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Monthly Archives: March 2017
Nato Back On Top? 133-Pound NCAA Preview – FloWrestling
Posted: March 11, 2017 at 7:55 am
Now that we have our sweet, sweet brackets for the NCAA Wrestling Championships, it's time to take a closer look at theweight classes. We'redoing a deep dive into eachdivision, rolling out previewsone at a time, so you can pour over and digest everything before thefirst whistle in St. Louis on March 16.
First was 125;now we move on up to 133.
Nahshon Garrett owned this weight class last year, going a perfect 37-0 on his way to an NCAA crown after bumping up from 125, where he wrestled the previous year. This year, Ohio State's Nathan Tomasello looks to follow a similar trajectory.
Like Garrett, Tomasellobulked up, having spent the last two seasons at 125. Also like Garrett, Nato is undefeated and the No. 1seed going into this tournament (one of 10 undefeated No.1 seeds; we will see one of those in each weight class).
However, unlike most of the other weight classes, our top-seeded wrestler at 131 did not start the season at the top. That honor belonged to Iowa senior Cory Clark. He is one of several contenders looking to stop the junior Buckeye from becoming a two-time NCAA champion.
We'll take a look at those contenders next, followed by dark horses and a full set of predictions and analysis (2017 NCAA tournament seeds in parentheses).
Tomasello just finished winning his third straight Big Ten title. Meanwhile,Seth Gross and Kaid Brock both just wrestled in the finals of the Big 12 Championships, where Gross emerged the victor after a wild 9-7 slugfest.
A returning finalist,Clark has been dogged by a shoulder injury all year long, but when he's wrestled he's been competitive with the best of the division, losing to the No.1-, No. 3-, and No.7-seeded wrestlers by a combined five points.
StevanMicic rounds out our list of contenders. The Wolverines sophomore is wrestling the best he has all year, getting revenge against Illinois seniorZane Richards at last weekend's Big Ten Championships bybeating him twice in convincing fashion.
Two of our dark horses come from the sneaky good Mid-American Conference, which is sending another five qualifiers to St. Louis in what is nationally a very deep weight class. Both BryanLantry and JoshAlber are sophomores with high ceilings and indefatigable motors. If either of them get on a roll, he isgoing to be trouble for higher-seeded guys in hisway.
ScottDelvecchio is more of a true dark horse, spending most of the year outside the top 20. He's revving up at the right time, however. Though he only placed ninth at the Big Ten Championships, the two losses he suffered were to No.1 Tomasello and No.8Richards by a total of just four points.
I also think Brock will avenge his Big 12 finals loss in the semis against Gross and score more precious team points for the Cowboys. Who knows if the team score will even be a factor at this point in the tournament, but you can bet that Oklahoma State head coach John Smith will have his 133-pounder primed for the big stage regardless.
Check out Brock putting away two-timeAll-American Earl Hallin anentertainingBig 12 semifinals bout: Additionally, I think Stevan Micic will get by Cory Clark in a heroic quarterfinal contestbut then fall to Nato in the semis. Micic willget to third place-match where he'll see Gross, who advances to the consolation finals after falling to Brock inthe semis. I think Gross comes out on top here and places third.
Lehigh juniorScotty Parkermissed a good chunk of the seasondue to injurybutlooked ferocious while winning an EIWA championship last week. He'll beat Richards in a mild round-of-16 upset before getting bounced into the consis by Nato in the quarters, where he'll thenrun into, and get the better of,Clark.
I seeParker takingfifth over Dom Forys, who famously did not place in the Pennsylvania state championships his senior year of high school. But Dommore than makes up for it this year atNCAAs with a commendable sixth-place finish and All-American honors.
Dark horse Josh Alber makes it past his MAC nemesis, John Erneste, and finds his way to the 7/8 placement match, where the veteranClark will be waiting for him. Clark ends his incredible Hawkeyes career on a positive note, taking seventh, while the young Panther finishes eighth and begins preparations for next season.
Think you can make better picks? There's a very good chance you can! Here's the 133 bracket. Let me know what you think, and enjoy the championship, wrestling fans!
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Congress Seek Answers On NSA’s New Powers | The Daily Caller – Daily Caller
Posted: at 7:55 am
5526154
WASHINGTON Congresswants answers about the National Security Agencys expansion of powers in respect to sharing intercepted personal communications with 16 other federal agencies.
