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Is the World Ready to Fight Quantum Hacking to Save the Internet? – Analytics Insight

Explore the race to save encryption from Quantum hacking and how to protect from invasion

Quantum computers could become far more powerful than digital computers. Quantum computers have limitless potential. But it is still in its infancy, incredibly expensive, and fraught with problems.it will help hackers get access to private data by breaking encryption. quantum computing is useful but, quantum hacking is dangerous. Quantum Hacking is the use of quantum computers for malicious purposes. even the most secure data encryption algorithms also will be hacked and its all the fault of quantum computers.

Quantum hacking is performed by modern cryptographic strategies which often use private and public keys to encrypt and decrypt data through a mathematical equation. Not all cryptography will be vulnerable to quantum computing, but many current forms will. Currently, quantum computers are weak, it will only be a few decades or so until more powerful quantum machines are widely available. One study suggests that encryption using a 2048-bit key could be cracked in 8 hours using a quantum computer. An expert says that the threat of a nation-state adversary getting a large quantum computer and being able to access your information is real.

Quantum Hacking can break cryptographic protocols which have a private key, they need just a number to decrypt encrypted data. ability to break encryption is the worst fear about quantum computers. Currently, no action is developed but developed quantum-safe encryption its a technical solution to this problem. strong password authentication never stood a chance against a hacker with access to a quantum computer. Even the super-secure blockchain technology wont be enough to protect against a quantum computer.

A Company in San Diego, California has a lot of computer geniuses, and experienced people who worked in the U.S. Governments cyber warfare, all are spending their time trying to stay one step ahead of the criminals by anticipating their move. Even though its moves are years away. If a hacker were to try to intercept these computer bits, the sensor beam would detect it.

In 2015, the US National Security Agency announced that crypto systems are vulnerable, and it advised US businesses and the government to replace them. The next year, NIST invited computer scientists globally to submit candidate post-quantum algorithms to a process in which the agency would test their quality, with the help of the entire crypto community. and then publish official versions of those algorithms. Similar organizations in other countries, from France to China, will make their announcements.

Microsoft, Google, and IBM companies are investing heavily in quantum computing academic research. International governments are providing some anti-hacking solutions, using quantum technology to help some government agencies and supersized corporations protect their passwords. Its hard to crack and unbreakable.

Multiple actors are working on the problems of quantum security. China has made a disproportionate investment in quantum security. This could lead to a possibility in which Chinese-sponsored companies are the only ones with access to tools that prevent quantum hacking.

Technology comes to a future problem; todays security systems wouldnt be able to provide much protection at all. And hackers are always eager to mess up great new technology. Hackers may soon be able to expose all digital communications by using advanced quantum computers. A new form of cryptography would stop hackers.

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SysMoore: The Next 10 Years, The Next 1,000X In Performance – The Next Platform

What is the most important product that comes out of the semiconductor industry?

Here is a hint: It is inherent to the market, but enhanced by a positively reinforcing feedback loop of history. Here is another hint: You cant hold it in your hand, like an A0 stepping of a device, and you cant point at it like a foundry with the most advanced manufacturing processes created from $15 billion to $20 billion worth of concrete, steel, and wafer etching equipment and a whole lotta people in bunny suits.

No, the most important thing that the semiconductor industry delivers and has consistently delivered for over five decades is optimism. And unlike a lot of chips these days, there is no shortage of it despite the serious challenges that the industry is facing.

By optimism we do not mean the kind of future poisoning that company founders and chief executives sometimes succumb to when they spend too much time in the future that is not yet here without seeing the consequences of the technologies they are in the process of inventing. And we certainly do not mean the zeal that others exhibit when they think that information technology can solve all of our problems. It cant, and it often makes some things worse as it is making other things better, as all technologies have done since humanity first picked up a stick. It is the arm that swings the stick both ways to plant a seed or to crush a skull. So it is with the Internet, social media, artificial intelligence, and so on.

The optimism that we are speaking of in the semiconductor industry is usually stripped bare of such consequences, with the benefits all emphasized and the drawbacks mostly ignored except possibly when considering the aspects of climate change and how compute, storage, and networking are an increasingly large part of our lives, and something that represents an ever-enlargening portion of business and personal budgets and consequently an embiggening part of the energy consumption on the planet. Semiconductor makers turn this drawback more computers requiring more power and cooling into a cause for driving innovation as hard as it can be done.

The irony is that we will need some of the most power-hungry systems the world has ever seen to simulate the conditions that will prove how climate change will affect us collectively and here is the important bit individually. How will you feel when you can drill down into a simulation, for a modest fee of course, and see a digital twin of your home being destroyed by a predicted hurricane two years from now? Or an earthquake, or a fire, or a tsunami? What is true of the Earth simulation will be as true for your body simulation and your consequent healthcare.

If the metaverse means anything, it means using HPC and AI to make general concepts extremely personal. We dont know that the world was hell bent to adopt the 24 hour news cycle and extreme entertainment optionality of cable television, or the Web, or social networks, but what we do know is that most of us ended up on these platforms anyway. And what seems clear is that immersive, simulated experiences are going to be normalized, are going to be a tool in all aspects of our lives, and that the race is on to develop the technologies that will get us there.

