FILE
- This April 3, 2013 file photo shows bitcoin tokens in Sandy, Utah.
The Mt. Gox bitcoin exchange in Tokyo is headed for liquidation after a
court rejected its bankruptcy protection application. Mt. Gox said
Wednesday, April 16, 2014, the Tokyo District Court decided the company,
which was a trading platform and storehouse for the bitcoin virtual
currency, would not be able to resurrect itself under a business
rehabilitation process filed for in February. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer,
File)
A division within the Department of Defense is investigating whether
the digital currency bitcoin is a possible terrorist threat.
The Combatting Terrorism Technical Support Office is spearheading a
program that will help the military understand how modern technologies
could pose threats to national security, including bitcoin and other
virtual currencies, the International Business Times reported.
A memo detailing some of the CTTSO projects states, “The introduction
of virtual currency will likely shape threat finance by increasing the
opaqueness, transactional velocity, and overall efficiencies of
terrorist attacks,” as reported by Bitcoin Magazine, according to IBTimes.
One of the greatest concerns reportedly rests with the anonymity
afforded bitcoin transactions. The transactions are public, but the
people involved in the operations are unnamed.
Bitcoins, according to the business site, can allow illegal
operations with the speed of the Internet, but with the secrecy of a
cash deal.
Some high-profile cases have highlighted bitcoin’s vulnerability,
including Silk Road, the digital black market shut down in October by
the FBI. Silk Road accepted only bitcoin for payments. The site’s
founder was charged with drug trafficking and money laundering.
A Treasury Department probe found no evidence of bitcoin being used
to finance terrorism, but the anonymous nature of the transactions still
has many law enforcement officials worried.
CTTSO is concerned that anonymous networks are a way to successfully
traffic drugs, weapons, people and nuclear tech under the radar.
Android, Motorola, social media and virtual reality were also
included on the CTTSO’s list of topics worth researching regarding
terrorism.
Click for the story from the International Business Times.
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