Bobby, thanks for all you do in this realm.
Questions:
- What have been the biggest legal challenges to setting up and running a Bitcoin Exchange in China?
- If you did it over, what would you do differently?
- You have your hands full with the exchange... What would you like to see the community focused on most aggressively? Adoption? Wallet software? Promotion? What say you.
- If you were to start another exchange in a new country, which country would you choose? Which country is a plus to start a Bitcoin Exchange in your opinion?
- Besides running an exchange are you doing anything else to further the Bitcoin Movement?
- What are your greatest fears or worries against Bitcoin?
Hi,
Thanks for your questions.
With the current regulatory climate in China, there are no specific legal challenges in setting up a bitcoin exchange. We are still in the “pre-regulatory” age for bitcoin exchanges in China.
The industry and our company evolved organically. For this reason, it’s not clear how we would have done things differently if we could do it over again.
The most important task for the bitcoin community is to get the word out, and to help everyone better understand bitcoin and the full potential of a decentralized digital currency, and how its frictionless payment system is actually faster, better, and cheaper than the current options. More education will naturally bring in more adoption, which would lead to success.
I would only start a new bitcoin exchange in a jurisdiction that I live in myself, and I will openly share this with any new entrepreneur who wants to do that. The reason is simple: running a bitcoin exchange is extremely difficult and time consuming, so it’s very hard to run it from abroad. The demand is everywhere, in every single continent that is inhabited.
Even though BTCC started as a bitcoin exchange in 2011, that is no longer our sole mission. Today, we offer a variety of products, servicing the bitcoin ecosystem, including wallets, merchant processing, mining pool, and blockchain technologies like Forever and BlockPriority.
My greatest fear and worry for bitcoin is for people to pre-judge it without understanding what it truly is. There’s the complex technical system that underpins bitcoin, and there’s also the very complicated use-cases and impact on society. In other words, even for many of the old hands in the bitcoin community, it took a long time for us to fully understand and grasp the revolutionary nature of bitcoin. In comparison, 20 years ago, understanding the full potential of the Internet was quite a bit easier.