The Future of Bitcoins in European Igaming Depends on Taxation

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

The future of bitcoins in European igaming depends on taxation by Matthias Spitz, Dr Gregor Fuehrich and Jessica Maier, LL.M. hen Calvin Ayre shared his payment – and thereby preserved Europe from perspective on future trends gambling away a technology which could be massively a ecting the industry at last year’s changing our view on the online sector. Malta iGaming Seminar, the is article will rst shed some light on the nature W audience was packed. Many of bitcoins, provide a short analysis of the recent European gaming lawyers, however, could tell a thing CJEU judgment and then enlarge upon the more or two about how taxation has sti ed the development “technical” implications of the VAT exemption. Matthias Spitz of the online gambling sector in their respective countries. Indeed, a couple of European tax On the nature of bitcoins authorities held that bitcoin trading is not VAT Let’s start at the very beginning. Since their alleged exempt under the VAT Directive1. As a consequence, invention by Satoshi Nakamoto in 20082, bitcoins bitcoin trading would have been subject to a “double have become increasingly popular for investors or taxation” under VAT – rst, upon the sale of a service as a form of payment in e-commerce and the online and, second, when exchanging the earned bitcoins for environment in general. is also includes the online hard currency. Obviously, this would have rendered gambling sector where SatoshiDice was one of the bitcoin trading totally unattractive for any earliest betting sites and which sees an increasing Dr Gregor Fuehrich e-commerce and online gambling service. Mr number of bitcoin casinos opening on the internet Hedqvist, who owns Bitcoin.se and intended to nowadays. Entire bitcoin casino solutions are available provide services consisting of the exchange of through so ware providers like So swiss. Even in the traditional currency for bitcoin and vice versa through “real world” bitcoins have gained some momentum, his web portal, brought a corresponding dispute with e.g. in the UK where in 2014 the rst bitcoin cash the Swedish tax authorities before court which then machine was launched in Shoreditch, London3. referred the case to the Court of Justice of the EU (the But what are they? e answer to this question is ‘CJEU’). In a judgment of 22 October 2015, the CJEU not straightforward. solved the dispute in favour of the bitcoin businesses Jessica Maier in declaring that trading bitcoins is VAT-exempt 1. Council Directive 2006/112/EC. 2. Nakamoto, Satoshi, “Bitcoin P2P e-cash paper”, 31 October 2008, “Bitcoin: under art. 135(1)e VAT Directive because it should A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System“, 24 May 2009, not be treated di erently to more traditional means of https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf. 14 | European Gaming Lawyer | Spring Issue | 2016 One would say bitcoins are a million were lost then. Despite each bitcoin bitcoins in a similar fashion to other “cryptocurrency”, i.e. an electronically being dividable into 100.000.000 units and it nancial products in the banking sector, created currency which only exists in only ever being possible to have a maximum however, at the same time did not allow the virtual world, does not have physical of 24.000.000 bitcoins in the system in total, bitcoins to be de ned as a functional presence and is run on an open, peer-to- i.e. despite bitcoins having to be considered currency or as electronic money. As a peer so ware. Unlike traditional bank rather stable in terms of in ation, critics result, the BaFin came to the conclusion transactions cryptocurrencies do not require still nd there to be nancial risks for users that transactions involving bitcoins were a central payments processor or bank. given the uctuation in the value of bitcoins, not to be taxed in the same way as other ey therefore not only allow for prompt, which in parts can be quite considerable. nancial products, but – since bitcoin immediate (international) transactions but Ultimately one would probably come transactions were to be understood as a also avoid the transaction fees which banks to the conclusion: bitcoins are a form kind of swap or exchange – both, the giving would usually charge. of payment and may be an attractive and the later sale/purchase of bitcoins One would to explain that Bitcoins can opportunity for investments. were each to be considered subject to VAT. be “mined”, i.e. created, by users solving However, the question of what bitcoins E ectively, bitcoins were therefore stuck in CPU-intensive cryptographic tasks and really are heavily depends on how bitcoin the middle of sort of being quali ed as a that the bitcoins created through mining transactions and investments are treated nancial product in terms of regulation but are then transferred to a so-called “wallet” in terms of taxation, as the quali cation of at the same time being subject to a highly where the addresses