A group of crypto-focused companies, including Bitcoin ATM operators DigitalMint and Coinsource, has founded a new coalition called the Cryptocurrency Compliance Cooperative (CCC) aimed at improving cash-to-crypto regulations and consumer safety.
“The mission of the CCC is to create a safer environment for all consumers and legitimize the cash-to-cryptocurrency industry by bolstering compliance standards that are deemed by many to be currently insufficient,” the organizers said in an announcement on Wednesday.
Apart from DigitalMint and Coinsource, the list of CCC’s founding members also includes the Anti-Human Trafficking Intelligence Initiative, Metropolitan Capital Bank, Royal Business Bank, Surety Bank, smart ATM operator Maya, blockchain forensics firms Chainalysis, Elliptic, and CipherBlade, and others.
“Unfortunately, many BTM operators feel that merely asking for a cell phone number is enough due diligence to absolve them of their mandated KYC requirements,” said Bo Oney, Exec. VP of Operations & Head of Compliance at @coinsourceusahttps://t.co/GZQLlnUEAS@Forkast_News
— Cryptocurrency Compliance Cooperative (@Crypto_3C) August 26, 2021
Bitcoin ATMs a 'safe haven for bad actors'
The goal of the CCC is to improve existing practices in the crypto ATM sector since “nefarious use cases plaguing this industry are well documented by several law enforcement agencies, and include fraud, elder abuse, and drug and human trafficking,” noted Seth Sattler, director of compliance for DigitalMint.
Bitcoin ATMs are coming to Texas supermarkets. Twenty nine crypto Coin Cloud ATMs will be set up in H-E-B stores, according to local media.
The crypto ATMs, which allow users to buy and sell over 30 different cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin and Dogecoin, will first be available in H-E-B stores in Houston, The Laredo Morning Times reported Friday.
H-E-B is a supermarket chain with stores all over Texas and some in northern Mexico. It gained national attention earlier this year when, in Feb...
Though many in the industry have already implemented Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) standards, others “simply turn a blind eye and are complacent to these bad actors,” he argued.
To remedy the situation, the CCC is inviting various money services businesses, regulatory bodies, financial institutions, suppliers, NGOs, and law enforcement agencies to join and share “best practices and learn how to collaborate with industry leaders” as well as “to enforce deeper and more robust compliance protocols.”
For example, many crypto ATM operators only require customers to provide a phone number—which can easily be a prepaid number and destroyed after a few uses—as a KYC requirement, according to Coinsource’s executive VP of operations Bo Oney.
“Such lax provisions provide a safe haven for bad actors to abuse the machines for nefarious purposes. The CCC is seeking to bolster regulatory requirements for the benefit of all BTM users and operators,” argued Oney.
Meanwhile, there are already over 42,000 Bitcoin ATMs deployed across the U.S., according to an online tracker called How Many Bitcoin ATMs.
Crypto ATM-focused research conducted by educational platform Crypto Head has also shown that America tops the list of countries that are most prepared for broad adoption of digital currencies.
“We must do better. This isn't just an industry group—this is a movement,” said Sattler. “It's our hope that others heed our call and join this cooperative as we push for enhanced and modernized regulations in the best interest of public safety.”
Daily Debrief Newsletter
Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.
Companies that serve as connective tissue between digital assets and legacy payments systems are getting a glow-up from stablecoins this year, according to VanEck Ventures Managing Partner Juan Lopez.
As companies continue to explore new use cases with dollar-pegged tokens, those that help customers swap between cash and crypto are becoming some of the hottest targets for mergers and acquisitions, he told Decrypt in a recent interview.
Although they were mostly perceived as a way to let customer...
Cryptocurrency exchange Gemini announced Friday that it has submitted a public S-1 filing with the SEC to launch a planned initial public offering, two months after previously revealing a confidential filing with the regulator.
Gemini, which was founded in 2014 by billionaire Bitcoin investors Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss—perhaps best known for their role in the creation of Facebook—plans to list via the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the ticker GEMI.
Details on the number of shares to be off...
SharpLink Gaming’s shares plummeted Friday as the online gambling marketer disclosed disappointing earnings for the second financial quarter.
The Ethereum treasury’s shares are trading at $20.04, down nearly 15% in intraday trading.
SharpLink reported $103 million in net losses for the three-month period ending on June 30—a stark contrast to its nearly $12 million net income during the same quarter last year.
Revenue came in at $1.4 million for the second quarter, down 30% from the same time las...