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Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Digital Gold Currency

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Digital gold currencies are issued by a number of companies, each of which provides a system that enables users to pay each other in units that hold the same value as gold bullion. These competing providers issue independent currency, which normally carries the same name as their company. In terms of the most popular providers, e-gold has the greatest number of users and GoldMoney holds the greatest quantity of bullion as of 2007.[dated info][citation needed]Digital gold currency (or DGC) is a form of electronic money based on ounces of gold. It is a kind of representative money, like a US paper gold certificate at the time (from 1873 to 1933) that these were exchangeable for gold on demand. The typical unit of account for such currency is thegold gram or the troy ounce, although other units such as the gold dinar are sometimes used. DGCs are backed by gold through unallocated or allocated gold storage.

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[edit]Features

[edit]Universal currency

Proponents claim that DGC offers a truly global and borderless world currency system which is independent of exchange rate variations and political manipulation. Gold, silver, platinum and palladium each have recognized international currency codes under ISO 4217. In addition to digital gold currency, GoldMoney and eLibertyDollar also provide digital currency backed by silver.

[edit]Asset protection

Unlike fractional-reserve banking, DGCs (such as e-gold and GoldMoney) hold 100% of clients' funds in reserves with a store of value. Proponents of DGC systems contend that deposits are protected against inflation, devaluation and other possible economic risks inherent in fiat currencies. These risks include the monetary policy of countries or territories, which are perceived by proponents to be harmful to the value of paper currency.

[edit]Bullion investing

For example, GoldMoney is accessible and approved for U.S. self-directed Individual Retirement Accounts through The Entrust Group[1].

All of the other digital gold currency systems can be used to buy, hold, and sell precious metals, but do not promote themselves as an "investment", as this implies an anticipated return.

[edit]Exchanging national currency

Some providers, like e-gold, Pecunix, Liberty Reserve do not sell DGC directly to clients. For those DGCs, e-currency must be bought and sold via a digital currency exchanger such as GoldNow or London Gold Exchange.

Currency exchangers accept payment in national currencies by a variety of methods, including Bank Wire, Direct Deposit, Cheque, Money Order. Some exchangers also sell and fund pre-paid debit cards to make it easier for their clientele to convert DGC into an easily spendable form of national currency.

According to the DGC issuers[who?] that do not directly sell DGC to clients, this keeps their system free of any exchange risk, which is instead taken by the independent exchange providers.[citation needed] DGCs are known as private currency as they are not issued by governments.

[edit]Non-reversible transactions

Unlike the credit card industry, DGC issuers generally do not bundle services such as repudiation. Thus having transactions involuntarily reversed, even in case of a legitimate error, unauthorized spend, or failure of a vendor to supply goods is not possible. In this respect, a DGC spend is more akin to a cash transaction while PayPal transfers, for example, could be considered more similar to credit card transactions.

The advantage of this arrangement is that the operating costs of the digital currency system are greatly reduced by not having to resolve payment disputes. Additionally, it allows DGC transactions to clear instantly making the funds immediately available to the recipient. By contrast credit cards, checks, ACH and other reversible payment methods generally have a "clearing time" of 72 hours or more.

The lack of payment repudiation in DGCs leaves an opportunity for third-parties to provide payment escrow services to buyers and sellers in untrusted environments, such as internet auction websites.

[edit]Risks

As with all financial media, there are several types of risk inherent to the use of DGCs: management risk, political risk, data security and exchange risk.

[edit]Management and political risks

DGCs, like all financial institutions and public securities, have a layer of risk in the form of the management of the issuing institution. Controls aimed to limit management risk are called "governance".

GoldMoney is the only DGC that is a government registered and financially regulated money service business.[2] All other DGC providers operate under self-regulation. DGC providers are not banks and therefore not subject to many bank regulations that pertain to fractional reserve lending. However, DGCs do provide a method for transferring currency from one person to another, and therefore may fall under regulations pertaining to money transmitting in various jurisdictions.

