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Post Doctoral Researcher, Electronic Engineering job with MAYNOOTH UNIVERSITY | 282033 – Times Higher Education (THE)

Department:Electronic EngineeringVacancy ID:014161Closing Date:03-Apr-2022

The vacancy is for a one-year postdoctoral position in the area of microfluidics. The postdoc will be leading the building/optimising a microfluidics platform that be developed in parallel with the bCARS microscope. This microfluidics platform will feature a pump system feeding into a microfluidic slide using a hydrodynamic flow focusing structure to generate water-in-oil droplets with high-throughput, continuous-flow, and the capacity for ultralow-volume sorting of cells. Off-the-shelf or customised PDMS or glass chips will be used to create the water droplets in oil that are hydrodynamically focused at high flow rates. Should off-the-shelf solutions not meet the needs of the project, the postdoc will help design chips to meet the required specifications and we will outsource manufacture. The postdoc will be required to work closely with other team members building the bCARS microscope and will be involved in alignment of the laser system into the hydrodynamic channel to probe the flowing cells.

Salary

Post-doctoral Researcher (2021): 39,132 per annum (1 point)

Appointment will be made in accordance with the Department of Finance pay guidelines.

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Post Doctoral Researcher, Electronic Engineering job with MAYNOOTH UNIVERSITY | 282033 - Times Higher Education (THE)

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US Justice Department taps new cryptocurrency czar – Aljazeera.com

The Justice Department named a veteran cybersecurity prosecutor to lead a new team dedicated to investigating and prosecuting illicit cryptocurrency schemes carried out by cyber criminals and nation states including North Korea and Iran.

Eun Young Choi will be the first director of the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team, which will serve as the focal point for efforts to identify and dismantle the misuse of cryptocurrencies and other digital assets, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco announced Thursday.

If were going to see as I think we will cryptocurrency gaining more traction and gaining wider adoption, weve got to make sure that the ecosystem that they operate in can be trusted and, frankly, can be policed, Monaco said in an interview. Were going to make it our business to go after them and get those proceeds back and make it clear to them that they cant hide.

The $2 trillion market for cryptocurrencies has boomed as companies and investors look to reap higher returns and get a foothold in a technology seen as still in its early days.

Prosecutors and regulators are rushing to determine how to police that space as well as the market for other digital assets such as nonfungible tokens which has become a new frontier for criminals and rogue nations to steal and launder billions of dollars through anonymous avenues like blockchain transactions, encryption and digital wallets.

Illicit transactionsjumpedalmost 80% to $14 billion, an all-time high, in 2021, according to blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis. Still, crime made up a much smaller share of total crypto transaction volume, which increased drastically last year, the firm said.

One of the main focuses for the new team will be rooting out illegal activity on virtual currency exchanges as well as cryptocurrency tumbler, or mixing, services, which are used to obscure tainted funds, Choi said in an interview.

Known among her colleagues as EYC, Choi most recently served as senior counsel to Monaco on cybersecurity matters. The crypto team is housed within the departments criminal division and has more than a dozen experienced prosecutors with plans to hire more personnel.

Were trying to centralize so that were a one-stop shop of all the subject matter experts within the department, Choi, 41, said.

When the creation of the crypto team was announced in October, Monaco said a key focus would be bringing cases against cryptocurrency exchanges and other entities that are found to be violating the law and assisting in the movement of illicit financing. The team would add support to current probes while pursuing new ones.

Although Choi didnt single out any exchanges by name, Bloomberg News previously reported that the Justice Department and the Internal Revenue Service are investigating whether Binance Holdings Ltd., the worlds biggest crypto trading platform, is a conduit for money laundering and tax evasion.

Choi said her team is reaching out to crypto companies that have robust anti-laundering policies and strong compliance programs, as well as blockchain analytics firms.

The information they hold is crucial to rooting out the abuse of cryptocurrencies because theyre the ones who can see in their own systems suspicious activities that may be happening, she said.

In a sign of the scale of the challenge U.S. law enforcement faces, the Justice Department this month seized Bitcoin valued at about$3.6 billionthat was stolen during a 2016 hack, the largest financial seizure ever. In addition, the U.S. Marshals Service which is the primary custodian of seized assets for the department was in possession of $919 million in 22 different cryptocurrencies at the end of 2021.

