Crypto ‘communities’ need to be more neighbourly | Financial Times

Tom Robinson of Elliptic

“This might push launderers and criminals to use Monero to a greater extent — they will see how traceable the bitcoin was in this case and this will push them to using Monero instead,” he said. “We have to accept that untraceable digital cash does exist. The question is how we deal with it.”

From Crypto ‘communities’ need to be more neighbourly | Financial Times:

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China’s digital yuan is not death knell for Alipay and WeChat Pay | South China Morning Post

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Both payment platforms are rolling out e-CNY as a payment option, and neither is excluded from using the digital yuan. My Alipay app already sports a prominent red e-CNY symbol and has a wallet available to accept and spend the currency.

While integration on Alipay and WeChat is far from complete, it is clear the People’s Bank of China has always intended coexistence. In December 2020, senior officials said “WeChat and Alipay are wallets, while the digital yuan is the money in the wallet.”

From China’s digital yuan is not death knell for Alipay and WeChat Pay | South China Morning Post.

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POST 20/20 Vision

As I told my good friends at Money 20/20, we should ignore the hype and people selling pictures of chimpanzees wearing sunglasses and focus on the underlying technology of token trading transactions. The protocols of DeFi, means that the rents extracted by the financial sector can at last start to trend down. This is why the money men and women are interested: nothing to do with ideology, everything to do with intermediation. 

A Crucial Clue in the $4.5 Billion Bitcoin Heist: A $500 Walmart Gift Card – WSJ

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Federal investigators spent years hunting for clues in the 2016 hacking of the Bitfinex cryptocurrency exchange, when thieves stole bitcoin now worth $4.5 billion. In the end, what helped lead them to two suspects was something much more quotidian: a $500 Walmart gift card.

From A Crucial Clue in the $4.5 Billion Bitcoin Heist: A $500 Walmart Gift Card – WSJ.

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Apollo Nears $2.3 Billion Deal for Worldline’s Terminal Business – WSJ

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Apollo Global Management Inc. APO 0.57% is nearing a deal to acquire the point-of-sale terminal business of European payments company Worldline SA WLN -2.36% for close to $2.3 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.

The proposed deal is the latest bet on the continued growth of digital payments.

From Apollo Nears $2.3 Billion Deal for Worldline’s Terminal Business – WSJ:

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France’s Worldline looking to divest POS terminal business

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French payments services provider Worldline has launched a strategic review of its point-of-sale (POS) terminals business and has hired UBS and BNP Paribas to advise on strategic options.

The company is looking to sell the Terminal Solution & Services (TSS) unit at a valuation of €3bn ($3.5bn), Bloomberg reported.

The strategic review of the business follows Worldline’s €7.8bn ($9.2bn) acquisition of Ingenico Group.

The French firm said that the move is part of its strategy to transition from “Hardware + Service” to “Software-as-a-Service” business model.

Worldline chairman and CEO Gilles Grapinet said: “Worldline is more than ever ready to keep playing a central role in the ongoing consolidation of payments in Europe and beyond, and, as planned, we are launching the strategic review for the payment terminals business unit.

From France’s Worldline looking to divest POS terminal business:

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Worldline in talks to offload POS terminal business to Apollo

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French payments firm Worldline is in the final stages of a talk to sell its point-of-sale (POS) terminal business to Apollo Global Management, reported WSJ.

The potential deal would see Apollo buy hardware that enables consumers to make purchases using their mobile phones and payment cards, for about $2.3bn, people with knowledge of the development told the publication.

From Worldline in talks to offload POS terminal business to Apollo:

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The impact of hardware specifications on reaching quantum advantage in the fault tolerant regime: AVS Quantum Science: Vol 4, No 1

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Finally, we calculate the number of physical qubits required to break the 256-bit elliptic curve encryption of keys in the Bitcoin network within the small available time frame in which it would actually pose a threat to do so. It would require 317 × 106 physical qubits to break the encryption within one hour using the surface code, a code cycle time of 1 μs, a reaction time of 10 μs, and a physical gate error of 10−3
10

3
. To instead break the encryption within one day, it would require 13 × 106 physical qubits.

From The impact of hardware specifications on reaching quantum advantage in the fault tolerant regime: AVS Quantum Science: Vol 4, No 1.

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“Tap to pay” becomes “Tap to prove” …? – new tech observations from the UK (ntouk)

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It’s not just the incumbent point of sale and other financial service providers who need to take notice of Apple’s announcement, but governments too

From “Tap to pay” becomes “Tap to prove” …? – new tech observations from the UK (ntouk):

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