Thailand's Central Bank Outlaws Bitcoin, Though Enforcement Should Be Interesting


There's some uncertaintly about how official this new ban actually is, but the Bank of Thailand has reportedly outlawed any use of Bitcoin in the country. The "huh?" factor comes from the news being announced by a Bitcoin exchange, and not by the central bank itself. For now, Thailand appears to be first country to outlaw the cybercurrency. Whether the country's government can make that ban stick is another issue, since Bitcoin was designed to be anonymous and as un-bannable as possible.
From Huffington Post:
The Bank of Thailand declared Bitcoins illegal on Monday, making it the first country to ban the virtual currency.
According to an online statement by Bitcoin Co. Ltd., which facilitates the trading of the currency, the ruling came after months of meetings between the company and Thailand's central bank. Thailand's Foreign Exchange Administration and Policy Department ultimately decided on the ban "due to lack of existing applicable laws, capital controls and the fact that Bitcoin straddles multiple financial facets."
Essentially all activities involving Bitcoins have been rendered illegal, including buying and selling Bitcoins, using Bitcoins to buy or sell goods online, and sending or receiving Bitcoins from outside the country.
As mentioned, the ban was announced on the Website of Bitcoin Co. Ltd., in a statement which reads, in part:
Initially the Bank of Thailand had bypassed the company's money exchange license on the basis that Bitcoin was not a currency, however the company was invited back, on July 29th, 2013, to participant in a conference about how Bitcoin works in general, and business operations of Bitcoin Co. Ltd. The conference was held with about 15 members of the Bank of Thailand in attendance. During this conference, managing director of Bitcoin Co. Ltd. gave a presentation about the workings of Bitcoin, the benefits of Bitcoin, insight into the company's operations and future implications of Bitcoin.
At the conclusion of the meeting senior members of the Foreign Exchange Administration and Policy Department advised that due to lack of existing applicable laws, capital controls and the fact that Bitcoin straddles multiple financial facets the following Bitcoin activities are illegal in Thailand:
- Buying Bitcoins
- Selling Bitcoins
- Buying any goods or services in exchange for Bitcoins
- Selling any goods or services for Bitcoins
- Sending Bitcoins to anyone located outside of Thailand
- Receiving Bitcoins from anyone located outside of Thailand
Based on such a broad and encompassing advisement, Bitcoin Co. Ltd. therefore has no choice but to suspend operations until such as time that the laws in Thailand are updated to account for the existance of Bitcoin. The Bank of Thailand has said they will further consider the issue, but did not give any specific timeline.
Some online commenters have pointed out that the Bank of Thailand has yet to confirm the announcement, though that may simply be a function of news traveling at the speed of bureaucracy. Likewise, some commenters question the bank's authority to impose such a ban, though government agencies have been known to…umm…stretch their wings, from time to time.
Assuming the ban is legitimate, Kavitha A. Davidson points out at the Huffington Post that "the actual enforcement of the ban seems virtually impossible, as the use Bitcoins is inherently anonymous." Douglas Carswell is more colorful in the pages of London's Daily Telegraph, writing, "this week's King Canute prize for attempting to hold back the tide goes to the government of Thailand."
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BAN IT.
I didn't RTFA. Did it mention that Bitcoin and the Thai currency, the Baht, both use the same symbol?
According to Wikipedia, the Baht uses one slash through a capitol B, while Bitcoin uses two. So it's somewhat different.
You what else Thailand outlaws?
Kratom, and posting bad things about the King, on blogs?
Any production of The King and I?
Hookers over the age of 12 or with only one set of genitalia?
Using the word "know" in a sentence?
Apparently this is not actually true. The CB hasn't shut any Thai BTC traders down and its statement was basically saying that it is going to make rules for BTC or some such. Confused at the moment.
http://qz.com/110164/thailands.....-it-seems/
Don't people know to double check HuffPo's sources yet?
Isn't there currently an American in prison there for posting insults about that King? I'm not sure what happened to that case. I bet Obama called up the King and got the guy released, being the champion of liberty that he is.
You mean Joe Gordon (aka Lerpong Wichaikhammat)?
He served two years and is out now.
And he didn't even post anything himself. His blog only linked to a Thai translation of a biography of the king that the government doesn't like.
And didn't this alleged crime, take place while he was in the United States?
Our president is a fucking pussy. I would have called up those shitbags and told them release him now or we cut all diplomatic relations with your country.
Yep. The Thai lese-majesty claims worldwide jurisdiction.
Then where would we place our CIA black sites?
If you want to know where BitCoin is headed, read up on Liberty Dollars (who got "clearance" from the Treasury Dept) and the Liberty Reserve (who got publicly and criminally charged with "money laundering" because they allowed their users a modicum of privacy).
This isn't hard to predict.
Who, exactly, are they going to prosecute? And how, exactly, are they going to shut it down? I don't see how Bitcoin is in any practical way analogous to either situation.
lol, thats pretty funny when you think about it.
http://www.Anon-Top.tk
No! No Bitcoin! You use Bhatcoin only!
To the Bahtmint!
"The Bank of Thailand has reportedly outlawed any use of Bitcoin in the country."
I understand prostitution is still illegal in Bangkok, too.
So is abortion, and yet Planed Parenthood operates in the country with a Royal Warrant.
As we ex-pats used to throw up our hands and say, "TIT*"!
*This is Thailand!
Right before you kick an ambassador into an open pit?
If the US government with its vast array of information can't find the dipshit that bombed Boston before he does it, how the hell does Turkey expect to find bitcoin users?
Woops, Thailand. Oh well, same difference really.
Motivation...?
Or lack thereof ?
until I looked at the paycheck of $4647, I didn't believe that my sister had been truley bringing home money in their spare time at there computar.. there mums best friend haz done this for less than 22 months and as of now paid for the morgage on their appartment and bourt a brand new Nissan GT-R:. I went here, http://www.Day34.com
Don't you know that the link provides no evidence it is a scam and only casts weak aspersions against BTC? Of course not. You don't know anything.
He IS a card carrying member of the Know Nothing Party...