Bitcoin Buyer Beware

Sunday, June 25, 2017
By Paul Martin

by Tyler Durden
ZeroHedge.com
Jun 25, 2017

Entrepreneurs have a new trick to raise money quickly, and it all takes place online, free from the constraints of banks and regulators. As Axios reports, since the beginning of 2017, 65 startups have raised $522 million using initial coin offerings — trading a digital coin (essentially an investment in their company) for a digital currency, like Bitcoin or Ether.

One recent example, as NYT reports, saw Bay Area coders earn $35 million in less than 30 seconds during an online fund-raising event. They sold Basic Attention Tokens (BAT coin) which will grant buyers access to an innovative ad-free web browser the coders are intending to create, but have yet to launch.
And that’s the catch: these investors are buying promises in the form of coins for a product or service that doesn’t exist.

Similar to the Bay Area example, a group of entrepreneurs in Switzerland secured $100 million last week by selling a coin that will one day be used on Status, an online chat program that’s still being developed.

Proponents argue that these initial coin offerings are “a financial innovation that empowers developers and gives early investors a chance to share in the profits of a successful new enterprise,” NYT notes.

However, many say it potentially violates securities law and that this trading of digital currencies is ripe for hackers, from NYT: “Last year, the first blockbuster coin offering, the Decentralized Autonomous Organization, quickly raised more than $150 million. But the project blew up after a hacker manipulated the code and stole more than $50 million worth of digital currency.”

The Rest…HERE

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