President Barack Obama amended an executive order last January that expanded the NSAs abilities to share intelligence.
So that was in the works for a long time. At this point I know that thats out there. Were asking questions about it. I dont think theres anything that that that issue would have to deal with the investigation, but weve asked questions about it, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes told reporters Thursday night, adding that members on the floor had asked him about it as a result of the coverage of the issue in the news.
Other intelligence committee members in their respective chambers had little to say about the effect the new rule has had. Texas Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro said he did not like to comment off the cuff on about intelligence security matters and the Senate Intelligence Committee Ranking member said he could not comment at the time.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, one of eight congressional leaders who receives exclusive intelligence information,would only say she did not believe the change in the NSAs powers caused recent leaks about sensitive information related to the Trump administration to occur.
I mean, I think that we all dont want everybody in pipeline, so were not having the benefit of information or intelligence to keep the American people safe. But I dont think that has anything to do with leaks, she said.
Texas Republican Rep. Louie Gohmert warned that reversing the NSAs expansion would be more difficult now.
Sure, that could be reversed. But its one of those things where youd be able to put you know that virus back into the little box or is it growing and spread too far, because you know its a legitimate question, Gohmert said.
He explained, Now that the intelligence community has seen what its like to spread what is supposed to be very private confidential classified wiretap information, and thats spread across 16 or 17 other federal agencies. I dont know if they would want to give that up. And even if they change the executive order, if that will be complied with.
Gohmert added, This is a very scary time for those of us who believe in a constitutional democratic republic.
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NSA Spying: We Still Don’t Know How Many Americans Are Affected … – Digital Trends
Posted: at 7:55 am
Why it matters to you
Are you curious to know just how many Americans are affected by the NSA's mass-surveillance programs. Well, the agency still isn't talking.
With the legislation that effectively legalizes the National Security Agency mass surveillance programs Prism and Upstream set to expire at the end of 2017, Congress is once again asking for numbers on how many Americans have been surveilled. Just as it has for the past six years, though, the NSA isnt playing ball.
Although most Americans only learned of the countrys large-scale spying operations after NSA whistleblowerEdward Snowden revealed them, Congress has been aware a little longer. Since 2011, several key members have been trying to find out how many Americans the NSA has collected personal information from, but theyvealways been denied, according to Ars Technica.
More:The NSA and GCHQ can see data from your phone when youre 10,000 feet in the air
The reason Congress is making a big case to have those numbers revealed this year is because, as during the Obama administration, Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) will expire on December 31. While the Trump administration is keen to see this legislation remain in place, according toThe Intercept, Congress wants the numbers to know just how effective it is and how much useless information is potentially collected from regular citizens.
The NSA says that it cant reveal them, even in top-secret briefings. Just as it did whenSen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) requested them in 2011, 2012 and 2014, it claims that by revealing how many Americans were affected, it would require identifying them. That, it claims, would mean destroying their anonymity as part of the data, thereby making their information more vulnerable.
That sort of circular logic isnt sitting well with senators, norwith privacy champion the Electronic Frontier Foundation. It is urging Congress to allow FISA to expire, thereby making the mass spying conducted by the NSA and other intelligence agencies illegal in the future.
As it stands, the NSA uses Prism to siphon mass data from popular online services like Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo, while Upstream lets it tap into the fiber cables that transmit the internet across the country and around the world.
Although the NSA and others argue that such technologies are vital in helping protect Americans, many have argued that mass surveillance breaches the Constitution and undermines the idea of a free and democratic society.
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New Hampshire House Passes Bill Banning Support for Warrantless Federal Spying Programs – Tenth Amendment Center (blog)
Posted: at 7:54 am
CONCORD, N.H. (Mar.10, 2017) The New Hampshire House has passeda bill that would ban material support or resources towarrantless federal spying.The vote was 199-153.
Rep. Neal Kurk and Rep. Carol McGuire, along with two cosponsors, introduced House Bill 171 (HB171). The legislation would prohibit the state or its political subdivisions from assisting a federal agency in the collection of electronic data without a warrant.
