the fed is getting their crypto ready. would they also get exclusivity via legal tender law? that's the way they roll, no?
i fear for my countrymen. might sell those beta test codes and go back into iraqi dinar
we are going to be surveilled and controlled at a level that could have never been possible without the whole crypto revolution
coincidence theorist says --- aw shucks, can you believe all of those pieces just randomly fell into place?
As Federal Reserve officials consider whether to launch a digital version of the dollar, several former officials of one company with a direct stake in the outcome are working to inform the project, a new report based on public records finds.
At least five employees of Circle, which issues the world’s second-most popular stablecoin, have left the company over the past three years to work at the Boston Federal Reserve Bank as it researches how a U.S. digital currency might work.
The project could have profound implications for the future of money — and for Circle’s business model. A new form of electronic cash minted by the central bank could “directly and adversely impact the demand” for Circle’s own, privately issued version, the company said in a federal filing last year.
i fear for my countrymen. might sell those beta test codes and go back into iraqi dinar
we are going to be surveilled and controlled at a level that could have never been possible without the whole crypto revolution
coincidence theorist says --- aw shucks, can you believe all of those pieces just randomly fell into place?

As Federal Reserve officials consider whether to launch a digital version of the dollar, several former officials of one company with a direct stake in the outcome are working to inform the project, a new report based on public records finds.
At least five employees of Circle, which issues the world’s second-most popular stablecoin, have left the company over the past three years to work at the Boston Federal Reserve Bank as it researches how a U.S. digital currency might work.
The project could have profound implications for the future of money — and for Circle’s business model. A new form of electronic cash minted by the central bank could “directly and adversely impact the demand” for Circle’s own, privately issued version, the company said in a federal filing last year.
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