It would be hard to find someone more genuine and more optimistic about the future of the semiconductor industry than Aart de Geus, co-founder, chief executive officer, and chairman of electronic design automation tool maker Synopsys, who gave the opening keynote at the ISSCC 2022 chip conference, which was hosted online this week. We read the paper that de Geus presented and watched the keynote as well, and will do our best to summarize the tour de force in semiconductor history and prognostication as we enter in what de Geus called the SysMoore Era the confluence of Moores Law ambitions in transistor design and now packaging coupled to systemic complexity that together will bring about a 1,000X increase in compute across devices and systems of all kinds and lead to a smart everything world.

Here is de Geus showing the well familiar exponential plot of the transistor density of CPUs, starting with the Intel 4004 in 1971 and running all the way out five decades later to the Intel Ponte Vecchio GPU complex, with 47 chiplets lashing together 100 billion transistors, and the Cerebras WSE 2 wafer-scale processor, with 2.5 trillion transistors.

Thats the very familiar part of the SysMoore Era, of course. The Sys part needs a little explaining, but it is something that we have all been wrestling with in our next platforms. Moores Law improvements of 2X transistor density are taking bigger leaps to stay on track and are not yielding a 2X lowering in the cost of the transistors. This latter bit is what actually drives the semiconductor industry (aside from optimism), and we are now entering a time when the cost of transistors could rise a little with each generation, which is why we are resorting to chiplets and advanced packaging to glue them together side-by-side with 2.5D interposers or stacking them up in 3D fashion with vias or in many cases, a mix of the two approaches. Chiplets are smaller and have higher yield, but there is complexity and cost in the 2.5D and 3D packaging. The consensus, excepting Cerebras, is that this chiplet approach will yield the best tech-onomic results, to use a term from de Geus.

With SysMoore, we are moving from system on chip designs to system of chips designs, illustrated below, to bend up the semiconductor innovation curve that has been dominated by Moores Law for so long (with some help from Dennard scaling until 2000 or so, of course). Like this:

The one thing that is not on the charts that de Geus showed in the keynote, and that we want to inject as an idea, is that compute engines and other kinds of ASICsare definitely going to get more expensive even if the cost of packing up chiplets or building wafer-scale systems does not consume all of the benefits from higher yield that comes from using gangs of smaller chips or adding lots of redundancy into a circuit and never cutting it up.

By necessity, as the industry co-designs hardware and software together to wring the most performance per dollar per watt out of a system, we will move away from the volume economics of mass manufacturing. Up until now, a compute engine or network ASIC might have hundreds of thousands to millions of units, driving up yields over time and driving down manufacturing cost per unit. But in this SysMoore Era, volumes for any given semiconductor complex will go down because they are not general purpose, like the X86 processor in servers and PCs or the Arm system on chip was for smartphones and tablet have both been for the past decade and a half. If volumes per type of device go down by an order of magnitude, and the industry needs to make more types devices, this will put upward pressure on unit costs, too.

So what is the answer to these perplexing dilemmas that the semiconductor industry is facing? Artificial intelligence augmenting human expertise in designing these future system of chips complexes, of course. And it is interesting that the pattern that evolved to create machine learning for data analytics is being repeated in chip design.

EDA is relatively simple conceptually, explains de Geus. If you can capture data, you may be able to model it. If you can model it, maybe you can simulate. If you can simulate, maybe you can analyze. If you can analyze, maybe you can optimize. And if you can optimize, maybe you can automate. Actually, lets not forget the best automation is IP reuse it is the fastest, most efficient kind. Now its interesting to observe this because if you look at the bottom layers, what we have been doing in our field really for 50 years, is we have built digital twins of the thing that we are still building. And if we now say were going to deliver to our customers and the world that 1,000X more capability in chips, the notion of Metaverse some call it Omniverse, Neoverse, whatever you want to call it is becoming extremely powerful because it is a digital view of the world as a simulation of it.

The complexity that comprises a modern chip complex, full of chiplets and packaging, is mind-numbing and the pressure to create the most efficient implementation, across its many possible variations, is what is driving the next level of AI-assisted automation. We are moving from computer-aided design, where a workstation helped a chip designer, to electronic design automation, where synthesis of logic and the placing and routing of that logic and its memories and interconnects, is done by tools such as those supplied by Synopsys, to what we would call AIDA, short for Artificial Intelligence Design Automation, and making us think of Ada Lovelace, of course, the programmer on the Difference Engine from Charles Babbage.

This chart captures the scale of complexity in an interesting way, since the bottom two have been automated by computers IBMs Deep Blue using brute force algorithms to play chess and Googles AlphaGo using AI reinforcement learning to play Go.

Google has been using lessons learned from AlphaGo to do placement and routing of logic blocks on chips, as we reported two years ago from ISSCC 2020, and Synposys is embedding AI in all parts of its tool stack in something it is calling Design Space Optimization, or DSO. A chess match has a large number of possible moves, and Go has orders of magnitude more, but both are win-loss algorithms. Not so for route and placement of logic blocks or the possible ways to glue compute complexes together from myriad parts. These are not zero sum algorithms, but merely better or worse options, like going to the eye doctor and sitting behind that annoying machine with all the blasted lenses.