Neither the state nor its political subdivisions shall assist, participate with, or provide material support or resources to enable or facilitate a federal agency in the collection or use of a persons electronic data or metadata, without that persons informed consent, or without a warrant issued by a judge and based upon probable cause that particularly describes the person, place, or thing to be searched or seized, or without acting in accordance with a judicially-recognized exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment to the Unites States Constitution.
On Feb. 15, the full House gave HB171 initial approval with an ought to pass recommendation by a 199-153 vote. It was then referredback to the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee. Under House rules, bills with certain subject matter are required to go through a 2nd committee for approval, however the Chair has the discretion to decline that 2nd referral.
Today, House House Criminal Justice and Public Safety ChairDavidWelch(r) exercised that prerogative per House Rule 46(f), and the original Feb. 15 vote stands as final House passage of the bill.
PRACTICAL EFFECT
Because the federal government relies heavily on partnerships and information sharing with state and local law enforcement agencies, passage of HB171 wouldhinder warrantless surveillance in the state. For instance, if the feds wanted to engage in mass surveillance on specific groups or political organizations in New Hampshire, it would have to proceed without state or local assistance. That would likely prove problematic.
The feds share and tap into vast amounts of information gathered at the state and local level through a programknown as the information sharing environment or ISE. This includes monitoring phone calls, emails, web browsing history and text messages, all with no warrant, no probable cause, and without the people even knowing it.
According to its website, the ISE provides analysts, operators, and investigators with information needed to enhance national security. These analysts, operators, and investigators have mission needs to collaborate and share information with each other and with private sector partners and our foreign allies. In other words, ISE serves as a conduit for the sharing of information gathered without a warrant.
State and local law enforcement agencies regularly providesurveillance data to the federal government through ISE and Fusion Centers. They collect and store information from cell-site simulators (AKA stingrays), automated license plate readers (ALPRs), drones, facial recognition systems, and even smart or advanced power meters in homes.
Passage of HB171 would set the stage to end this sharing of warrantless information with the federal government. It would also prohibit state and local agencies from actively assisting in warrantless surveillance operations.
By including a prohibition on participation in the illegal collection and use of electronic data and metadata by the state, HB171would also prohibit what NSA former Chief Technical Director William Binney called the countrys greatest threat since the Civil War.
The bill would ban the state from obtaining or making use of electronic data or metadata obtained by the NSA without a warrant.
Reuters revealed the extent of such NSA data sharing with state and local law enforcement in an August 2013 article. According to documents obtained by the news agency, the NSA passes information to police through a formerly secret DEA unit known Special Operations Divisions and the cases rarely involve national security issues. Almost all of the information involves regular criminal investigations, not terror-related investigations.
In other words, not only does the NSA collect and store this data. using it to build profiles, the agency encourages state and local law enforcement to violate the Fourth Amendment by making use of this information in their day-to-day investigations.
This is the most threatening situation to our constitutional republic since the Civil War, Binney said.
NSA FACILITIES
The original definition of material support or resources included providing tangible support such as money, goods, and materials and also less concrete support, such as personnel and training. Section 805 of the PATRIOT Act expanded the definition to include expert advice or assistance.
Practically-speaking, the legislation would almost certainly stop the NSA from ever setting up a new facility in New Hampshire.
In 2006, the agency maxed out the Baltimore-area power grid, creating the potential, as the Baltimore Sun reported, for a virtual shutdown of the agency. Since then, the NSA aggressively expanded in states like Utah, Texas, Georgia and elsewhere, generally focusing on locations that can provide cheap and plentiful resources like water and power.
For instance, analysts estimate the NSA data storage facility in Bluffdale, Utah, will use 46 million gallons of water every day to cool its massive computers. The city supplies this water based on a contract it entered into with the spy agency. The state could turn of the water by voiding the contract, or refusing to renew it. No water would effectively mean no NSA facility.
What will stop the NSA from expanding in other states? Bills like HB171. By passing this legislation, New Hampshire would become much less attractive for the NSA because it would not be able to access state or local water or power supplies. If enough states step up and pass the Fourth Amendment Protection act, we can literally box them in and shut them down.
LEGAL BASIS
HB171 rests on a well-established legal principle known as the anti-commandeering doctrine. Simply put, the federal government cannot force states to help implement or enforce any federal act or program. Theanti-commandeering doctrineis based primarily on four Supreme Court cases dating back to 1842. Printz v. US serves as the cornerstone.
