European Bank to Study Benefits of Integrating Bitcoin Technology
The Estonian bank LHV will examine bitcoin bank services and the use of the block chain technology.
Estonia-based bank LHV has announced a new project that will explore the legal framework and potential uses of bitcoin's block chain technology in banking so it might develop bank services for bitcoin and other digital currencies.
"We are interested in the technological side of digital currencies as we hope it could make bank services more simple and efficient," Priit Rum, head of communications at LHV, told CoinDesk.
The project manager will examine all digital currencies, not limiting itself to bitcoin.
For now, the bank won't engage in trading bitcoin, Rum said, but more likely, could develop its payments system using block chain technology.
The company claims to be the first bank in the world to implement such a program, stating:
Regulatory uncertainty remains
While the news of this action by a major bank is perhaps encouraging, in Estonia, bitcoin is tangled in regulatory uncertainty.
Earlier this year, the country’s central bank issued a warning against bitcoin and digital currencies calling it a Ponzi scheme, saying "virtual currency schemes are an innovation that [deserve] some caution", but that it would continue to monitor their development.
Shortly after, local bitcoin trading site BTC.ee put a halt on trades, coming under pressure from Estonian authorities who challenged the site’s compliance with the Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Prevention Act.
Said Rum:
Local enthusiasm grows
Estonians have been enthusiastic about bitcoin for some time, despite the regulatory difficulties the domestic ecosystem faces.
The country’s capital Talinn had a successful week-long bitcoin showcase last month, during which bitcoin advocates came together to educate those new to the digital currency and boost its popularity.
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Estonian parliament image via Shutterstock