The possible combinations of logic elements and interconnects is a very large data space, and will itself require an immense amount of computation to add AI to the design stack. The amount has been increasing on a log scale since the first CAD tools became widely used:

But the good news is that the productivity gains from chip design tools have been growing at a log scale, too. Which means what you can do with one person and one workstation designing a chip is amazing here in the 2020s. And will very likely be downright amazing in the 2030s, if the vision of de Geus and his competitors comes to pass.

In the chart above, the Fusion block is significant, says de Geus, and it is implemented in something called the Fusion Compiler in the Synopsys toolchain, and this is the foundation for the next step, which is DSO. Fusion plugs all of these different tools together to share data as designers optimize a chip for power, performance, and area or PPA, in the lingo. These different tools work together, but they also fight, and they can be made to provide more optimal results than using the tools in a serial manner, as this shows:

The data shown above is an average of more than 1,000 chip designs, spanning from 40 nanometers down to 3 nanometers. With DSO, machine learning is embedded in all of the individual elements of the Fusion Compiler, and output from simulations is used to drive machine learning training that in turn is used to drive designs. The way we conceive of this and de Geus did not say this is that the more the Synopsys tools design chips and examine options in the design space, the faster it will learn what works and what does not and the better it will be at showing human chip designers how to push their designs.

Lets show some examples of how the early stages of DSO works with the Synopsys tools, beginning with a real microcontroller from a real customer:

De Geus highlighted the important parts of the design, with a baseline of the prior design and the target of the new design. A team of people were set loose on the problem using the Synopsys tools, and you can see that they beat the customer target on both power and timing by a little bit. Call it a day. But then Synopsys fired up the Fusion Compiler and its DSO AI extensions. Just using the DSO extensions to Fusion pushed the power draw down a lot and to the left a little, and then once AI trained algorithms were kicked on, the power was pushed down even further. You can see the banana curve for the DSO and DSO AI simulations, which allows designers to trade off power and timing on the chip along those curves.

Here is another design run that was done for an actual CPU as it was being designed a year ago:

A team of experts took months to balance out the power leakage versus the timing in the CPU design. The DSO extensions to the Fusion Compiler pushed it way over to the left and down a little, and when the AI trained models of the tool were switched on, a new set of power leakage and timing options were shown to be possible. A single engineer did the DSO design compared to a team using the Synopsys tools, and that single engineer was able to get a design that burned from 9 percent to 13 percent less power and had 30 percent less power leakage with anywhere from 2X to 5X faster time to design completion.

There were many more examples in the keynote of such advances after an injection of AI into the tools. But here is the thing, and de Geus emphasized this a number of times. The cumulative nature of these advances are not additive, but multiplicative. They will amplify much more than the percents of improvement on many different design vectors might imply. But it is more than that, according to de Geus.

The hand that develops the computer on which EDA is written can help develop the next computer to write better EDA, and so on, de Geus explained at the end of his talk. That circle has brought about exponential achievements. So often we say that success is the sum of our efforts. No, its not. It is the product of our efforts. A single zero, and we all sink. Great collaboration, and we all soar.

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Ann Coulter: Have at ’em, Antifa! The new free speech – Marshall News Messenger

In 2017, as fear and loathing of Donald Trump seized the nation, a U.S. mayor got a four-star resort to cancel a conservative conference by threatening to withdraw police and fire protection.

With all the media blubbering about attempts to DESTROY our democracy and violations of constitutional norms, its remarkable that this Howitzer blast to the First Amendment has received barely any attention, much less the front-page coverage it deserves, not even from the conservative press.

The banned conference, you see, was about immigration.

Wow, our elites really dont want Americans thinking about immigration! (Remember, kids: Its a right-wing conspiracy theory and racist, to boot! to think that liberals are using mass immigration to change the country.)

The sponsor of the conference was VDARE, a long-standing immigration website espousing ideas that are basically identical to Trumps 2016 immigration promises both before he made them and after he broke them. The main difference is that the arguments on VDARE are expressed in proper English, and the writers actually believe what they say.

As the 2016 election demonstrated, these ideas are quite popular with a certain segment of voters. Not everyone, just enough to elect a president no one thought could ever be elected, who was loathed by the media, and who was outspent 2-to-1.

Named for Virginia Dare, the first European born on U.S soil, VDARE promotes the novel idea that U.S. immigration policy should benefit Americans. (Obviously, that includes white, Hispanic, Asian and Black Americans whom, by the way, mass immigration hurts the most.) Naturally, therefore, it has been designated a white supremacist website by the countrys largest hate group, the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Four months after VDARE signed a contract to hold its annual conference at the Cheyenne Mountain Resort in Colorado Springs, the local mayor, John Suthers nominee for the Liz Cheney Profiles in Courage Award! issued a public announcement accusing VDARE of engaging in hate speech and urging the resort to cancel (OK, whatever), but also vowing to deny any support or resources to this event if the resort honored the contract.

Hey antifa, in case anybodys interested if you firebomb this conference, we wont be sending any firetrucks. And if you want to attack the attendees, there wont be any police showing up to stop you.

The next day, the resort canceled the contract and, per the agreement, paid a kill fee. VDARE sued the mayor, alleging a violation of its First Amendment rights.

Heres the frightening part: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit (one Obama judge and two G.W. Bush judges; one dissent) found for the mayor on the grounds that its possible that the resort canceled NOT because the mayor announced that there would be no police or fire protection, but because of ... CHARLOTTESVILLE!

Which VDARE had nothing to do with. (Again, VDARE is an immigration website, not a street protest organization.)