and keys necessary bitcoin transactions from a tax viewpoint unattractive double taxation. for the veri cation of the transaction (and, acts as the “make or break” with regard to In the UK, the exchange of bitcoins into consequently, for receiving the money) their success in the market. a currency was considered not taxable are stored. A point of concern in the legal at all. In a policy paper of March 2014, debate on bitcoins, speci cally in the Dispute on VAT treatment of bitcoins HM Revenue & Customs provisionally context on gambling, is that these addresses, within the EU concluded that bitcoin transactions are although they verify the transaction do Before the judgement of 22 October exempt from VAT under art. 135 para. 1 not provide insight into who the bitcoins 2015, the VAT quali cation of and the d) of the VAT Directive as falling within actually belong to and consequently bitcoin applicability of VAT exemption rules on the definition of ‘transactions, including transactions involve a money laundering bitcoins was unclear, and there was no negotiation, concerning deposit and risk. Another point of criticism raised in uniform opinion across the EU. current accounts, payments, transfers, the context of bitcoins is that bitcoins may In Germany, the legal assessment of debts, cheques and other negotiable be lost or stolen. Reference is o en made to bitcoin transactions was predominated by instruments’5. the bankruptcy declared in 2014 by Mount the assessment provided by the Federal In a subsequent parliamentary inquiry of Gox, one of the then largest global bitcoin Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) May 2015, the Federal Ministry of Finance exchanges, as a result of it having become in 20134. e BaFin de ned bitcoins then stated that the British interpretation subject to hacker attacks. Allegedly bitcoins as “ nancial instruments in the form of is “not relevant and not binding for the rest in the amount of then approximately $ 473 accounting units” and suggested regulating of the Members States” and denied VAT exemption6. 3. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/10682842/UKs-fi rst-Bitcoin-cash-machine-launches-in-Shoreditch.html. All the more important in the eyes of 4. https://www.bafi n.de/SharedDocs/Veroeff entlichungen/DE/Fachartikel/2014/fa_bj_1401_bitcoins.html. critics of this legal assessment was the 5. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/revenue-and-customs-brief-9-2014-bitcoin-and-other-cryptocurrencies/revenue- and-customs-brief-9-2014-bitcoin-and-other-cryptocurrencies awaited CJEU decision in the case C-264/14 6. https://www.bundesverband-bitcoin.de/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/140512-Antwort-PStS-Meister.pdf of Mr Hedqvist. European Gaming Lawyer | Spring Issue | 2016 | 15 CJEU: Bitcoins transactions are VAT Bitcoin payments not subject to VAT taxability, unlike the later (tax-free) exempt! e question of VAT taxability rst arises exchange of bitcoins into currencies against e CJEU now ruled that transactions when bitcoins are used as payment for remuneration (see below)9. Even if two “which consist of the exchange of traditional services, such as online gambling services. supplies were to be assumed in the payment currency for units of the ‘bitcoin’ virtual As an example, the German tax authorities of the service following Germany’s Federal currency and vice versa, in return for assume that the payment of services via Ministry of Finance, the bitcoin sales payment of a sum equal to the di erence bitcoins results in two supplies, i.e. (1) should now be exempt from tax pursuant between, on the one hand, the price paid by the obvious taxable supply of the service to the judgment (art. 135 para. 1 lit. e) VAT the operator to purchase the currency and, and (2) in return the taxable supply of the Directive). on the other hand, the price at which he bitcoins. According to the Federal Ministry sells that currency to his clients, constitute the supply of services for consideration7.” e judgment clari es that this exchange “I think that Bitcoin and blockchain, the is in fact a service against remuneration where the remuneration is not equal to technology behind it, are developing the value of the exchanged bitcoins but our industry and that the application of only equal to the realized margin/spread in return for the exchange. Moreover, the this technology is going to be massive in CJEU decided that this margin is exempt from VAT, since “Article 135 para. 1 lit. e of changing how we view the whole industry.” the VAT Directive also covers the supply of services […] which consist of the exchange of traditional currencies for units of the of Finance, it is yet to be decided whether Consequences for the exchange of ‘bitcoin’ virtual currency and vice versa.” or not the restrictive opinion preceding bitcoins e CJEU thereby accepts that bitcoins fall the CJEU judgment will be amended or As mentioned above, the further question within the meaning of the above art.
Recommended publications
  • Taal Research Report

