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The Bitcoin Act
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We cover #Bitcoin & #legal news in our newsletter 📰, and share updates, polls & the best Bitcoin memes on Primal 😎. Save time, stay informed, laugh a little.

Meme of the day #Bitcoin

Pardons are just a Band-Aid on centralization.

Real change comes from building systems that don’t rely on mercy.

Replying to Avatar Bitcoin News

BANKS SURRENDER: THE 3-PART BITCOIN PEACE TREATY

For ten years, TradFi’s strategy against Bitcoin was simple: a war of attrition.

Close the accounts of those associated with Bitcoin and, through alienation, attempt to starve the beast.

But this week, rather than continue the siege, banks and regulators offered a peace treaty in three parts.

And as a result, we just witnessed the fastest convergence between Bitcoin and the US banking system in history.

Let’s assess the new state of play.

First, the banks.

PNC Bank, a top-10 institution with over half a trillion dollars in assets, crossed the Rubicon.

Rather than just selling you an ETF wrapper, they are launching direct, spot Bitcoin trading inside your regular bank account.

Right next to your checking account, right next to your mortgage... there is Bitcoin.

PNC is the first major US bank to offer the real thing.

They realized what we’ve known for years: if they don't offer it, you’ll go somewhere that does.

Next, the Regulators.

The CFTC just admitted that the US Dollar is too slow for the modern world.

They launched a pilot program to accept Bitcoin as collateral in derivatives markets.

Why? Because Wall Street closes on Friday at 5 PM, but in a global market, risk happens 24/7.

When a margin call hits in the middle of the night, your Treasury bonds are useless because the bank is closed.

But Bitcoin? Bitcoin is awake.

This 16-year-old, nearly $2 trillion asset is forcing regulators to accept that their own settlement rails are obsolete.

And finally, the OCC signing off on the "Riskless Principal" approval.

The regulator just admitted that buying and selling Bitcoin for clients is a 'logical outgrowth' of standard banking.

They ruled it is the 'economic equivalent' of acting as an agent for any other asset.

Meaning? The bank is just an intermediary.

They don't hold the coins in inventory; they execute the trade, just as they would for any other financial asset.

Banks can now officially act as brokers for your coins.

With this move, the government is paving the road over the grave of Joe Biden’s Operation Chokepoint 2.0.

The passing of the GENIUS Act is forcing the incumbents to adopt it or die.

So, what are we really looking at?

We are watching the 9-to-5 banking system try to plug itself into the 24/7 Bitcoin network.

And the financial rails of the last 50 years are being forced to catch up.

We went from an industry under siege, to a Trojan Horse outside their gates, to an asset inside their vaults and a network they need to keep up in the 21st century.

After 10 years of war, banks realized: you can’t kill what doesn’t sleep.

Welcome to Bitcoin time. ⏰

⚡️ If you own #Bitcoin in the #US, the government treats it as… 👇

A) Cash you can spend

B) Property

C) Illegal contraband

D) Fed-backed money

Meme of the day #Bitcoin

📊 #Polymarket bettors currently assign a 52% probability to Kevin Hassett being nominated as the next #Fed Chair, followed by Kevin Warsh at 38%, reflecting market expectations around future #monetary and regulatory direction. 🏦

⚖️ #Tajik authorities argue harsh penalties for illegal #Bitcoin mining are necessary to protect the power grid, while critics see the law as #criminalizing energy use rather than addressing structural shortages through transparent pricing and infrastructure reform. ⚡️

⚡️ Eric Larchevêque warns France’s proposed amendment forcing disclosure of self-custodied #Bitcoin valuations creates a dangerous #privacy precedent, assembling sensitive databases that link identities to balances without any taxable event or demonstrated public necessity. 🏦

They’re suggesting 1–3% of portfolios for diversification and as a hedge against currency and market risks, and even launched a dedicated crypto unit to support this strategy.

Replying to Avatar FLASH

⚡️💬 STORY - He mined over 400,000 Bitcoin when BTC was worth less than $1.

Then he disappeared...

ArtForz.

Discover the forgotten story of this mysterious pioneer, who single-handedly controlled 25% of the Bitcoin network in 2010.

➥ When Bitcoin was worth almost nothing. In 2010, Bitcoin was still very much a niche currency.

Satoshi Nakamoto's white paper was just over a year old, and BTC was worth barely $0.01.

The mining difficulty was ridiculously low, and the reward was still 50 BTC per block.

The first users were cypherpunks, libertarians, and nerds, who mined with... their processors.

A simple desktop PC was enough to mine blocks at the time.

It was against this backdrop that a new username appeared on Bitcointalk in July 2010: ArtForz.

No one knew it yet, but this name would become legendary.

➥ A broke engineer with a PayPal problem.

Before Bitcoin, ArtForz wasn't exactly what you'd call a financial tycoon.

He is an electrical engineer, comfortable with hardware, circuits, and graphics cards.

He loves computers, video games, and complex systems.

To make ends meet, he "farms" virtual currencies in video games, which he then sells for real money.

Until the day PayPal froze his account because of these activities.

The message was harsh for ArtForz: the traditional financial system can cut off access to your money... with a single click.

At the same time, a new concept was circulating on certain Internet forums: A currency that no company, no bank, no platform can censor: Bitcoin.