Chois appointment comes after years spent chasing hacking and crypto attacks.

In one of her first major cases, she led the successful prosecution of the 2014hackagainst JPMorgan Chase & Co., which saw hundreds of millions of dollars stolen by hackers and conspirators in more than a dozen countries. She also argued the appeal in the case against Ross Ulbricht, the founder and chief administrator of the now-shuttered Silk Road underground virtual drug bazaar.

What her appointment shows is that cryptocurrency is really at the intersection of complex financial investigations, cybersecurity, anti-money laundering, narcotics trafficking and cross-border enforcement, said Edward Imperatore, who was a colleague of Choi in the cybercrime unit of the U.S. attorneys office in Manhattan. She has experience in each one of these areas.

As cryptocurrencies become more mainstream, the potential for wrongdoing has increased exponentially. Crypto fraud now cuts across a swath of activity including financial crimes, bribery, narcotics cases, ransomware attacks, hacking attacks, money laundering, terrorist financing and sanctions evasion, Choi said.

Chois team will lead the departments efforts to coordinate with U.S. and international law enforcement agencies, regulatory bodies and private industry. It also will enhance the criminal divisions existing efforts to provide support and training to federal, state, local and international law enforcement agencies.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation also plans to announce on Thursday the creation of a new virtual asset exploitation unit.

It is going to be important for us to have a united front in trying to determine what tools and authorities were all bringing to this approach on digital assets, Choi said.

Theres some tension, however, between private companies dealing with crypto and what the department is doing.

Companies are concerned that Justice and regulatory agencies will take a heavy handed approach toward enforcement actions, according to a former federal prosecutor who asked to remain anonymous speaking about relations between private companies and the department.

U.S. agencies struggled for years to get companies to disclose hacking attacks and cyber vulnerabilities. Those private-sector victims feared such reporting would put them in the crosshairs of prosecutors or that there might be some regulatory blowback. But U.S. officials have expressed hope that theyve turned a corner in recent years, especially with successful efforts to help companies recover stolen funds.

In addition to this months Bitcoin seizure in the Bitfinex hacking case, last year the U.S. recovered almost all the Bitcoin ransom paid to the perpetrators of a cyber attack on Colonial Pipeline Co. that sparked a fuel shortage along the U.S. east coast.

(Updates with comment from former colleague in 17th paragraph)

With assistance from Allyson Versprille, Tom Schoenberg and Christian Berthelsen.

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ETHDenver event attracting thousands of cryptocurrency and blockchain fans from around the world – The Denver Channel

DENVER While Colorado pushes to be the hub of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology, the 5th annual ETHDenver event welcomed more than 12,000 people from 100 different countries this year, which is the highest attendance in the event has experienced.

"This line took like three hours yesterday," Bobby Miller said as he was waiting in a line that wrapped around the former Denver Sports Castle building, where the event was held.

By now, at least in passing, you may have heard of the terms "cryptocurrency," a decentralized digital currency, and "blockchain," a peer-to-peer network online ledger that supports major cryptocurrencies.

Those topics were the basis of the event, where industry leaders would share their insights of the future of cryptocurrency and people would compete to create the next big thing.

"In simple terms, it's the world's largest blockchain technology, software development competition," ETHDenver Founder and Executive Steward John Paller said. "So teams come from all over the world to build these next-generation applications, protocols, currencies, whatever it might be, that have different use cases around things like social impact, mobile phones, decentralized finance, digital communities."

The contestants are competing for over $1.5 million in prizes and bounties and $2 million in investment capital, Paller said.

It's an event CEO of Chain Safe Systems, Aiden Hyman, has attended for the last five years.

"The point here is to empower people to be more financially literate, to be in control of their finances, and to honestly be in control of their entire digital footprint," Hyman said. "Without events like this, we really wouldn't have the community we have and our company wouldn't be where it is today."

It's people like Hyman that Gov. Jared Polis hopes to continue attracting to Denver.

