I miss the days before these cunt institutions got into this scene.
I was saying this to a couple of guys who hold Bitcoin last night. These bureaucrats and massive financial institutions have somewhat captured Bitcoin, to a degree.
I live in the UK as many of you know. I believe it is the same in the EU but fairly recently exchanges are enforcing
The Travel Rule on us.
For those unfamiliar see here -
https://support.kraken.com/articles/updates-to-crypto-transfer-procedures-for-uk-clientsTLDR; When you deposit to the exchange in any size over €1,000 they want to know where the Bitcoin came from. Was it from a cold wallet or another exchange or even from somebody else. You better hope it’s not from somebody else or they’re going to ask you a tonne of questions.
Any way, my personal story was I sold a handful of Bitcoin the first time we went over $90,000. The second sale was for 3 Bitcoin. I got an email saying I needed to confirm where the funds came from. I told them a cold wallet and then I received a support ticket saying Kraken were looking into this and will get back to me before my funds are released.
Sorry what, you are holding MY funds hostage? Any way, about 2 hours later they released the Bitcoin so I could sell. You can get a Bitcoin address whitelisted so they don’t do this again but address reuse is not good for privacy. If I use a new sending address this will happen again. It all turned out fine but my behaviour will definitely change now when I sell more late this year. I will deposit in smaller amounts, what if they had my deposit on hold for days? It would give me huge anxiety.
Earlier in the year Kraken and Coinbase made me fill in a big questionnaire about my financial status or my account would be limited. They can’t believe you are retired if you are under 40.
I just wanted to reinforce what Husristic said, Bitcoin has been somewhat captured. Trade P2P where possible and keep your Bitcoin in cold storage. These bastards are trying to make our beautiful Bitcoin as centralised as possible.
Yeah, this is a cautionary tale. Additionally, Trezor used to give you a new address for each deposit (maybe it still does). So, whitelisting would need to be repetitive.
Reviewing all of your UTXOs seems prudent, but, overall, it is a bummer, of course.
One "thing" I know for the fact
is that Coinbase and Coinbase Pro account histories used to be separate, but now they seem to integrate all of your activity on their platform into one 'history', which could be useful if you purchased some there, initially.
Interestingly, the recent FHFA (US mortgage admin)
announcementannouncements would probably
resultsresult in more coins moving to exchanges (CEXs) and it is a requirement for using funds to qualify for a mortgage.
I see this as a potential negative, because once most of the funds are on CEXs or at corporations, one can envision something like 6102-like order for btc being easier to implement.
This is all theoretical, of course, but it did happen before and with a "store of value".
EDIT: i would definitely exchange at least some btc for an ETF if this could be done in a tax-free manner, alas it is only possible in some countries where there is no tax after a year of holding.