    Taal Research Report

    1 Taal Distributed Information Technologies Inc. (TAAL, TAALF, 9SQ1) February 21st, 2021 There is a lot to unpack. Let’s start with some numbers: Market Capitalization: 192.40M ($CAD) Issued & Outstanding Shares: 24,819,643 Closing Price of TAAL.CN on Friday February 19th: $7.10/share TAAL Business Descriptions From Yahoo Finance[1]: Taal Distributed Information Technologies Inc., through its subsidiaries, provides blockchain infrastructure and transactional platforms to support businesses building solutions and applications in Canada, Kazakhstan, and Cayman Island. It also engages in the developing, operating, and managing distributed computing systems for enterprise users. From the Taal website[2]: New innovation for the new economy. Mission: accelerate the adoption of the BitcoinSV vision. Vision: Disrupt how we transact with each other. Taal is a pure play on the global adoption of BitcoinSV Now you’re probably wondering what is BitcoinSV (BSV) and why you should care about it. The simple part is what it is: BitcoinSV, or Bitcoin Satoshi Vision, is the only Bitcoin today that follows Bitcoin as laid out by Satoshi Nakamoto in the Bitcoin White Paper[3]. Why should you care about BSV and in turn a pure play investment on it? Well, that’s a much longer answer. I hope you’ll stick with me as I lay out about three and a half years of research into what I hope will be the best DD (due diligence) you’ve ever read. Bitcoin Satoshi Vision (BSV) A quick overview of Bitcoin SV: • BSV has unlimited scalability. It never really hits a scale ceiling. There is no block size cap and blocks as large as 369MB containing 1.3M transactions have been mined on the BSV blockchain[4].
  • The Forking Phenomenon and the Future of Cryptocurrency in the Law

    The Forking Phenomenon and the Future of Cryptocurrency in the Law

    UIC REVIEW OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW THE FORKING PHENOMENON AND THE FUTURE OF CRYPTOCURRENCY IN THE LAW CHELSEA D. BUTTON ABSTRACT In the evolving and ever-changing world of cryptocurrency, new and exciting phenomena arise, including hard forks. Hard forks occur when two groups supporting a cryptocurrency disagree on how the code should evolve. If the changes are incompatible, the code diverges into two chains, essentially doubling the amount of each holder’s coin. Forking a coin is theoretically easy. However, maintaining a fork requires great effort and support by members of the community. This Article discusses the November 15, 2018 Bitcoin Cash hard fork and subsequent lawsuit, analyzing anti-trust, negligence, and conversion claims. Forcing de facto fiduciary duties on developers and miners fails to consider that cryptocurrency is a product, likening developers to copyright holders, and the basic premises of fiduciary law. Next, this Article examines the effect of lawsuits on crypto-communities, including legal and economic ramifications of hard forks. While developers may hold some power in cryptocurrency management, external regulations would be impractical and lead to serious ramifications. This Article proposes that developers and miners should protect themselves through contract law and public blockchain networks should be treated as pseudo-sovereigns with internal regulations, for situations such as hard forks. Cite as Chelsea D. Button, The Forking Phenomenon and The Future of Cryptocurrency in the Law, 19 UIC REV. INTELL. PROP. L. 1 (2019). THE FORKING PHENOMENON AND THE FUTURE OF CRYPTOCURRENCY IN THE LAW CHELSEA D. BUTTON I. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................ 1 II. BACKGROUND ................................................................................................................ 3 A. The Basics: What Is Cryptocurrency? ................................................................
  • 1 Nov 6Th 2019

