits his guilt.
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Forbes, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST If nothing can escape from a black hole, then how to the 'ripples in spacetime' themselves get loose? |
CoinDesk, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Bitcoin prices neared $780 this week, coming within 1% of their annual high after lingering above $700 for more than two weeks. |
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