The Global Digital Currency Association (GDCA), which was founded in 2002, is a non-profit association of online currency operators, exchangers, merchants and users. The GDCA is an example of the DGC industry's attempt at self-regulation. On their website they claim their goal is to "further the interests of the industry as a whole and help with fighting fraud and other illegal activities, arbitrate disputes and act as escrow agent when and where required."[3] Of the current DGC providers, Pecunix, Liberty Reserve and eight others have become members of the association. It costs one gram of gold to file a complaint if you are not a member, and the list of filable complaints is not exhaustive. Their domain name is registered anonymously through domains by proxy, see whois.

[edit]OS-Gold, Standard Reserve and INTGold

Several companies claiming to be Digital Gold Currencies sprang up and failed between 1999 and 2004, such as OS-Gold[4], Standard Reserve[5]and INTGold[6]. All these companies failed because the principals diverted deposits for other purposes instead of holding them in the form of gold. In each of these cases, account holders lost several million dollars worth of gold when the "institution" failed.

[edit]e-gold and 1mdc

Following April 27, 2007, the United States Department of Justice forced e-gold to liquidate some 10 to 20 million dollars worth of e-gold, and is attempting to bring a case against e-gold.[7] e-gold has committed to counter what its founders have declared to be groundless allegations.[8]

1mdc was backed by e-gold, so events that affected e-gold also affected 1mdc. Once e-gold Ltd. was instructed by the US government to freeze and liquidate all 1mdc accounts, 1mdc became insolvent by default along with all other e-gold accounts seized in the April 27 action.

The indictment and gold seizure by the Justice Department led to a run on e-gold, as many account holders liquidated, the largest being the court-ordered liquidation of Omnipay's entire gold balance. Defenders of e-gold argue the fact that e-gold was able to satisfy the court order to liquidate the gold and fill all the liquidation orders of account holders is strong evidence that their governance system works.[citation needed]

[edit]e-Bullion

As of August 2008 Jim Fayed of e-Bullion is in United States Federal custody where he faces felony charges of conducting unlicensed money transactions and the murder of his business partner. As of January 2010 e-Bullion is closed for business and the website unavailable.

[edit]Data security

Digital Gold Systems are completely dependent on electronic storage and transmission of account ownership information. Therefore the security of a given digital currency account is dependent upon the security of the Issuer as well as the security of the Account Holder's computer.

While the Digital Gold Issuers employ data security experts to protect their systems, the average account holder's computer is poorly protected against malware (trojans, worms, and viruses) that can be used to intercept information that could be used to access the user's DGC account. Therefore the most common attacks on digital currency systems are directed against account holder's computer through the use of malicious spam, phishing and other methods.

Issuers have taken quite different approaches to this problem. E-gold basically places the entire responsibility on the shoulders of the user, and uses a user-name and password authentication system that is weak and highly vulnerable to interception by malware. (Though it is the most common authentication method used by online banks.) The "not our problem" approach to user security has negatively contributed to e-gold's public image, as not a few e-gold accounts have been hacked and swept clean by attackers.

e-Bullion offers account holders a "Cryptocard" security token that changes the passphrase with each logon, but charges the account holder USD $99.50 for the token. E-bullion does not require customers to use the Cryptocard, so account holders who choose not to get one may suffer from the same security issues as e-gold customers.

GoldMoney allows the user to login with user-name and passphrase, but sends an email with a unique personal identification number (PIN) that the user must enter in the form to complete the transaction. This reduces the likelihood of a successful attack because the attacker must gain control of the user's email account in addition to his login information, and must further prevent the user from receiving the email with the PIN, which would alert the user that someone is attempting to transfer gold out of his holding.

Pecunix devised a unique rotating key system that provides many of the benefits of a security token without requiring the user to buy one. Pecunix also supports the use of PGP signatures to access an account, which is probably the strongest of all authentication methods.

