At first glance, this seems like any other Nissan 350Z you may encounter on the road: it’s silver-gray, it has a manual, and it has a fairly sparse interior. It’s.![]() ![]() China Bans Initial Coin Offerings, Warning of Financial Scams. The initial coin offering party is over in China. News, sports, features, obituaries, advertising, and special online features from the city's daily newspaper. When traveling, the best camera can often be the one you happen to have with you, but there are also situations where you’ll want something more than an iPhone to. A committee led by the People’s Bank of China, the nation’s central bank, has imposed an immediate ban on new cryptocurrency crowdfunding efforts and warned many ICOs are scams, Tech. Crunch reported . According to financial news site Caixin, the committee warned ICOs could be used for pyramid schemes and other scams, and “severely disrupt the social and economic order.”“The committee also provided a list of 6. ICO platforms that local financial regulatory bodies will need to thoroughly inspect and report on,” Caixin wrote. It added “at least two major Chinese cryptocurrency exchanges” have recently stopped their ICO operations, while a conference on blockchain technology was also canceled. ICOs are a form of investment funding wherein startups offer new types of cryptocurrency in exchange for cash or preexisting cryptocoins like Bitcoin or Ethereum. They are currently unregulated in most of the world; Investopedia defines them as intended to “bypass the rigorous and regulated capital- raising process required by venture capitalists or banks.” A recent boom in ICOs has seen them surpass early stage venture capital funding in the amount of money raised in the US, CNBC wrote in August, raising worries of a looming bubble as the price of leading cryptocoins like Bitcoin has skyrocketed. Though the US Securities and Exchange Commission has determined ICOs must be held in accordance with federal securities law, warning of “pump and dump” schemes, a total crackdown has yet to occur stateside. China’s crypto market is huge; many tech- savvy residents have bought in as a way to get ahead (and avoid taxes). State agency Xinhua recently estimated the Chinese market had raised “$3. Tech. Crunch added—surely spooking authorities in a country where economic growth is a priority, but one that is closely overseen by regulators. Earlier this year, Chinese regulators lifted a three- month ban on cryptocoin withdrawals after major exchanges upgraded security, the Wall Street Journal reported. The ban was originally implemented because authorities believed the technology could be used for money laundering or to bet on a collapse of the yuan.[Tech.
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