Polis, who spoke at the event Friday, is pushing hard to make sure Colorado is the first digital currency state in the union.

It's a vision that Paller shares.

"We could be a destination of choice for this innovation to work here, live here, invest here, build here, and really experience the future. Governor Polis is the founder of the Blockchain Caucus in Congress," Paller said.

Polis also signed Colorado's first blockchain-related law known as the "Colorado Digital Token Act."

For those who have yet to consider life in a digital currency world, your time may be running out.

The governor recently shared his vision with CNBC, stating that paying for drivers licenses and state taxes with cryptocurrencies may be an option as early as this summer.

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ETHDenver event attracting thousands of cryptocurrency and blockchain fans from around the world - The Denver Channel

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NeighborImpact is now accepting cryptocurrency donations – KTVZ

REDMOND, Ore. (KTVZ) -- NeighborImpact, a nonprofit supporting people and strengthening communities, said Friday it is now accepting cryptocurrency donations via Every.org, including Bitcoin, USD Coin, Ethereumand more.

Cryptocurrency has reached a market cap of $2 trillion in 2021. While the asset class remains volatile, it is the fastest growing asset of the decade. With the addition of the first Bitcoin ETF and integration of crypto into everyday payments platforms such as PayPal and Venmo, cryptocurrency is becoming more and more integrated into peoples lives.

Similar to donating equities or other appreciating assets, there can be significant tax advantages to donating cryptocurrency directly. Since the IRS classifies donated cryptocurrency as property, donating it is not a taxable event. This means donors do not have to recognize capital gains on donations of appreciated crypto. If they held it for over a year, they may even be able to deduct the fair market value on their taxes.

The crypto donations are supported through Every.org, which takes cryptocurrency and converts it into fiat currency, this comes at no additional cost to the donor. Donors can donate Bitcoin, Ethereum, USD Coin directly on Every.org. Please contact crypto@every.org if donating with a different coin and the donation is valued at $5,000 or more. Donors will also receive a tax-deductible receipt from Every.org once the transaction is detected on the blockchain.

Tina Roh, co-founder of Every.org added, This is a unique time, where crypto is highly appreciated and donating it is uniquely tax-advantaged. And its easier than ever before through Every.org. Donors should speak to their tax advisor on the benefits to make sure they can maximize their giving.

To donate cryptocurrency to NeighborImpact, visit https://www.every.org/neighborimpact/donate/crypto.

About NeighborImpact:NeighborImpact is a private non-profit governed by a board of directors drawn from across the community.Since 1985, NeighborImpact has led the region in developing solutions and bringing resources to Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties and the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. We help meet the basic needs of Central Oregonians, build economic security and create a community where everyone thrives.NeighborImpact receives federal, state and local grants, foundation grants and donations from individuals and businesses in our community. To learn more about NeighborImpact please visitwww.neighborimpact.org.

About Every.org Every.org is a 501(c)(3) charity building an accessible giving infrastructure to help every person and organization use technology for good. Since launching in March 2020, it has raised over $11 million for nonprofits. It is committed to sustaining no platform fees in order to create a world where every person and organization has the best technology to help them do more good. Founded by tech entrepreneurs who previously worked at companies like Snap and Pinterest, the team hopes to grow generosity by making it easier than ever to support and share important causes.

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NeighborImpact is now accepting cryptocurrency donations - KTVZ

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Newly Published, From Cryptocurrency to the Kennedys – The New York Times

AVIVA VS. THE DYBBUK, by Mari Lowe. (Levine Querido, ages 8 to 12, $17.99.) Lowes mystical debut novel about the psychic tussle between a grief-stricken 11-year-old girl and a mischievous boy ghost who stirs up repressed memories of the accident that caused her fathers death offers a rare, sensitive portrayal of a contemporary Orthodox Jewish community.

OLU & GRETA, by Diana Ejaita. (Rise x Penguin Workshop, ages 3 to 5, $17.99.) Though theyve never met, two cousins a boy in Lagos and a girl in Milan celebrate the many things they have in common in this ebullient picture book by the Nigerian Italian illustrator, textile designer and New Yorker cover artist.