ArtForz immediately understood the power of the concept and, above all, he quickly realized that Bitcoin could be mined.

➥ From laptops to “ArtFarms.”

In 2010, it was still possible to mine on a laptop or a simple desktop computer.

The first enthusiasts discovered that GPUs (graphics cards) were much more efficient than CPUs at calculating the hashes required for Proof of Work.

Officially, Satoshi Nakamoto hoped for a "gentleman's agreement" to avoid rushing into a hardware race too quickly, so as not to kill the decentralization of the network.

But ArtForz decided to step up a gear in July 2010 and started mining with GPUs.

He quickly built what is considered one of the world's first GPU mining farms: the "ArtFarm."

In just one month, ArtForz already controlled about 10% of the Bitcoin network's computing power.

By the end of 2010, his farm had reached up to 25% of the network's total hashrate.

ArtForz stacked dozens of them in cardboard boxes to keep them somewhat ventilated, in a kind of homemade chaos halfway between a laboratory and a geek's attic.

One day, he posted on Bitcointalk that he had mined 1,700 BTC in six days.

➥ 409,650 Bitcoin: a treasure mined amid indifference.

With its ArtFarm, ArtForz is racking up the blocks.

Cross-referenced estimates suggest that ArtForz mined a total of around 409,650 BTC during this period, which is colossal!

ArtForz sold a large portion of the BTC when the price began to rise, but according to several accounts, it still retained around 50,000 BTC.

➥ The bug that could have killed Bitcoin.

ArtForz is not just an opportunistic miner, he is also a highly skilled programmer and security expert.

In July 2010, he discovered what would later be described as one of the most dangerous bugs in the history of Bitcoin: a flaw in the way transaction scripts are validated, linked to what would become known as the OP_RETURN bug.

The flaw could have allowed anyone to spend BTC from any wallet without owning the keys.

ArtForz could have taken advantage of this, but he chose to report the problem directly to Satoshi Nakamoto and the developers.

The problem was then fixed as a matter of urgency.

Authors such as Nathaniel Popper, in Digital Gold, emphasize this moment: the fact that ArtForz did not use this flaw to enrich himself is presented as proof that the system's incentives were already working.

His own coins would have been worthless if the protocol had lost all credibility.

On that day, an anonymous miner certainly saved Bitcoin.

➥ The race for hardware: FPGA, ASIC, and the fall of ArtFarm.

But ArtForz's dominance did not last forever.

As Bitcoin grew in popularity, new miners wanted to get in on the action.

Mining moved from CPUs to GPUs, then to FPGAs (reprogrammable circuits), and then to ASICs (specialized chips designed for mining cryptocurrencies).

ASICs quickly rendered desktop PCs obsolete, then made GPUs virtually useless for mining Bitcoin.

ArtForz tried to survive by designing its own custom mining chips, which allowed it to regain about 5% of the hashrate for a time.

But in August 2011, despite its efforts, ArtForz's share fell below 1% of the total hashrate.

It could no longer compete with giant farms and warehouses filled with metal racks and industrial fans.

➥ The Scrypt controversy.

Faced with this growing centralization, ArtForz refuses to give up.

If the hardware becomes too powerful, then perhaps we need to change... the algorithm itself.

It turns to Scrypt, a cryptographic function designed in 2009 by Colin Percival to secure file backups.

In 2011, ArtForz implemented Scrypt in a new cryptocurrency: Tenebrix, often cited as the first crypto to use Scrypt as a proof-of-work algorithm.

Litecoin, launched in October 2011, also adopted Scrypt for its Proof of Work.

In the Litecoin white paper, the developers wrote in black and white:

"We humbly offer our thanks to ArtForz for the implementation."

But the story doesn't end there, as controversy erupted over ArtForz's possible use of Scrypt to mine 150 times faster with GPUs.

Part of the community began to suspect ArtForz of keeping a hidden technical advantage to himself.

ArtForz denied wanting to deceive anyone.

Shortly after this controversy, he almost completely stopped posting on Bitcointalk.

➥ The disappearance.

After 2012, traces of ArtForz became scarce.

His username appeared on forums related to video game mods, notably for Minecraft and Kerbal Space Program.

But there were no more messages on Bitcointalk.

ArtForz remains silent.

Some believe he still holds 50,000 BTC in a cold wallet...

Others think he sold everything or lost it all...

No one really knows.

➥ Why does ArtForz still matter today?

The story of ArtForz raises several fundamental questions about:

➤ The centralization of the Bitcoin network and mining.

➤ The role of anonymous pioneers, whose contribution is not necessarily recognized by the general public.

But who was ArtForz really?

Little is known about him.

He was a solitary engineer, a coder brilliant enough to spot a fatal bug... and ethical enough not to take advantage of it.

A pioneer who accumulated 409,650 BTC at a time when no one was yet looking at Bitcoin price charts.

And then, complete silence.

Greetings to you, ArtForz, if you're on Nostr 🫡

I love this ArtForz story!

Meme of the day #Bitcoin

Meme of the day #Bitcoin

📊 Do you think #governments should provide clearer legal frameworks for #Bitcoin, or stay out and let the market evolve on its own? 👇

A) Clearer rules

B) Fewer rules

C) Tax clarity only

D) No rules at all

Meme of the day #Bitcoin

Meme of the day #Bitcoin