We held in New York that Congress cannot compel the States to enact or enforce a federal regulatory program. Today we hold that Congress cannot circumvent that prohibition by conscripting the States officers directly. The Federal Government may neither issue directives requiring the States to address particular problems, nor command the States officers, or those of their political subdivisions, to administer or enforce a federal regulatory program. It matters not whether policy making is involved, and no case by case weighing of the burdens or benefits is necessary; such commands are fundamentally incompatible with our constitutional system of dual sovereignty.
NEXT UP
California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a limited version of the Fourth Amendment Protection Act in 2014. The law prohibits state cooperation when a federal agency requests state assistance in data collection if there exists actual knowledge that the request constitutes an illegal or unconstitutional collection of electronically stored information. Although that law will need further steps to put into practical effect, it set a strong foundation that HB171 would expand on for New Hampshire.
The legislation willnow move to the Senate for further consideration.
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Your Help Urgently Needed to Protect the Second Amendment Rights of America’s Veterans! – NRA ILA
Posted: at 7:54 am
Americas veterans helped protect us. Now we can ensure they themselves are not arbitrarily denied the right of self-protection.
On Wednesday, the House Committee on Veterans Affairs marked up and favorably reported H.R. 1181, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act, sponsored by Committee Chairman Phil Roe, M.D. (R-TN). The bill now moves to the full U.S. House, where a vote could come as early as next week.
H.R. 1181 is meant to deal with a longstanding and shameful practice by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), which administers disability benefits for veterans and their families. Under this practice, anyone who the VA declares incompetent to manage his or her own benefits and assigns a fiduciary is automatically reported to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) as a prohibited mental defective. The person is then subject to a lifetime ban on the acquisition and possession of firearms, unless he or she successfully petitions for relief from disabilities.
As of Dec. 31, 2016, the NICS contained 167,815 active records submitted by the VA under this program.
The VAs program suffers from a number of legal and practical issues.
Above all, it does not attempt to identify which beneficiaries have mental illnesses that actually cause them to be a danger to themselves or others. Rather, it merely targets individuals who have been identified as needing help to manage their benefits. Yet there is no scientific or empirical evidence to support the idea that needing help managing money is the same thing as being too dangerous or irresponsible to safely handle a firearm.
Second, the statute on which the reporting is based prohibits firearm acquisition or possession by persons who have been adjudicated as a mental defective. While these terms are not defined in the statute, the purely bureaucratic process by which a fiduciary is assigned which in most cases does not involve a hearing, much less a judge is hardly the sort of procedure most would consider an adjudication. And the only issue at stake is whether the person needs help with his or her finances. It does not affect rights other than under the Second Amendment, including the right to form legally binding contracts, vote, hold office, serve on a jury, etc.
While the VA does theoretically make relief available after the fact, few of the beneficiaries affected by the program have the means to negotiate the highly bureaucratic process, which may also require expensive mental health evaluations and legal aid. The procedure also turns due process on its head by forcing the petitioner to prove by a high standard of evidence that he or she is not a risk to public safety, a premise the government was never required to establish in the original adjudication.
The VAs own records showed that as of April 2015, only 3% of relief petitions had been granted. And the decision makers considering the petitions are the same sorts of VA bureaucrats who made the original fiduciary determination, not an independent judge or magistrate.
H.R. 1181 would change all this by ensuring that the VA could only report a beneficiary to NICS as prohibited mental defective if a judicial authority had already made a finding that the person is a danger to self or others. This would ensure due process, as well protect those who simply need help managing their finances but are not at increased risk of committing a dangerous act with a firearm.
President Trump signed a measure into law last month that prevented the Social Security Administration from going through with a plan to implement a similar reporting system for certain of its Disability or Supplementary Security Income beneficiaries assigned representative payees.
And the House had passed a bill to halt VAs program in 2011, which eventually died in the Senate.
Action to stop this unconscionable infringement of veterans Second Amendment Rights is long overdue.
Please contact your congressional representative NOW and respectfully ask him or her to vote YES on H.R. 1181, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act. You can call the Congressional Switchboard at 202-224-3121 and ask to be connected to your representatives office, or you can send an email using our Take Action tool.
Americas veterans answered the call to serve for the good of all. Now is your chance to ensure their rights are protected. Dont delay. Please call or write your representative today.
