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Digital money - Taking a liberty

May 29th 2013, 21:02

A CRIMINAL indictment, filed in New York against Liberty Reserve (LR) and seven

current and former employees, has shaken the burgeoning world of digital

currencies. The defendants are charged with running a money-laundering

operation that allegedly acted as a financial hub of the cybercrime world ,

serving credit-card fraudsters, identity thieves, hackers and drug-traffickers.

Authorities estimate that LR processed 55m transactions worth $6 billion

between 2006 and May 2013. That makes it the largest case in the history of

cross-border money laundering.

With LR s website shut down and regulators recently issuing a warning that

virtual currencies should follow anti-money-laundering rules more assiduously

cyber-enthusiasts have been left wondering which digital-money business will be

next in the prosecutors sights. Attention has inevitably turned to Bitcoin,

the darling of virtual currencies, which is widely used on Silk Road, an online

marketplace for illegal drugs.

But the two are not the same. LR was essentially no more than a digital Western

Union or PayPal, albeit one designed to break the rules. Users had to provide a

name, address and date of birth, but the firm did not verify the information.

It charged a 1% fee per transfer, plus a 75-cent privacy fee to ensure

untraceability (even within LR s system). To dodge regulations and avoid

creating a paper trail, LR made users deposit and withdraw funds through

third-party exchangers .

Bitcoin is more of a proper currency, because it can be transferred without

recourse to a central clearing house rather like bundles of dollar bills. But

businesses which trade Bitcoins for central bank-issued money, such as Mt.Gox,

an exchange based in Japan, resemble Liberty Reserve. They could find

themselves chased down by prosecutors if too much dirty money starts flowing

through Bitcoin. On May 16th federal agents seized some funds from an account

held by Mt.Gox at Dowalla, another online transfer service, on the basis that

laws governing money transfers were not being followed closely enough.

If prosecutors look for more cases, the most likely targets are online payment

services that allow cash to be moved without verifying users identities. The

number that merely pretend to apply know your customer and other

anti-laundering rules is thought to be in the dozens. The scale of the LR case

will make regulators warier of all digital-money innovations such as Bitcoin.

The case highlights how hard it is to track such operations. LR s founder,

Arthur Budovsky (pictured, after his arrest), had been known to the authorities

for years. After being prosecuted in America for running an unlicensed

money-transmission firm (the home of E-Gold, a now-defunct digital currency),

he moved the business to Costa Rica and renamed it. When local regulators grew

concerned, he allegedly bought time by designing a fake compliance portal, then

pretended to shut the firm down while in fact taking it underground and running

it through shell companies.

But crimefighters techniques have evolved too. As well as creating undercover

LR accounts, they wiretapped internet connections and executed search warrants

for e-mail accounts and internet service providers. Prosecutors offices are

investing heavily in their cybercrime labs. Money-moving businesses that

facilitate digital dodginess will find it increasingly hard to stay a step

ahead.