BLUE: A History of the Color as Deep as the Sea and as Wide as the Sky, by Nana Ekua Brew-Hammond. Illustrated by Daniel Minter. (Knopf, ages 4 to 8, $18.99.) This poetically written, gorgeously painted picture book, about our quest to replicate the color of the ocean and the heavens, encompasses joy and sorrow.

THE LEGEND OF GRAVITY: A Tall Basketball Tale, by Charly Palmer. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, ages 4 to 8, $18.99.) An acclaimed artist slam-dunks his solo picture book debut, in which fast-dribbling vernacular wordplay and thick, perspective-bending brushstrokes tell a whopper of a hoop-dreams tale.

WHEN IM GONE, LOOK FOR ME IN THE EAST, by Quan Barry. (Pantheon, $27.) The relationship between a young Buddhist monk and his identical twin, who renounced monastic life, is tested when the two are tasked to roam Mongolia in search of a reincarnated spiritual teacher.

THE CRYPTONIANS: Idealism, Greed, Lies, and the Making of the First Big Cryptocurrency Craze, by Laura Shin. (PublicAffairs, $18.99.) A former senior editor at Forbes tells the story of the founding of Ethereum, a novel cryptocurrency network that allowed users to launch their own coins, and how it fundamentally altered the crypto landscape.

WHY ARGUMENT MATTERS, by Lee Siegel. (Yale University, $26.) This account examines the role that argument has played throughout history and how it has shaped human existence.

THE FIRST KENNEDYS: The Humble Roots of an American Dynasty, by Neal Thompson. (Mariner, $28.) A journalist traces the Kennedy dynasty back to two struggling Irish immigrants who arrived in America during the great famine and tells the story of Bridget Murphy, who, after her husbands untimely death, single-handedly raised the first Kennedy to be elected to public office.

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Newly Published, From Cryptocurrency to the Kennedys - The New York Times

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Cryptocurrency is akin to Ponzi scheme and banning it is perhaps the most advisable choice, says Indias Central Bank – TechCrunch

A top official of Indias central bank has compared cryptocurrency to a Ponzi scheme and suggested an outright ban in its sharpest criticism just weeks after the government proposed taxation of the virtual digital asset and paved way to recognize it as legal tender in the worlds second-largest internet market.

T. Rabi Sankar, deputy governor of Reserve Bank of India (RBI), told an audience at a banking conference that cryptocurrencies have been specifically developed to bypass the regulated financial system, and are not backed by any underlying cash flow.

We have also seen that cryptocurrencies are not amenable to definition as a currency, asset or commodity; they have no underlying cash flows, they have no intrinsic value; that they are akin to Ponzi schemes, and may even be worse, he said.

Sankars remarks come at a time the Indian government has sent signals that its moving in the direction of recognizing the digital virtual asset as legal tender. The nations Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman proposed taxing income accrued from transfer of cryptocurrencies and NFTs in the federal budget early this month.

The sale of cryptocurrencies and NFTs have made quick inroads in India in the past year despite regulatory uncertainty. The worlds second-largest internet market has seen the second-highest adoption rate for cryptocurrency investments, according to an analysis by research firm Chainalysis.

The magnitude and frequency of these transactions have made it imperative to provide for a specific tax regime, she said in her budget speech.

Indias central bank has so far been very cautious about cryptocurrencies. In 2018, it banned financial firms from dealing with cryptocurrency. The ban was overturned by Indias Supreme Court two years later, but most banks have continued to follow the RBIs direction.

Sitharaman said on Monday that New Delhi and the RBI were holding discussions to formulate rules and that the two were onboard.

Sankars speech has made it clear that the RBI has not changed its long-held stance. As a store of value, cryptocurrencies like bitcoin have given impressive returns so far, but so did tulips in 17th century Netherlands. Cryptocurrencies are very much like a speculative or gambling contract working like a Ponzi scheme. In fact, it has been argued that the original scheme devised by Charles Ponzi in 1920 is better than cryptocurrencies from a social perspective, he said.

Cryptocurrencies can wreck the currency system, the monetary authority, the banking system and in general the governments ability to control the economy, he warned.