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Your Help Urgently Needed to Protect the Second Amendment Rights of America's Veterans! - NRA ILA
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FYI , AR-15 Rifles Are No Longer Included in Second Amendment – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
Posted: at 7:54 am
AmmoLand Shooting Sports News | FYI , AR-15 Rifles Are No Longer Included in Second Amendment AmmoLand Shooting Sports News Buckeye, AZ -(Ammoland.com)- By now you've probably heard about the Federal Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit's horrible anti-rights decision declaring that so-called assault weapons and high-capacity magazines are not protected by the Second ... |
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FYI , AR-15 Rifles Are No Longer Included in Second Amendment - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
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Pennsylvania Court: Automatic Knives not Protected by Second Amendment – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
Posted: at 7:54 am
AmmoLand Shooting Sports News | Pennsylvania Court: Automatic Knives not Protected by Second Amendment AmmoLand Shooting Sports News An appeal was filed shortly after the conviction, based solely on the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The appeal did not reference Pennsylvania's state Constitution. Pennsylvania has a strong right to bear arms provision in ... |
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Second Amendment’s illogical conclusion | Letter – The Courier-Journal
Posted: at 7:54 am
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CJ Letter 2:23 p.m. ET March 10, 2017
Nuclear explosion(Photo: RomoloTavani, Getty Images/iStockphoto)
I am curious if Mr. Milby - Reader's Forum "Weapons of war protected by Second Amendment" March 8, 2017- believes that Second Amendment rights extend to nuclear weapons. If not, where does he draw the line on the spectrum of weapons between, say,rocks and anyweapons of mass destruction?In addition tonuclear bombs, are chemical weapons covered by the Second Amendment? What about lasers from satellites? Ballistic missiles? As a private citizen, I just want to know what I and my fellow citizens have a right to own and use in order to defendourselves from tyranny, government or otherwise. Or, maybe the interpretation of the Second Amendment should be more nuanced than Mr. Milby proclaims.
Christopher Rife
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Europe-Wide Raids Against Cybercrime Networks – NewsFactor Network
Posted: at 7:51 am
Child Porn Case Dropped as U.S. Refuses To Show Software code
Charges against Vancouver, Washington, teacher Jay Michaud in U.S. District Court in Seattle were dismissed Monday.
In 2015, Michaud was arrested and accused of downloading child pornography. During the child porn investigation, the FBI allowed a secret child porn website on the largely anonymous Tor network to run for two weeks while it tried to identify users by hacking into their computers.
The child porn website, called Playpen, operated on Tor, which provides users anonymity by routing their communications through numerous computers around the globe, and it had more than 150,000 members. The Tor browser is based on Firefox. While the network is used for various reasons -- including circumventing free-speech restrictions in some parts of the world -- it has also provided sanctuary for child pornography, drug trafficking and other criminality.
After arresting Playpen's operator in Florida in early 2015, the FBI let the website continue running for two weeks while trying to identify users, a move the agency said was necessary to apprehend those posting and downloading images of children being sexually abused. Defense attorneys criticized the tactic as unethical.
A magistrate in Virginia issued a search warrant allowing the agency to deploy what it calls a "network investigative technique": code that prompted the computers that signed into Playpen to communicate back to the government certain information, including IP addresses, despite the anonymity normally afforded by Tor.
The FBI then obtained further warrants to search suspects' homes. At least 137 people were charged. Defendants have challenged the FBI's hacking on numerous grounds.
A federal judge in Washington state threw out the government's evidence against Michaud last year, saying that unless the FBI detailed the vulnerability it exploited, the man couldn't mount an effective defense.
The DOJ said previously the information is not relevant. Defendants have been offered or provided all the evidence they need, including limited source code and data streams showing what the program did, the FBI has argued.
Michaud's lawyer, Colin Fieman, said in an email to The Associated Press that they are relieved and grateful his case is done but that many unanswered questions remain about the FBI's investigation, known as Operation Pacifier.
"Mr. Michaud maintained his innocence from the outset, and the dismissal is a result of the FBI's overreaching and misuse of its computer hacking capabilities, including its operation of the world's largest child pornography web site and attacks on computers in over 120 countries," Fieman said. "It remains to be seen whether the FBI will ever be held fully accountable for those aspects of its investigation that put core privacy rights at risk and violated common standards of decency when it comes to how law enforcement agencies do their job."
