33 comments

[ 0.27 ms ] story [ 71.7 ms ] thread
This guy used to run Barclays tax evasion division, which while apparently completely legal, gave the wrong impression as Barclays accepted taxpayer money...
So you're saying he's an expert on financial regulations?

If he wasn't doing anything illegal, then it sounds like he probably just knows the system really well, which is probably a good person to have around when you're working out at the edges, which bitcoin is.

No he used to run their credit card division. I think you are refering to Roger Jenkins
Oh I didn't know they were different people! Then I am wrong and apologize for any misinformation
When did they take taxpayer money?
A retail banker, with little understanding of technology and little clout. Having served in the investment arm of Barclays during his tenure, I'm not sure he can add much.
Connections?
He was a less than impressive CEO, fired by his own board. Sure he may have connections, but he doesn't come across as the best mediator. I have nothing against the guy, but I personally see little in terms of value add from having him in a fintech start up.
Blockchain is probably in need of a round soon so it's possible they are looking to stack the board to increase the likelihood of them actually raising one. I doubt DCG has much more in the tank to keep leading every bitcoin round.
Actually Antony Jenkins had relatively little involvement with investment banking (and only towards the end) - his main background was with credit cards, then as you say retail banking[0].

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antony_Jenkins

He made a right mess of BarCap.
Seeing more and more Bitcoin stories and HN these days, is something "happening" in that space finally?
Simply crypto is eating finance. Very slowly but it's happening.
Is there any evidence it's making any progress into traditional finance? There were a number of projects announced over the past few years but they all seem to have sizzled out or been outright cancelled. Where are you seeing it "eating finance"?
Synthetic USD/CNY/JPY bonds: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XehDfHTa8Sg

This stuff is brilliant.

I feel like I'm missing a lot here. Why would anyone go through all that trouble just to create an asset that follows the price of USD? Why not just use USD?
Untaxed and black market trading. It's worth a lot of money, until it gains serious traction at which point the government will simply outlaw it.
> at which point the government will simply outlaw it

If you are using it for tax avoidance or money laundering, it is already illegal.

I think many people see crypto currencies, until they are regulated, somehow, as legal ways to not pay tax. Obviously they are not and when the gov catches up, they might get you anyway. They are very patient.

Ofcourse things are easier to hide if you want to for a while, but how would you turn it into actual money if we are talking large amounts?

I think "outlaw" upthread means "take notice of the particular mechanism, and sufficient steps to make it untenable for most use".
It's no more "eating finance" than SQL servers or hadoop are eating finance. It is a tool that may or may not be used by large financial institutions.
(comment deleted)
There's been a rally up to almost $800 in the last month or so.
As someone who's followed the space closely for years: No major events, just gradual improvements to the tech, tooling, and adoption surrounding Bitcoin, blockchains, and everything related to them.

Not nearly as entertaining as recent international affairs that may be driving more interest to the space.

As someone who's also followed the space closely I feel like we're watching two different shows? Where are you seeing these improvements?
gradual improvements.

more access, better tech, fewer scams. Where do you see that we are the same as we were a few years ago?

2 years of community infighting. I don't see any better tech that is relevant to most users just edge cases. I don't actually see fewer scams at all. The whole ICO market is basically a giant set of scams for one example and they are exploding. We've had multiple large exchange thefts this year as well.
-CheckLockTimeVerify (CLTV)

-CheckSequenceVerify (CSV)

-Replace-By-Fee (RBF) -> See Peter Todd and https://medium.com/@bramcohen/how-wallets-can-handle-transac...

-compact blocks

-segwit (already been released, waiting to be activated by miners)

-good progress by the 5 implementations (alpha-versions) of the Lightning-protocol (hughe improvement on scalability and even privacy by using TOR). See Rusty Russell: https://medium.com/@rusty_lightning/the-bitcoin-lightning-sp...

CLTV is over a year old at this point. Segwit doesn't look like it's going to reach consensus anytime soon which means lightning implementations are doa.

Compact blocks are definitely an improvement for the network though.

Mostly centered on Ethereum. Though the signal/noise ratio isn't that good.
In Bitcoin SegWit is a hope for change. In the whole scene ICOs seem to be a killer application, this is what Bitcoin smart assets/colored coins envisioned years ago. The USV and A16Z funding of Polychain Capital signals a new kind of experiment.

In the other hand private "blockchains" are waiting for a killer and real implementation.

Antony Jenkins is NOT someone you want in a BitCoin startup if you want your customers' TRUST.

He was fired from Barclays because he got his hand caught in the cookie jar - several times [1] (money laundering, management bonuses, tax avoidance, conflicts of interest, rate fixing, market manipulation on electricity and gold)

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barclays#Controversies