They threaten the financial sovereignty of a country and make it susceptible to strategic manipulation by private corporates creating these currencies or governments that control them. All these factors lead to the conclusion that banning cryptocurrency is perhaps the most advisable choice open to India, he said. We have examined the arguments proffered by those advocating that cryptocurrencies should be regulated and found that none of them stand up to basic scrutiny.

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Cryptocurrency is akin to Ponzi scheme and banning it is perhaps the most advisable choice, says Indias Central Bank - TechCrunch

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Why the hell is comedy genius Larry David flogging Cryptocurrency? – The Independent

There are few people who have had such an outsize influence on TV comedy as Larry David. Its only fitting then that one of the mediums true geniuses is now getting the full HBO documentary treatment. The Larry David Story, set to air Stateside this March, will see David sit down with longtime friend and collaborator Larry Charles to talk about the early lows and many subsequent highs of his career. As an avowed fan of everything David has ever worked on, Ill be tuning in quicker than you can say Beloved Aunt.

Or rather, a fan of almost everything hes ever done. Last weekend, during one of the Super Bowls many lavishly produced advertising breaks, my ears pricked up at the sound of David in ancient finery dismissing the inventor of the wheel with a pithy: Eh, I dont think so. The ad continued to race through great moments in history, with David as the eternal cynic trying to push back progress. He doesnt rate the indoor toilet, has no taste for coffee and even pooh-poohs the humble fork, waggling his fingers and admitting; Ive got 10 forks right here, baby!

Its a lark watching David hop through eras, but the final punchline isnt so funny. At the end of the ad, modern-day David is pitched the Bahamas-based cryptocurrency exchange FTX. Its a safe and easy way to get into crypto, its claimed. David isnt convinced: Eh, I dont think so, he says. And Im never wrong about this stuff. Never! I wasnt the only one taken aback when it was revealed what David, appearing in his first ever television advert, was actually selling. Among the many tweets calling him out, one Twitter user put it succinctly: Not Larry doing a crypto adLARRY NO.

Of course, while the conceit of the clip is that David isnt endorsing investing in cryptocurrency sparing us the image of him grinning like a used car salesman and telling us to Sign up now we all know that isnt how adverts work. His presence and celebrity lend an air of respectability to a less than three-year-old company that desperately wants to be taken seriously.

Larry Davids credibility not to mention his immense fortune runs deep. After starting out as a stand-up comedian and then briefly, thanklessly, writing for Saturday Night Live in the mid Eighties, he teamed up with Jerry Seinfeld in 1989 to create Seinfeld. Widely considered to be one of the greatest sitcoms ever made, it was also one of the most lucrative. In 1998, when Seinfeld was syndicated, David reportedly enjoyed a $250m (183.6m) pay day. He has continued to earn money from the rights ever since, and the deal stipulates he will do so until a full $1.7bn (1.24bn) has been paid out. In 2019, Netflix picked up the Seinfeld streaming rights and David again pocketed somewhere north of $100m. Its hard to read those figures without also hearing Davids deathless catchphrase: Prett-ay, prett-ay, prett-ay good.

While Seinfeld may have made David the sort of money that would entice many to buy a private island somewhere hot and disappear from public life altogether, he was made of more ambitious stuff. A decade after creating Seinfeld, he returned as the creator and star of Curb Your Enthusiasm, another all-time great sitcom. It has now run for 11 seasons, two more than Seinfeld managed, and seen David crowned as Americas favourite misanthrope.

Davids brutal pessimism is key to the FTX advert. What is less clear is this; If David is willing to lend his name to a cryptocurrency exchange, is he also happy to be paid in the stuff? Turning to an in-depth making of feature about the advert in the The New York Times, we learn from the headline alone that: Larry David Doesnt Get Crypto. I dont know about you, but if a salesman wasnt prepared to use their own product Id certainly think twice about using it myself. David isnt interviewed, but director Jeff Schaffer a veteran of both Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm - was happy to talk. Im excited to have someone try to explain it to me at some point, Schaffer said, laughing, when asked to explain exactly what it is theyre selling. Times writer Tiffany Hsu notes: Needless to say, he was not paid in virtual currency. Schaffer adds: Thats what I should have done then I would understand it. Maybe. Or I would simply lose it all. Yikes. It seems safe to assume that David was similarly recompensed in old-fashioned, real-world currency.

