PaymentsJournal
No Result
View All Result
SIGN UP
  • Commercial
  • Credit
  • Debit
  • Digital Assets & Crypto
  • Digital Banking
  • Emerging Payments
  • Fraud & Security
  • Merchant
  • Prepaid
PaymentsJournal
  • Commercial
  • Credit
  • Debit
  • Digital Assets & Crypto
  • Digital Banking
  • Emerging Payments
  • Fraud & Security
  • Merchant
  • Prepaid
No Result
View All Result
PaymentsJournal
No Result
View All Result

Gen Y Driving Mobile Bill Payments

By Edward O'Brien
January 3, 2014
in Analysts Coverage
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Mobile Biometrics: Past, Present, and Future - PaymentsJournal

California’s warning to the Bitcoin Foundation to cease-and-desist from allegedly acting as an unlicensed money-transmitter company may be misguided or designed to trap others.

The California Department of Financial Institutions sent a cease-and-desist letter dated May 30 to the foundation, which promotes the digital currency but does not serve as a bitcoin exchange. It accused the foundation of defying the Money Transmission Act.

From PaymentsSource:

“The foundation is certainly not a money transmitter,” says Paul Soter, a California attorney who specializes in banking regulations and money transfer laws. “So I think they have the wrong entity [or] they are, well, shooting at the bank robber and hitting the guy next to him who is a member of an organization called ‘friends of bank robbers.’”

“Guilt by association” appears to be at the heart of what Soter contends the agency’s thinking is, but regardless of what the agency might contend about the Bitcoin Foundation, it does not appear to be in violation of money-transmitter laws. In March, the U.S. Treasury stepped in to regulate convertible virtual currencies after the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) clarified their status under anti-money-laundering rules.

To FinCEN, convertible virtual currencies “either have an equivalent value in real currency or act as a substitute for real currency.” Though not mentioning bitcoins specifically, FinCEN’s new guidelines say anyone who exchanges decentralized virtual currency for real currency must register as a money services business and follow existing FinCEN regulations covering registration requirements and compliance with anti-money-laundering, recordkeeping, and reporting responsibilities.

Consumers who obtain convertible virtual currency and use it to purchase real or virtual goods or services are not a money services business, so they are not affected by the FinCEN regulations. The same is true for the Bitcoin Foundation, which simply serves to promote Bitcoin use, not to facilitate the exchange of bitcoins for U.S. dollars.

Click here to read more from PaymentsSource.

0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Tags: Banking Channels

    Get the Latest News and Insights Delivered Daily

    Subscribe to the PaymentsJournal Newsletter for exclusive insight and data from Javelin Strategy & Research analysts and industry professionals.

    Must Reads

    ai phishing

    The Fraud Epidemic Is Testing the Limits of Cybersecurity

    February 6, 2026
    stablecoins b2b payments

    Stablecoins and the Future of B2B Payments: Faster, Cheaper, Better

    February 5, 2026
    Payment Facilitator

    The Payment Facilitator Model as a Growth Strategy for ISVs

    February 4, 2026
    Simplifying Payment Processing? Payment Orchestration Can Help , multi-acquiring merchants

    Multi-Acquiring Is the New Standard—Are Merchants Ready?

    February 3, 2026
    ACH Network, credit-push fraud, ACH payments growth

    What’s Driving the Rapid Growth in ACH Payments

    February 2, 2026
    chatgpt payments

    How Merchants Should Navigate the Rise of Agentic AI

    January 30, 2026
    fraud passkey

    Why the Future of Financial Fraud Prevention Is Passwordless

    January 29, 2026
    payments AI

    When Can Payments Trust AI?

    January 28, 2026

    Linkedin-in X-twitter
    • Commercial
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Digital Banking
    • Commercial
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Digital Banking
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Sign Up for Our Newsletter
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Sign Up for Our Newsletter

    ©2024 PaymentsJournal.com |  Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

    • Commercial Payments
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    No Result
    View All Result