If the Supreme Court does not agree to take up this case and brutally slap down the 10th Circuit, free speech will be officially limited to speech acceptable to antifa, working hand-in-hand with liberal mayors and governors.

I have long maintained that the left never truly cared about free speech. They merely pretended to in order to protect the people they actually supported: communists and pornographers. That was the sort of speech that used to get banned.

But today, the speech that gets banned includes statements like: There are only two genders; Maybe we shouldnt defund the police; Affirmative action is unjust; Masks dont work No they work! No, they dont work! Also, apparently, speech asserting that mass immigration has not been an unalloyed good for our country, contributing to our prosperity, cohesiveness and happiness.

One of Justice William Brennans hallowed quotes is: [T]he government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable. Those stirring words were in defense of flag-burning. And heres a famous one from Justice William O. Douglas: Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions. It is the one un-American act that could most easily defeat us. That was about communists.

But ever since conservative speech became the target of censors, liberals adore governmental suppression of speech. (The one, lone exception that proves the rule: Nadine Strossen, former president of the ACLU and author of HATE: Why We Should Resist It With Free Speech, Not Censorship.)

As the 10th Circuit explained, conservative speakers should have no expectation of police and fire protection. Specifically, the majority opinion declared: What VDARE wanted, it had no right to demand municipal resources to monitor a private entitys private event. (Monitor? How about That the city not refuse to send police officers and firetrucks?)

So I guess we can forget that sonorous horse crap about the First Amendment protecting ideas that society finds ... offensive or disagreeable. The lefts new model is a public-private partnership to prohibit speech unacceptable to Joy Ann Reid.

Henceforth, blue states and cities will be free to shut down conservative speakers, MAGA meetings, Daughters of the American Revolution gatherings or anti-mask protests. Some mayor will claim that the conservatives are threatening to engage in hate speech and deny them police and fire protection (then sit back and wait for the accolades from the media).

With midterms approaching, conservatives are feeling giddy. Everything the left holds dear open borders, racial equity, Defund the Police, critical race theory is toxic to voters. Woo hoo! Were winning!

Not so fast, patriots. While you fist-pump, liberals are busy institutionalizing the censorship of conservatives throughout the nation. You want to talk about institutional bias? How about the systemic bias against any ideas unacceptable to progressives being baked into American society?

If the Supreme Court fails to overturn the outrageous opinion in VDARE Foundation v. City of Colorado Springs, free speechs gravestone will read: Bedrock principle of a nation; 1791-2022.

Ann Coulter is a syndicated columnist.

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Danehy: Tom Will Miss P.J. O’Rourke, A Conservative With A Sense Of Humor – Tucson Weekly

The first time I read something by P.J. ORourke, I found myselflaughing out loud. What a rare and delightfulexperience that is, to stumble across something so well-written and yet, at the sametime, so full of that great essence of humanity, humor! I kept on reading and laughingout loud, not caring about whether I was in aroom by myself or in a library full of RussianLiterature grad students boning up the nightbefore the big Dostoyevsky midterm. I remember thinking to myself, My God!A conservative with a sense of humor! Thisguy was like a unicorn with a spare unicorngrowing out of his butt.

P.J. ORourke died last week of complications from lung cancer at the age of 74, nodoubt a victim of the omnipresent cigarettesor the jointsor, later in life, cigars thesize of diseased bratwursts. He leaves behinda treasure trove of wit and style with a rightward lean that makes it all the more uniqueand worthy of our attention.

Like H.L. Mencken, in whose hallowedfootsteps he followed, he was the master ofacerbic one-liners. To wit (sorry):

Always read something that will makeyou look good if you die in the middle of it.

-If you think health care is expensive now, just wait until its free.

A hat should be taken off when you greet a lady and left off for the rest of your life. Nothing looks more stupid than a hat.

"Its better to spend money like theres no tomorrow than to spend tonight like theres no money. He wrote in college and later became editor of National Lampoon, which was really funny for a time and then became an unfunny caricature of itself, sort of like what happened to Lenny Bruce and the recently departed Mort Sahl. After quitting the magazine, he became a freelancer and then a semi-regular for Rolling Stone magazine, where he mostly covered absurd foreign happenings.

During one of his foreign travels, he once observed, Each American embassy comes with two permanent features: a giant anti-American demonstration and a giant line for American visas.

Also at Rolling Stone, he would do those wonderful year-end wrap-ups, the kind I first came across in Esquire and a tradition carried on by everyone from Dave Barry to our own Jim Nintzel and Leo Banks. One of my all-time favorites of his observations was Armenians and Azerbaijanis in Stepanakert, capital of the Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous region, rioted over much needed spelling reform in the Soviet Union.

He wrote books and essays and even wrote a movie for Rodney Dangerfield (Easy Money). In his later years, he became a semi-regular on NPR. He said that his whole purpose in life was to offend everyone who listens to NPR, no matter what position they take on anything.

The best thing about him was that he took dead aim at the ridiculousness of politics and the pathetic, self-aggrandizing practitioners thereof. He was a conservative with a distinct Libertarian bent, but he said, The Republicans are the party that says that government doesnt work and then they get elected and prove it.

His words from long ago ring loudly true today. He wrote, To mistrust science and deny the validity of scientific method is to resign your job as a human. Youd better go look for work as a plant or wild animal.