Larry David, as seen in the Super Bowl advert for cryptocurrency FTX

(FTX)

David is far from the only A-list star to have taken a pay day from the burgeoning crypto industry, with both Matt Damon and LeBron James appearing in similarly themed adverts. Something all three have in common is enough cold hard cash in the bank not to be too concerned if any cryptocurrency investments end up going sour. Thats probably not true when it comes to the majority of the 112.3 million people who watched the Super Bowl. For most of us, putting our money into an unregulated currency thats hard to use and so vulnerable to scams that an occasional magician recently stole $4.5bn worth of the stuff represents a prett-ay, prett-ay, prett-ay big risk.

Thats before you get into how utterly disastrous it is for the environment, with cryptocurrency now using up nearly as much electricity as Argentina. It all adds up to a bad look for a man already a multi-millionaire many times over, but David is once again laughing all the way to the bank not to a Bahamian cryptocurrency exchange.

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Why the hell is comedy genius Larry David flogging Cryptocurrency? - The Independent

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Crypto Donations to Charity Rose More Than 1000% Last Year – Money

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Donations of cryptocurrency have soared along with the price of Bitcoin and other digital assets. In 2021, Fidelity Charitable investors donated more than $330 million in cryptocurrency, more than 12 times the amount given in 2020, according to a recent report.

In 2021, Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, saw its price reach an all-time high of $67,000 (it's now trading around $40,000). Not surprisingly, Bitcoin accounted for most (80%) of crypto donations to Fidelity Charitable, followed by Ethereum (11%) and Litecoin (1%). A non-profit organization independent of Fidelity Investments, Fidelity Charitable distributed a total of $10.3 billion last year.

There are many ways you can give cryptocurrency to your favorite charities. One way is to work with an organization like Fidelity Charitable, which administers donor-advised funds.

Heres how it works: You set up a Giving Account through Fidelity Charitable online with no minimum investment. Then you transfer the Bitcoin or other currency from your crypto wallet to your Fidelity Charitable account. The crypto you donate to Fidelity Charitable will be converted into cash. (Keep in mind that some investing apps don't currently let you transfer crypto from their platform to another, while others, like Coinbase, will charge you to do so.)

You can then choose when Fidelity Charitable will send the money to a non-profit of your choice. If you don't want to donate right away, you can invest the money in various securities, including ESG funds, mutual funds that own stocks of companies with favorable track records on environmental and social factors. Earnings grow tax-free in your account until they're donated.

Another option for donating cryptocurrency is to work with companies like The Giving Block. This organization helps nonprofits accept cryptocurrency donations. It also links crypto donors to different charities. According to its latest report, The Giving Block took in a total donation volume of more than $70 million in 2021, or an increase of 1,558% from 2020. Moreover, NFT projects donated $12.3 million to charities via The Giving Block.

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Donating crypto to charity can also save you on taxes. When you sell an asset such as a stock or crypto coin for more than you bought it for, you typically owe a capital gains tax on the difference. The rate ranges from 0% to 37%, depending on your income and how long youve held the investment. (Short-term capital gains, levied on assets held for a year or less, are generally taxed at the same rates as ordinary income.)

So if you bought $10,000 worth of Bitcoin and sold it for $25,000, youd owe a capital gains tax on $15,000. But if you donated it to an eligible nonprofit, youd avoid a capital gains tax on your donation.

Plus, you may be able to deduct the donation from your federal income tax bill. Daniel Rodriguez, an accredited investment fiduciary and chief operating officer at Hill Wealth Strategies, a wealth management firm in Richmond, Virginia, says that if youre taking the standard deduction, then you won't also get a charitable deduction by selling cryptocurrency. Only people who itemize their deductions are allowed to deduct charitable contributions on their federal income tax return.

If you owe more than $10k in taxes, Tax Relief can allow you to break down your debt into payments.

Community tax Relief provides a full menu of tax relief services to help clients get out from under the yoke of tax debt.