    1 Nov 6Th 2019

    Introduction Project Overview Network Analysis Mining Ecosystem Appendix Nov 6th 2019 PROJECT RESEARCH Digital Asset Research Bitcoin SV believes its protocol best represents the original vision for Bitcoin. Specifically, this means that Bitcoin SV Alex Kern AC does not limit its block size and believes that developers have too much power relative to miners. Today, the network is [email protected] primarily used for storing metadata. BSV’s goal over the long-term is to provide usage both as a payments network and 212-293-7133 commodity data ledger (metadata storage). With its ambitious goals, Bitcoin SV is contributing to the necessary protocol Sam Doctor design experimentation in crypto. No cryptocurrency has achieved global adoption, thus the space needs projects to [email protected] continue tinkering with protocol designs to find the optimal one that can accommodate global adoption. • Bitcoin SV believes its protocol more closely reflects the original Bitcoin design than does Bitcoin Core or Bitcoin SV TL;DR Bitcoin Cash. Specifically, BSV believes BCH was wrong to add opcodes and make other changes not in the original protocol and will soon be removing its block size limit; BTC and BCH limit block sizes to ~2MB and 32MB, respectively (though BTC now technically uses a “block weight” limit) (Slide 14). The challenge for BSV will be to • Split of Bitcoin Cash (which prove that its protocol is not only the original Bitcoin design, but the best design for wide consumer and business itself came from split of Bitcoin adoption (Slide 9). Core) • Protocol design requires tradeoffs between scalability, security, and decentralization.
  • The US District Court for the Southern District of Florida Receives An

    The US District Court for the Southern District of Florida Receives An

    e-Competitions Antitrust Case Laws e-Bulletin June 2019 The US District Court for the Southern District of Florida receives an antitrust claim against bitcoin companies concerning alleged coordination in order to restrain trade (United American Corp / Bitmain) ANTICOMPETITIVE PRACTICES, FINANCIAL SERVICES, PRIVATE ENFORCEMENT, COORDINATED EFFECTS, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, INTERNET, ONLINE PLATFORMS, BIG TECH US District Court for the Southern District of Florida, United American Corp / Bitmain, Case 1:18 cv 25106-KMW, 6 December 2018 Kristian Soltes | Constantine Cannon (New York) e-Com petitions News Issue June 2019 The First Blockchain Antitrust Case. Or Is It?* Legal professionals paying close attention to the still nascent world of blockchains and cyptocurrencies are following what is considered to be the rst antitrust case involving cryptocurrencies. For enthusiasts, United American Corp. v. Bitmain, Inc. involves the self-described inventor of bitcoin on one side, the operator of bitcoin.com on the other side, the world’s largest mining pools, and the Bitcoin Cash blockchain over whose future these recognizable blockchain pioneers wrestle. The case, awaiting a Florida federal district Judge Kathleen William’s ruling on the motions to dismiss, presents a truly fascinating fact pattern but perhaps a less compelling antitrust argument. The Hash War The relevant facts stem from a disagreement over the rules governing the Bitcoin Cash cryptocurrency (BCH), which were to be decided by vote at a November 2018 scheduled update. On one side of the disagreement was a faction known as Bitcoin Cash ABC, consisting of key bitcoin players like Roger Ver, an early bitcoin entrepreneur and CEO of bitcoin.com; Kraken, a prominent U.S.-based cyptocurrency exchange; Bitmain, a manufacturer of bitcoin mining chips and operator of the largest mining pools in the world; and others.
  • Highlights This Month

    Highlights This Month

    - - MARKET COMMENTARY By Rob Edel, CFA HIGHLIGHTS THIS MONTH Economists’ Crystal Ball: A Prediction for 2018. The domestic economy and why growth stocks remain hot. The risks associated with an inverted yield curve. The Fed carefully navigates markets as they move to regulate monetary policy. The U.S. Tax Reform: How does it impact the markets? Are fast-growing “disruptive” companies the new norm or a fad? Let’s talk Bitcoin and Blockchain. Is this a Bitcoin bubble? THE NICOLA WEALTH MANAGEMENT PORTFOLIO Returns for the NWM Core Portfolio Fund were up 1.2% for the month of November. This fund is managed using similar weights as our model portfolio and is comprised entirely of NWM Pooled Funds and Limited Partnerships. Actual client returns will vary depending on specific client situations and asset mixes. Both the Canadian and U.S. yield curves continued their year-long flattening trends last month, with the spread between 2 and 10-year Canada’s narrowing nine basis points to 0.45% and 2 and 10-year U.S. treasury spreads declining five basis points to 0.63%. Short rates in both Canada and the U.S. continue to drift higher but long rates remain stubbornly low. For the month, the NWM Bond Fund was up 0.4%, a good result in a tough interest rate environment. The NWM High Yield Bond Fund was flat in November, compared to -0.3% for the Bank of America Merrill Lynch U.S. High Yield Index. The high yield market was down over 2% at mid-month, but post-U.S.
  • The Satoshi Affair Andrew O’Hagan on the Many Lives of Satoshi Nakamoto the Raid Ten Men Raided a House in Gordon, a North Shore Suburb of Sydney, at 1.30 P.M