Some idiot on the radio said that P.J. ORourkes mantle is now passed to Tucker Carlson. I wanted to wretch. ORourke was insightful and intelligent and witty. Carlson is mean and petty and about as funny as a truckload of body parts.

It has been suggested that Carlson has tried to copy ORourkes look (khakis with a blazer), but even that reminds me of an ORourke-ism. He once said, The weirder youre going to behave, the more normal you should look. It works in reverse, too. When I see a kid with three or four rings in his nose, I know there is absolutely nothing extraordinary about that person.

His use of humor and self-deprecation easily set him apart from the pedantry and snottiness of people like Charles Krauthammer and Ann Coulter. In fact, he often went after Coulters fake-ass conservatism.

Perhaps his finest hour came in 2016 when he absolutely refused to jump on the Trump bandwagon. He eviscerated Trump and openly endorsed Hillary Clinton, whom he called the second-worst thing that could happen to this country.

He then added, Shes wrong about absolutely everything, but shes wrong within normal parameters.

As for Donald Trump, he said, This man just cannot be President. Theyve got this button, you know, in the briefcase. Hes going to find it.

I have to believe that if he had not been facing death himself, P.J. ORourke would have savaged the anti-vaxxers, the Me!-Me!-Me! responsibility shirkers, the mask-less morons, and all of their enabling right-wing media liars.

I had always hoped to meet him. I think I would have mentioned that he and I shared the same birthday, perhaps suggesting that there was some kind of kinship there. He would have silenced me by pointing out that it is also the birthday for that philandering wimp, Prince Charles. RIP, P.J.

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Dear Littler: Is paying employees with cryptocurrency an option? – Littler Mendelson PC

Dear Littler: We are a multi-state employer with operations in multiple technology hubs, including Silicon Valley and Austin. Over the past several months we have heard from multiple applicants and employees about whether the company offers cryptocurrency as an option for compensation. While I am generally aware of what cryptocurrency is, I do not have enough understanding to make an informed decision. Is paying cryptocurrency as a component of compensation an option?

Confused on Crypto

Dear Confused on Crypto,

While cryptocurrency has been around since at least 2009, it has become more mainstream recently and you are seeing that widespread recognition with your applicants and employees. For the uninitiated, cryptocurrency is a digital peer-to-peer payment system secured and verified through private codes housed on an encrypted public ledger called blockchain, without the use of banks or any other financial institute. We are seeing an uptick in questions from employers about using cryptocurrency as a signifier in a competitive labor market. While there are mayors,1professional athletes,2and at least one country3that are embracing cryptocurrency, we recommend a cautious approach to using cryptocurrency as wages for your employees.

The paramount question is whether it is legal to pay wages to employees in the form of cryptocurrency. Under federal law (Fair Labor Standards Act), wages must be paid in cash or negotiable instrument payable at par. 29 C.F.R. 531.27. Multiple states, including California, require that wages be paid in cash or negotiable form of U.S. currency. Cal. Lab. Code 212 (prohibiting payment in scrip, coupon, cards, or other thing redeemable, in merchandise or purporting to be payable or redeemable otherwise than in money). Cryptocurrency is neither cash nor a negotiable instrument in the United States, and is not backed by the government or other legal entity. Therefore, use of cryptocurrency for base wages (hourly or salary) is not recommended. While there may be an argument that some forms of cryptocurrency are readily exchangeable for U.S. currency, the legal system is still catching up to the use of cryptocurrency and has not issued any binding precedent to allow for the practice of payment of wages in cryptocurrency. Therefore, we recommend the use of traditional U.S. currency for payment of all wages to ensure compliance with federal, state, and local minimum wage requirements, overtime statutes, and salary thresholds for exemption classifications.

A separate issue related to paying any form of wages in cryptocurrency is the associated transaction fees for selling cryptocurrency, exchanging cryptocurrency to U.S. dollars, or using a cryptocurrency exchange card. Many states, including California, expressly require that wages be paid without discount. Even without an express statute prohibiting the practice, providing wages in a manner that cannot be utilized without incurring a fee effectively lowers the employees take-home pay and may compound any employee frustrations if the value of the cryptocurrency decreases. Certainly, a number of retailers are accepting some cryptocurrencies, but until employees can pay their rent, mortgage, utilities, and other essentials in cryptocurrency, there are risks associated with paying wages handcuffed with transaction fees.

Considerations for non-exempt employees further complicate matters. Given the inherent nature of value fluctuations with cryptocurrency, the appropriate regular rate of pay for overtime, paid sick time, meal and rest break premiums, or reporting time pay would be a constantly moving target and may be difficult to determine. Any unpaid time or historical time/pay adjustments would require not only a recalculation based on the value of the cryptocurrency at the exact time of the adjustment, but also a recalculation of all other regular rate of pay payments in that time period. Assuming the calculations could be done correctly, there would be a significant administrative burden and cost for your payroll department and/or external payroll provider.

In addition to wage and hour risks, there are accounting and tax reporting difficulties that you should discuss with a tax professional or tax attorney.

Practical Recommendations

We understand that using cryptocurrency may be viewed as a differentiator in attracting or retaining talent, so if you are considering using cryptocurrency, we have the following recommendations:

The bottom line, Confused on Crypto, is that until our wage and hour laws catch up with the technology, traditional forms of wage payment, particularly for non-exempt employees and for base pay, should continue to be the norm in most instances. As with most issues, please run any proposed changes to your methods of payment by wage and hour counsel before implementing them.