Before you decide to donate cryptocurrency to charity, make sure the recipient accepts crypto. And if it does, make sure the organization has a means to convert it to cash quickly and easily. Cryptocurrency is a highly volatile asset, and wild price swings can mean the charity benefits from less than you initially donated.

Organizations like Fidelity Charitable and The Giving Block convert your crypto donations into cash as soon as possible and transfer it to charities. Fidelity Charitable currently accepts only Bitcoin, Ethereum and Litecoin. The Giving Block accepts these three, as well as Dogecoin and any cryptocurrency supported by the Gemini exchange.

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Cryptocurrency Investors Are Surprisingly Big on Giving Money to Charity

TurboTax Now Lets You Get Your Tax Refund in Crypto

5 Best Crypto Wallets of 2022

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Crypto Donations to Charity Rose More Than 1000% Last Year - Money

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U.S. Treasury Signals that Cryptocurrency Miners & Stakers Will Not Be Subject to Broker Information Reporting Tax Requirements – JD Supra

[co-author: Benjamin Cantor]*

On February 11, 2022, in a letter addressed to certain U.S. Senators, the U.S. Department of the Treasury indicated that cryptocurrency miners, cryptocurrency stakers or related hardware or software providers would not be considered to be brokers, as defined, for purposes of the information reporting tax rules included in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (the Act), enacted on November 5, 2021.

The Act amended the definition of broker for tax information reporting purposes to include any person who (for consideration) is responsible for regularly providing any service effectuating transfers of digital assets on behalf of another person. The Act defined digital asset as any digital representation of value which is recorded on a cryptographically secured distributed ledger or any similar technology as specified by the Secretary. As a result of these changes, a broker of digital assets must file IRS Form 1099-B reporting the name and address of each customer and for a digital asset acquired after January 1, 2023, the customer's adjusted basis in the digital asset and whether gain or loss if any with respect to such digital asset is long-term or short-term, and a failure to file may result in civil penalties.

In its letter, the Treasury stated that certain statements previously made in the U.S. Senate were consistent with the Treasurys view that ancillary parties who cannot get access to information that is useful to the Internal Revenue Service are not intended to be captured by the reporting requirements for brokers. The statements that the Treasury referred to were made by U.S. Senators Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Mark Warner (D-Virginia) on August 9, 2021, with reference to the proposed draft of the Act (find link here). Specifically, Senators Portman and Warner indicated that the following categories of persons would be excluded from the definition of broker in the legislation: (i) persons solely involved with validating distributed ledger transactions through proof of work (commonly known as miners), (ii) persons solely staking digital assets for the purpose of validating distributed ledgers transactions (commonly known as stakers), or solely involved with validating distributed ledger transactions through other validation methods, now or in the future, associated with other consensus mechanisms that are developed and might come into the market as the technology evolves, and (iii) persons solely engaged in the business of selling hardware or software for which the only function is to permit persons to control private keys which are used for accessing digital assets on a distributed ledger. Senators Portman and Warner reiterated their views in a letter addressed to the Treasury, dated December 14, 2021, which was signed by four other senators (find link here).

In its letter, the Treasury also stated that it will consider the extent to which other parties in the digital asset market, such as centralized exchanges and certain exchanges described as decentralized exchanges and peer-to-peer exchanges, should be treated as brokers in light of the clarification provided by the Act. The Treasury also stated that it intends to propose regulations that reflect its view of the appropriate scope of the definition of broker.

*Law Clerk

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U.S. Treasury Signals that Cryptocurrency Miners & Stakers Will Not Be Subject to Broker Information Reporting Tax Requirements - JD Supra

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The ‘no-code revolution’ is one of the next big tech trends – Siliconrepublic.com

Channel Mechanics Geraldine Powderly discusses some of the biggest trends changing the tech industry, from zero-trust security to the no-code revolution.

Geraldine Powderly is the chief information security officer at Galway-based cloud management company Channel Mechanics.

In this role, she works across a wide variety of domains including security operations, risk management, incident detection and response, identity and access management, product security, continuity planning, cyber intelligence and vulnerability management.