    The Satoshi Affair Andrew O’Hagan on the Many Lives of Satoshi Nakamoto the Raid Ten Men Raided a House in Gordon, a North Shore Suburb of Sydney, at 1.30 P.M

    The Satoshi Affair Andrew O’Hagan on the many lives of Satoshi Nakamoto The Raid Ten men raided a house in Gordon, a north shore suburb of Sydney, at 1.30 p.m. on Wednesday, 9 December 2015. Some of the federal agents wore shirts that said ‘Computer Forensics’; one carried a search warrant issued under the Australian Crimes Act 1914. They were looking for a man named Craig Steven Wright, who lived with his wife, Ramona, at 43 St Johns Avenue. The warrant was issued at the behest of the Australian Taxation Office. Wright, a computer scientist and businessman, headed a group of companies associated with cryptocurrency and online security. As one set of agents scoured his kitchen cupboards and emptied out his garage, another entered his main company headquarters at 32 Delhi Road in North Ryde. They were looking for ‘originals or copies’ of material held on hard drives and computers; they wanted bank statements, mobile phone records, research papers and photographs. The warrant listed dozens of companies whose papers were to be scrutinised, and 32 individuals, some with alternative names, or alternative spellings. The name ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ appeared sixth from the bottom of the list. Some of the neighbours say the Wrights were a little distant. She was friendly but he was weird – to one neighbour he was ‘Cold-Shoulder Craig’ – and their landlord wondered why they needed so much extra power: Wright had what appeared to be a whole room full of generators at the back of the property. This fed a rack of computers that he called his ‘toys’, but the real computer, on which he’d spent a lot of money, was nearly nine thousand miles away in Panama.
  • Bitcoin and the Trust Problem: Is Bitcoin Adoption Accelerated by the Abuse of Trust?

    Bitcoin and the Trust Problem: Is Bitcoin Adoption Accelerated by the Abuse of Trust?

    THESIS Karo Zagorus 2020 8E06 CD72 ACE6 1F00 2 Art by Koridian Lionell 8E06 CD72 ACE6 1F00 3 Bitcoin and the Trust Problem: Is Bitcoin adoption accelerated by the abuse of trust? Examining how our trust is being breached and abused, how we are used for rent-seeking, how governments impoverish us through the use of Monetary Nationalism and examining whether Bitcoin is the solution to restore individual freedom and limit the reach of government. Art by Made X Forever Location Redacted Faculty of Arts Applied Social Sciences Department Karo Zagorus Dr. Miklos N. MA Student Associate Professor 2020 Released under CC BY 4.0 license 8E06 CD72 ACE6 1F00 4 Table of Contents DISCLAIMER ................................................................................................................................... 6 LETTER OF ACKNOWLEDGEMENT ............................................................................................ 7 FOREWORD ...................................................................................................................................... 9 I. INTRODUCTION TO THE DISSOLUTION OF TRUST ................................................ 11 A. THE UNBANKING OF TRUST ............................................................................................... 16 i. The Unbanking of America ............................................................................................ 20 B. THE ERA OF POST-TRUTH ................................................................................................. 22 C.
  • Taal Ye 2019