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Digital Currency Vs Cryptocurrency Whats The Difference? – CNBCTV18

Ever since Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, during her 2022 Budget speech, announced that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) would be rolling out its digital currency, there has been a lot of chatter about what exactly a digital currency is and how will it differ from cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Dogecoin and other popular tokens.

If youve been wondering how digital currency will differ from cryptocurrency then this guide will help you know everything about these two forms of currencies. Lets begin by defining them first.

Digital Currency is the digital format of fiat currency that you carry around in your wallet or withdraw from an ATM. Its the same currency that is backed by an authority, the Reserve Bank of India in case of Indian currency, and can be exchanged for actual currency if and when it is scheduled to be launched in 2023.

Cryptocurrency is not backed by a central figure but derives its purchasing power from its community of users. Technically, they are pieces of code created by mining that are managed through a digital ledger called as blockchain to ensure transparency at each stage of its journey. Although coins like Bitcoin and Ethereum have many uses when it comes to NFTs and the upcoming metaverse, they cannot be utilised outside of blockchain as these are digital assets that can be traded but not used as a legal tender in India.

Now that we know about them, here are five major differences between digital currency and cryptocurrency.

1 - Centralisation

The biggest difference digital currency and cryptocurrency is the question of who has control over the monetary value of your coins. In case of digital currency, it would be the Reserve Bank in India or Fed in the US along with the government, banks and other middlemen, all of whom would have to come together to set the value of the currency in question. This is why you would read of the Turkish Liras depreciation by over 40% in 2021 or the collapse of financial systems in Myanmar and Afghanistan once the central authority is left powerless.

Cryptocurrency, on the other hand, follows a transparent procedure right from mining to ownership to transfer of crypto assets. Its value is also independent of central banking authorities and regional geopolitical problems.

2 - Encryption

Once again, cryptocurrency trumps digital currency when it comes to encryption. Digital currencies are essentially e-cash that doesnt need any special indigenous methods to encrypt them. Cryptocurrencies, on the other hand, are stored on a blockchain and the coins themselves are stored in wallets that offer a much higher degree of cyber security.

3 Transparency

The biggest advocates for cryptocurrency will cite the transparency afforded by the platform. Every detail regarding cryptocurrency transactions is in the public domain thanks to the presence of a decentralised ledger that records all the blockchain details. With digital currency, only the banking authorities along with the sender and receiver are involved in the transaction involved. In case of conflict over any asset, cryptocurrencies are easier to manage as the records are there for everyone involved to see, whereas digital currencies could involve bureaucratic hurdles and other problems in case of any conflict. This decentralisation of data is, in fact, one of the driving forces leading to the adoption of cryptocurrencies across the world.

4 Stability

Digital currency is usually stable and also relatively easy to manage, thanks to having wider acceptance in the global market. Digital currency, being the fiat version of approved currency, is traded and understood by a vast majority of the population. This, in turn, makes it more stable when compared to a new technology such as cryptocurrency that has started gaining attraction but isnt mainstream yet. Added to that, the price volatility of cryptocurrencies is another aspect that hampers its stability even as new tech and features mean that it is slowly but steadily gaining traction all around.

5 Legality

Most countries, including India, are now taking a look at the legality and acceptance of cryptocurrencies. Since these arent backed by any governing body, most traditional frameworks dont assign any value to them. However, the swift rise in the number of depositors and various use cases of blockchain today and the upcoming metaverse, where the only method of payment remains cryptocurrencies, means that some sort of discussion around the legality of cryptocurrencies is bound to happen sooner than later. For now, countries around the world are firm in backing their own fiat currencies.

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Cryptocurrency Company Fined $100M In Novel Action Concerning Registration Obligations For Crypto Lending Product – JD Supra

On Monday, February 14, 2022, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged cryptocurrency lending company BlockFi Lending LLC (BlockFi) with failing to register the offers and sales of its retail crypto lending product, violating the registration provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940, and making certain material misrepresentations regarding the level of risk associated with its product. To settle the charges, BlockFi agreed to pay a $50 million penalty, cease its unregistered offers and sales of the lending productBlockFi Interest Accounts (BIAs)and bring its business within the provisions of the Investment Company Act within 60 days. BlockFi also agreed to pay an additional $50 million in fines to 32 different states to settle similar charges.

Under Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act of 1933 (the Securities Act), any securities that are offered or sold must be registered with the SEC unless they qualify for an exemption. And under Sections 3(a)(2) and 7(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Investment Company Act), issuers of securities that are (1) engaged in the busines of investing, reinvesting, owning, holding, or trading in securities and owning investment securities that (2) have a value in excess of 40% of the issuers assets must register as an investment company with the SEC.