[edit]Exchange risk

Digital gold currency is a form of representative money as it directly represents gold metal on deposit or in custody[9], and denominated in units of mass (grams or troy ounces). Just as the exchange rates of national currencies fluctuate against each other, the exchange rates of DGCs fluctuate against national currencies, which is reflected by the price of gold in a particular currency. This creates exchange risk for any account holder, in the same way one would experience exchange risk by holding a bank account in a foreign currency.

Some DGC holders make use of the digital currency for daily monetary transactions, even though most of their normal income and expenses are denominated in the national currency of their home country. Fluctuations in the value of gold against their national currency can create some confusion and difficulty for new users as they see the "value" of their DGC account fluctuate in terms of their native currency.

In contrast to exchange risk, caused by gold's fluctuation against national currency, the purchasing power of gold (and therefore DGCs) is measured by its fluctuation against other commodities, goods and services. Since gold has historically been the refuge of choice in times of inflation or economic hardship, the purchasing power of gold becomes stronger during times of negative sentiment in the markets[10]. Due to this speculative interference, there are times when purchasing power has also declined. For example, in 2007–2008, gold volatility closely tracked the run-up in oil prices.[11]

[edit]Providers

Comparison of DGCs (as of January 2007):

Digital gold currency↓Date
founded↓
Financially regulated↓GDCA
member↓
Bullion
stored↓
Number
of user
accounts↓
DCEtransfers accepted↓Wire transfersaccepted↓Annual storage fee↓Processing fee
(when receiving from another user)↓
c-gold2007Red XGreen tick1,367 oz gold (as of June 5th 2008)11,669Green tickRed X1%1 - 5% (with min. 5% plus 0.0002 grams - max. 0.05 grams)[citation needed]
e-dinar2000Red XRed XUndisclosedUndisclosedRed XGreen tick1%1% (with max. 0.015 gold dinar)
e-gold1996Red XRed X111,779 oz gold, 138,567 oz silver, 400 oz platinum, 396 oz palladium3,571,496Green tickRed X1%1 - 5% (with min. 5% plus 0.0002 gold grams - max. 0.05 gold grams)
GoldExchange2006Red XRed XUndisclosedUndisclosedRed XGreen tick1%$0.35 USD[citation needed]
GoldMoney2001Green tickRed X427,221 oz gold, 15,802,907 oz silver13,316Red XGreen tick0.15 - 0.18%1% (with min. 0.01 - max. 0.1 gold grams)
Liberty Reserve2005Red XGreen tickUndisclosedUndisclosedGreen tickRed X0%1% (min. $0.01 - max. $0.25 USD)[citation needed]
Pecunix2002Red XGreen tick2,375 oz goldUndisclosedGreen tickRed X0%0.15 - 0.50% (with min. 0.0001 - max. 3.0 gold grams)[citation needed]
SupraGold2006Red XRed X7,531 oz gold1,533Green tickRed X1%5% + AUG 0.0002, up to AUG 0.75[citation needed]
VirtualGold2006Red XRed XUndisclosedUndisclosedRed XGreen tick0%1% (with min. $0.10 - max. $2.00 USD)[citation needed]

[edit]Criticisms

DGC providers and exchangers have been accused of being a medium for fraudulent high-yield investment program (HYIP) schemes. In January 2006, BusinessWeek reported that ShadowCrew, an online gang, used the e-gold system in a massive identity theft and fraud scheme.[12]Traditional banks are also used frequently for such fraud. Allegations that e-gold is a safe medium for crime and fraud are strongly denied by its Chairman and founder, Dr. Douglas Jackson.[13]

Many DGC providers do not disclose the amount of bullion stored (see table), or do not allow independent external bullion audits, raising concerns that such companies do not maintain a 100% reserve ratio, or that their currency is entirely virtual and not backed by physical gold at all.

[edit]Cultural references

[edit]See also