While the cybersecurity industry is full of technical products that help prevent or detect cyberattacks, these products often come with a hefty price tag. A price tag that is not always easily understood or accepted by a company, she told SiliconRepublic.com.

My role within Channel Mechanics is to ensure that we always consider security risk and business risk together. They are two sides of the same coin. When it comes to defining a strategy for our platform and technical investments, I always put emphasis on considering the security risk and the business risk to help drive the best decision-making process.

No-code interfaces are very exciting from both a design and innovation perspective GERALDINE POWDERLY

In my opinion, one of the biggest challenges out there for any IT department is the implementation of a zero-trust strategy. Zero trust means dont trust anyone and only connect to an application, not the entire network. Its the opposite to VPN and firewall where once youre authenticated, you are on a routable network.

Its not a new concept. I have been hearing about if for several years now. Having listened in on numerous talks with vendors describing their zero-trust products, it always left me feeling that the challenge of successful implementation is still underestimated.

Comments about how VPN is so last decade always make me smile, because it reminds me of a quote you would expect to hear at fashion week. Of course its very dependent on the size of a companys footprint.

In todays world, it has become very clear that the traditional company network perimeter is in the past. Nothing has emphasised this more than the pandemic and working from home.

Overnight, the work-from-home requirements put an unforeseen load on VPNs, creating issues with internet access and speed while on VPN. This led to complaints and requests for split tunnels or other unsecure tactics. The impact of this forced users off VPN to browse the internet, thereby removing the protection of web filtering gateways, leaving users unprotected and susceptible to attack.

The challenge I see for companies with large footprints and hybrid deployments is that there is still a big gap between talking about it and implementing it in a successful manner that provides protection without disrupting the functioning of the business.

For smaller companies, the risk is also very real. In a lot of cases there might not even be a corporate VPN or web filtering gateways. The company could be reliant on endpoint protection, with users remotely connecting to environments. In this case, the implementation should be a lot of easier, but the same rules apply Dont break the business!

According to Forbes, everything-as-a-service and the no-code revolution are some of the next big technology trends in 2022. The concept is that it aims to put the skills and tools for tech-led innovation in the hands of as large a proportion of society as possible, regardless of their expertise.

At Channel Mechanics, we have already reaped the rewards of concepts like platform-as-a-service in terms of cloud solutions. As a born-in-the-cloud company, our SaaS offering provides a platform for channel program automation.

Choosing a reputable cloud-hosting solution provides a wonderful level of security, out of the box. Its akin to renting an apartment within a large apartment block offering security guards, CCTV, locked front doors, secure windows and alarms.

However, the security of the apartment is the tenants responsibility. If the tenant fails to secure the entrance or the contents stored within, then the buildings security is quickly negated. This is the same for software that is hosted in the cloud, whereby the tenant still has a responsibility for the security of their product.

At Channel Mechanics we take this responsibility very seriously. We continuously assess risk that may arise due to our environment configurations, and we follow our risk management and vulnerability management strategies to mitigate any risks found.

No-code interfaces are very exciting from both a design and innovation perspective. As CISO and a self-professed security nerd, I will be following this closely as it will definitely provide a challenge when it comes to ensuring these interfaces are secure.

From a 100-foot view, the challenge for any security team is finding all the possible vulnerabilities that could be exploited and secure them. A malicious actor only needs one successful exploit that gives them a foothold into an application or environment. There are specialist companies that you can engage and partner with to support this challenge.

Agile and DevOps provide faster to market software. However, the speed at which software can be deployed and environments can be created can introduce risk when it comes to deploying vulnerable code and environments.

Embedding security early in the software design cycle is the most effective method to help address this challenge. This may seem pretty obvious, but a lot of companies still see security as an afterthought or an added expense, which then relies on detection and containment rather than prevention.

Shifting security activities left by implementing DevSecOps is the most effective method to help address this challenge, and by engaging in the software development life cycle as early as possible.

Implementing security architectural reviews, threat modelling, static and dynamic analysis are all proactive methods of preventing security flaws entering an application.

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Excerpt from:
The 'no-code revolution' is one of the next big tech trends - Siliconrepublic.com

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