According to the SECs order, beginning in March 2019, BlockFi offered and sold BIAs to the public without registering them as required, but prior to the order, there was arguably some degree of open question as to how crypto lending products such as BIAs would be treated. The SEC applied the longstanding tests set forth in Reves v. Ernst & Young, 494 U.S. 56, 6466 (1990), and SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293, 301 (1946), and concluded that the BIAs were securities both because they were notes and also because BlockFi offered and sold the BIAs as investment contracts. Critical to the findings were that, at least as alleged by the SEC, through BIAs, investors lent crypto assets to BlockFi in exchange for the companys promise to provide a variable monthly interest payment; investors in the BIAs had a reasonable expectation of obtaining a future profit from BlockFis efforts in managing the BIAs based on BlockFis statements about how it would generate the yield to pay BIA investors interest; and investors had a reasonable expectation that BlockFi would use the invested crypto assets in BlockFis lending and principal investing activity, and investors would share in the resulting profits in the form of interest payments resulting from BlockFis efforts. Because the SEC found that the BIAs were securities, the order found that BlockFi operated for more than 18 months as an unregistered investment company because it issued securities and also held more than 40 percent of its total assets, excluding cash, in investment securities, including loans of crypto assets to institutional borrowers.

The size of the SEC fine was likely influenced by the fact that the SEC also found that BlockFi had made certain material misrepresentations regarding the level of risk associated with BIAs. In particular, the SEC alleged that BlockFi made a statement in multiple website posts that its institutional loans were typically over-collateralized, when in fact, most institutional loans were not. And while the SEC did not allege that this in fact led to losses, and specifically noted that these misstatements were the result of an operational oversight, the SEC likely concluded that the risk of misstatement was increased by the lack of registration.

The SECs action against BlockFi is the first of its kind, though not the first sign that the SEC is focused on crypto lending products; it has previously been reported that at least one other crypto company withdrew a contemplated crypto lending product after receiving similar inquiries from the SEC. Commenting on the Order, SEC Chair Gary Gensler noted:

Todays settlement makes clear that crypto markets must comply with time-tested securities laws, such as the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940. It further demonstrates the Commissions willingness to work with crypto platforms to determine how they can come into compliance with those laws.

The SECs latest action is another reminder that its existing rules can apply to any number of scenarios in the rapidly developing fintech space generally, and crypto currency trading specifically, and that the SEC (and other regulators) will particularly apply scrutiny whenever retail customers are impacted.

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SC asks Centre to clear its stand on legality of cryptocurrency trade in India – The Tribune India

PTI

New Delhi, February 25

The Supreme Court on Friday asked the Centre to make its stand clear on whether cryptocurrency trade involving Bitcoin or any other such currencies is legal in India or not.

A bench of Justices DY Chandrachud and Surya Kant, which was dealing with a case related to the quashing of multiple FIRs registered against one Ajay Bhardwaj and others for allegedly duping investors across India by inducing them to trade in Bitcoin and assuring them high returns, said that the accused were booked for their involvement in Bitcoin trade.

The bench told Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati, appearing for Centre and Enforcement Directorate, We want you to tell us on affidavit whether cryptocurrency trade involving Bitcoin or any other such currencies is legal in India or not? What is the regime for Bitcoin trade at present?

Bhati said she would file an affidavit on the legality of the cryptocurrency trade and added that the accused, who is seeking quashing of proceedings, has not been cooperating with the investigating agency after being granted bail by the court in 2019.

She said that 47 FIRs have been registered against the accused of duping people across the country and the issue involves a trade of 87,000 Bitcoin worth Rs 20,000 crore.

The bench ordered, We direct the petitioner to appear before the investigating officer of Directorate of Enforcement within two days and thereafter cooperate with the investigation as and when called upon to do so. The investigating officer shall file a fresh status report before this court on or before four weeks, indicating the progress of the investigation and whether there has been any cooperation on the part of the accused. List after four weeks.

The bench said the ad-interim order restraining the arrest of Bhardwaj shall continue till the next date of listing of the matter.

At the outset, Advocate Shoeb Alam, appearing for one of FIR informant Vipin Kohli, said that he has filed an application seeking cancellation of bail granted to Bhardwaj on the ground that he has not disclosed true facts of the matter to this court and concealed material in his writ petition thereby misleading this court.

The advocate said that Bhardwaj has deliberately suppressed the fact that Chief Metropolitan Magistrate (CMM), Patiala House Court through court notice had issued a proclamation requiring the appearance of the accused under section 82 of Criminal Procedure Code.

These material facts were not disclosed to the court when the bail was granted to him. Hence, we are seeking cancellation of bail granted to the petitioner, Alam submitted.

He said that after the grant of bail to the accused, the complainant was attacked in a hotel, which is on CCTV cameras.

The bench asked whether the grant of bail to other accused has been challenged to which the advocate replied in affirmative.

Bhati said that even the co-accused, who have also been granted bail are also not cooperating in the matter.

The bench noted in its order that a status report has been filed in July 2021 by the Assistant Director of Enforcement Directorate and Bhati has submitted that the accused has not cooperated in the course of the investigation.

It noted that there is an allegation of collection of 87,000 Bitcoins (valued at approximately Rs 20,000 crores) and prayer is being made that the ad-interim order granting an interim stay of arrest be vacated.

The bench made it clear that it is testing the petitioner Bhardwaj and asked him to cooperate in the investigation and for now, it is not vacating the protection from arrest.

The allegation against Bhardwaj is that he along with other co-accused, who are mostly his family members, had induced investors to invest in Bitcoin through a multi-level marketing scheme on false promises of securing to the investors a 10 per cent assured monthly returns for 18 months that is total of 180 percent profit.

