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Kazakhstan to limit energy use for crypto mining

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Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has signed a law to limit the energy consumption of domestic cryptocurrency miners

The country has seen an influx of bitcoin miners, putting a strain on the energy grid.

The new law restricts miners from consuming energy from the national grid unless there is a surplus, which will be distributed among licensed operators.

Those using renewable energy, imported electricity, or their own energy generation capacity not connected to the grid, are exempt from this cap.

The legislation requires miners to be licensed and establishes a minor adjustment to the tax regime for the industry.

Kazakhstan is also looking to regulate digital assets exchanges in the wake of the FTX fiasco.

Miners must sell half of their crypto to registered exchanges in the Astana International Finance Centre by 2024, and 75% by 2025.

Kazakhstan is also planning to regulate digital asset exchanges.

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Crypto

Ted Cruz introduces bill to block U.S. CBDC

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The Senator fears digital currencies may be susceptible to cyber attacks

U.S. Senator Ted Cruz has introduced a bill which would prohibit the U.S. Federal Reserve from moving ahead with a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC).

The government has been researching the possibility of a U.S. CBDC after President Joe Biden an executive order last year.

“The federal government has no authority to unilaterally establish a central bank currency,” Cruz said in announcing the bill’s introduction.

“The bill goes a long way in making sure big government doesn’t attempt to centralise or control cryptocurrency and instead, allows it to thrive in the United States.

“We should be empowering entrepreneurs, enabling innovation, and increasing individual freedom – not stifling it.”

Cruz added that unlike decentralised cryptocurrency like Bitcoin, digital currencies created by the government are centralised and could be more vulnerable to cyber attacks.

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Crypto

FTX sues liquidators in the Bahamas

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The liquidators argue they took on a more prominent role before the collapse

Crypto exchange FTX has sued the liquidators overseeing its wind-down in the Bahamas.

The exchange claims FTX Digital Markets are wrongly claiming ownership of certain assets.

CEO John Ray told a U.S. court that that the affiliate had no interest in FTX.com’s cryptocurrency, intellectual property and customer relationships.

The affiliate from the Bahamas was a corporate shell of former company founder Sam Bankman-Fried, who attempted to funnel customer deposits and property rights into the nation.

Liquidators have argued the affiliate took on a more prominent role when the company moved its headquarters from Hong Kong to the Bahamas.

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Crypto

Authorities shut down largest darknet money laundering service

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More than $3 billion had been laundered through the platform since 2017

U.S. and European authorities have managed to shut down crypto platform ChipMixer, and charge its alleged operator of money laundering.

The platform has been accused of laundering more than $3 billion in criminal proceeds, including $700 million stolen by North Korean hackers.

Prosecutors say they also traced $17 million in bitcoin of ransomware proceeds, made between August 2017 and March 2023 to ChipMixer. 

The service became popular in the darknet, because it was able to take funds and co-mingle them, so you couldn’t tell who the owner previously was.

ChipMixer had been in existence since 2017.

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