    Taal Ye 2019

    TAAL Distributed Information Technologies Inc. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION & ANALYSIS For the year ended December 31, 2019 Date of Report: May 26, 2020 The following management’s discussion and analysis (“MD&A”) for TAAL DistriButed Information Technologies Inc. (“TAAL” or the “Company”) should Be read together with the accompanying annual audited consolidated financial statements and the notes thereto for the year ended DecemBer 31, 2019, which are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”). Readers should also refer to the Company’s audited financial statements and accompanying notes for the fourteen-months ended DecemBer 31, 2018 and the Company’s accompanying MD&A dated April 30, 2019. All amounts are stated in Canadian dollars unless otherwise indicated. In this MD&A, unless the context reQuires otherwise, all references to “we”, “us” “our”, “TAAL”, and the “Company” refer to TAAL DistriButed Information Technologies Inc., including its suBsidiaries, and all references to “Management” refer to the directors and executive officers of the Company. Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Information This MD&A includes certain statements that may Be deemed forward-looking statements and information, as defined in applicaBle securities laws (collectively referred to herein as “forward-looking statements”) and relate to the Company’s future performance or to future events. All statements other than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements. Often, But not always, forward-looking statements can Be identified By the use of words such as “plans”, “expects”, “is expected”, “Budget”, “scheduled”, “estimates”, “continues”, forecasts”, “intends”, “aims”, “anticipates”, “will”, “projects”, or “Believes” or variations (including negative variations) of such words and phrases, or statements that certain actions, events, results or conditions “may”, “could”, “would”, “might” or “will” Be taken, occur or Be achieved.
  • Blockchain and Fintech

    Blockchain and Fintech

    Blockchain Technology Piero Scaruffi, 2018 https://www.scaruffi.com/singular/ppt/blockchain.pdf Lesson #1 • Introduction to blockchain introduction and why it is a disruptive technology 1 The Historical and Sociological Context • Society is an organized system of transactions • You do things with others, and these things involve transactions: assets move from you to others and from others to you • The invention of software allowed people to digitize information and communication, and to carry out invisible transactions (e-commerce existed before the Internet!) • The invention of the World-wide Web allowed ordinary people to post, retrieve and search for information, and to shop online 2 The Historical and Sociological Context • But there was always a intermediary (IBM, Microsoft, Amazon, eBay, Google, Facebook, PayPal…): the intermediary controls which transactions can be made and makes money out of the transactions • The intermediary is always insecure: you give them a lot of personal data and they store it somewhere – easy to steal data • The user is also untrustable: easy to make copies of digital goods (of data) 3 The Historical and Sociological Context • Users cannot trust the intermediaries (too easy to steal data) and the intermediaries cannot trust the users (too easy to copy data) • Boom of cryptography… • …and of hacking! • Escalating problems of privacy and security • 2008: the global financial crash causes a loss of trust in the entire system of intermediaries 4 The Past and the Future • The Internet (and all preceding networks)
  • June 2020 Issue

    June 2020 Issue

    June 2020 Issue Contents The Crypto Vigilante Portfolio Monthly Snapshot 2 Cryptocurrency Fundamental Metrics Charts 3 Big Block Bitcoin Fundamental Analysis Rafael LaVerde 9 Crypto Asset Outlook & Market Commentary Mr. X 27 www.cryptovigilante.io 1 www.cryptovigilante.io 2 Bitcoin (BTC) Number of Transactions on Blockchain Per Day - Historical Chart (Logarithmic) Source: https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/bitcoin-transactions.html#log ​ Monero (XMR) Number of Transactions on Blockchain Per Day - Historical Chart (Logarithmic) Source: https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/monero-transactions.html#log ​ Bitcoin (BTC) Average Transaction Fee (USD) - Historical Chart (Logarithmic) Source: https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/bitcoin-transactionfees.html#log ​ www.cryptovigilante.io 3 Monero (XMR) Average Transaction Fee (USD) - Historical Chart (Logarithmic) Source: https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/monero-transactionfees.html#log ​ Bitcoin (BTC) Google Search Trends - Historical Chart (Logarithmic) Source: https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/google_trends-btc.html#log ​ Monero (XMR) Google Search Trends - Historical Chart (Logarithmic) Source: https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/google_trends-xmr.html#log ​ www.cryptovigilante.io 4 Bitcoin (BTC) Hashrate Distribution Amongst The Largest Mining Pools Source: https://blockchair.com/bitcoin/charts/hashrate-distribution ​ www.cryptovigilante.io 5 Monero (XMR) Hashrate Distribution Amongst The Largest Mining Pools Source: https://minexmr.com/pools.html ​ www.cryptovigilante.io 6 Bitcoin