It was alleged that due to the dishonest inducement, the customers invested their Bitcoins in the said business, but after making an investment they did not get the assured returns.

The FIRs also said that to escape from inevitable punishment under the law, Bhardwaj and other co-accused persons collectively, in a dishonest manner and with the deliberate intention of destroying all the evidence shut down the fake gainbitcoin website through which investors made the investment.

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Third Party Debt Orders and Cryptocurrency – Lexology

InIon Science Ltd and Duncan Johns v Persons Unknown, Binance Holdings Limited, Payward Limited and Mirriam Corp LP, the first-ever third party debt order was granted in relation to cryptocurrency.

Third party debt orders are generally a method of enforcement for judgements involving money, as opposed to cryptocurrencies. The granting of the third party debt order in this case to the value of 2.9 million - enabled victims of crypto-related fraud to recover what is rightfully theirs.

The Case

The case was brought after the first claimant was the victim of a cyber-fraud in 2020. This involved the persons unknown transferring a large amount of the cryptocurrency Bitcoin out of the first claimants account.

The claimants successfully applied for a proprietary injunction, a freezing injunction and disclosure orders against various cryptocurrency exchanges, including Binance Holdings and Payward Ltd (a subsidiary of Kraken Exchange). The disclosure order led to Payward Ltd disclosing that Mirriam Corp LP was the holder of the now-frozen account that had been used to carry out the fraud. The disclosure also showed there were amounts of both cash and cryptocurrency in that account. The claimants obtained a judgement for 2,935,204.30 against Mirriam Corp after it failed to respond to the claim.

The High Court then made an interim third party debt order relating to a debt owed by Payward to Mirriam Corp. A third-party debt order allows whoever is owed money to take what is owed from whoever currently has the money. In this case, Payward owed money to Mirriam Corp which was its customer that could be used to repay the 2,935,204.30 that Miriam Corp owed the claimants under the judgement.

Payward had no objection to the third party debt order, but Mirriam Corp did not respond to the application (just as it had not responded to the original claim for 2,935,204.30). Despite Mirriam Corps lack of response, the High Court made the third party debt order final. The judge was satisfied that there was a debt payable from Payward to Mirriam Corp and that Ion Science and Duncan Johns were entitled to have the interim order made final. The courts ruling ensured the claimants could recover what they had lost in the fraud.

Other Aspects of the Case

While this case was notable for the use of the third party debt order, it was also significant for a number of other reasons.

It was believed to have been the first time the Commercial Court had heard a fraud case involving an initial coin offering - where finance is raised through the creation of cryptocurrency. It was also the first time that a court had considered the lex situs (location) of Bitcoin to establish jurisdiction.

The case was also the first example of a court granting permission to serve a free-standing Bankers Trust order out of the jurisdiction against cryptocurrency exchanges. Such an order compels a third party (in this case a cryptocurrency exchange) to disclose certain information to the applicant. In AA v Persons Unknown, it was doubted whether this could be done but the Ion Science case confirmed it could be. This is set to be of great use to anyone who is trying to trace and recover assets that they have lost to crypto-related fraud.

Conclusion

The successful application for the third party debt order in this case can be seen as proof that fraud using virtual assets such as Bitcoin is not necessarily a safe haven for bad actors. It demonstrated that assets can be traced and followed no matter what form they take. This new asset class cannot now be viewed as a refuge for fraud and money laundering within the UK financial system.

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Cryptocurrency scam costs woman and father nearly $400,000 – NewsChannel5.com

MARSHALL COUNTY, Tenn. (WTVF) A Tennessee woman and her father are out nearly $400,000 after a cryptocurrency scam that started on an encounter with a popular dating app.

After 24-year-old Niki Hutchinson's mom died in 2020, she inherited her mom's house, which she sold, splitting the money with her father, Melvin.

Then, Hutchinson says, she joined the dating app Hinge, where she met someone calling themselves "Hao."

During their conversations, Hutchinson asked about Hao's hobbies. He rattled off a long list, before ending with "Cryptocurrency."

"He was very casual about it too," Hutchinson said.

After more conversation, Hao told Hutchinson, "if you want to invest in cryptocurrency, I can teach you. This is my field. I can be your teacher."

Hutchinson then set up an account on a legitimate cryptocurrency site, but then Hao told her to transfer her money to what she was told was a "cryptocurrency exchange platform." Over time, Hutchinson invested her money from the sale of the house, eventually encouraging her dad to invest too, after the account started showing what Hutchinson thought were big profits.

"It actually got over a million dollars, and it was $1.2 million when we said its time to cash out," said Hutchinson's dad, Melvin.

But the two had actually been putting money in a digital wallet, controlled by the scammers.

They told Hutchinson they'd need to pay a nearly $400,000 "tax bill" to get their money out. They didn't pay it, but in the end, Hutchinson and her dad had paid the scammers nearly $400,000 already.

But instead of reacting in anger, Hutchinson's dad turned to love.

"She was just crying, 'Dad, I'm so sorry, this is a scam.' All I could do is hug her and tell her I love her and say it's going to be ok," Melvin said.

Now the family wants to warn others of this quickly growing cryptocurrency scam, while getting back on their own feet.

Hutchinson says part of the money from the sale of her mom's house was meant to go toward her grandmother's care at a Cool Springs assisted living center. Hutchinson has started a GoFundMe fundraiser for support.

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