A school district spokeswoman says Michaud hasn't returned to work, KGV-TV reported.
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New Hampshire House reverses stance on cryptocurrency money transmitter status – Brave New Coin
Posted: at 7:50 am
New Hampshire is home to the largest community of freedom advocates in the US, and possibly the largest Bitcoin-using community as well. The New Hampshire State House of Representatives recently passed an important bill for local Bitcoin businesses. The legislation unwinds a bill created two years prior, an ominous-sounding Bill, HB 666, which defined bitcoin and cryptocurrency-using businesses as money transmitter services.
The law forced at least one Bitcoin business from accepting customers in the state, and has kept new businesses from starting up in the otherwise bitcoin-friendly stronghold. The popular bitcoin and altcoin exchange Poloniex, based in Washington DC, discontinued services in October 2016, due to changes in New Hampshires regulatory statute as it applies to cryptocurrency.
Other Bitcoin exchanges, including Coinbase, CoinEx and Circle registered with the state Banking Department. They also handle US dollars, whereas Poloniex only deals in cryptocurrencies.
- Poloniex
Poloniexs CEO Michael Demopoulos later testified to a Committee studying Cryptocurrency regulation in New Hampshire, and began discussions with the New Hampshire Banking Department soon thereafter.
LBRY CEO Jeremy Kauffman joined the conversation when the New Hampshire governor appointed him as an industry expert on virtual currencies. [New Hampshire] already has the highest per-capita Bitcoin usage, Kauffman said soon after the new bill was approved, And very soon it is likely to have the most favorable regulatory climate. New Hampshire is passing legislation to completely deregulate cryptocurrencies.
Ian Freeman has also been working to overturn the legislation. How did this happen in a state with the largest concentration of bitcoin enthusiasts per capita? asked Freeman, who worked with a couple of the State Representatives to help clarify cryptocurrency usage. Honestly, we were caught off-guard, but now thats all changed.
Freeman is the Program Director of LRN.FM and hosts the popular libertarian podcast, Free Talk Live. He founded the the Free Keene blog in late 2006, after moving to New Hampshire as part of the Free State Project. The activist and talk show host had been attending and recording sessions of the state house committee formed in the wake of the Poloniex withdraw to study cryptocurrency.
- Ian Freeman, Program Director of LRN.FM and host of Free Talk Live
The bill [HB 436] as filed wasnt quite what wed hoped for, Freeman said on the Free Keene blog. It created a new definition and exemption for virtual currency in the statutes, but still left in statutes a definition and regulation for convertible virtual currency.
We explained to them that this was confusing and they should be striking the regulation for convertible virtual currency rather than creating the additional terminology, Freeman continued. You know what? They listened AND did us one better!
While the new bill removes cryptocurrencies from the category of money transmitter services, and therefore no longer requires licensing, it still has to pass the State Senate before becoming law. The commerce committee amended the bill and turned it into the best possible protection for bitcoin businesses in New Hampshire! The amended bill completely exempts from the money transmitter statutes, Freeman concluded.
New Hampshires legislature has had more than its share of run-ins with Bitcoin. In January 2016, the same House of Representatives voted 264 to 74 to kill a separate bill allowing citizens in New Hampshire to pay their taxes and other state fees using bitcoin.
The New Hampshire State Treasurer would have been forced to not only accept the cryptocurrency if the bill had passed, but also to choose a bitcoin payment processing firm to convert the transactions by January 2017. The bill faced serious opposition and has not been re-introduced since.
- New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration
More and more states have been considering following New Hampshires early lead into Bitcoin regulation. Both Hawaii and Washington State recently introduce new rules. Bitfinex has since changed the terms of service on their website to exclude customers from Washington State.
Two weeks ago Coinbase announced that it will cease offering services in Hawaii. The state now requires local Bitcoin businesses to get a license and hold 100% reserves for each customer.
The Hawaii Division of Financial Institutions demanded that customer reserves be held in fiat currency. Although Coinbase securely maintains 100% of all customer funds on behalf of our customers, the company said in their announcement, it is impractical, costly, and inefficient for us to establish a redundant reserve of fiat currency over and above customer digital currency secured on our platform.
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New Hampshire House reverses stance on cryptocurrency money transmitter status - Brave New Coin
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