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微软、澳大利亚储备银行对虚拟货币的支持(翻译版)

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微软印刷机央行对虚拟货币
微软是按澳大利亚储备银行,以帮助消费者进行虚拟货币的交易,如Facebook积分和微软点,考虑调整国内支付市场。

澳洲储备银行的支付系统创新的意见书的呼吁,微软指出,虚拟货币有一些关键的优势,推动其通过包括取消多个卡处理交换费低价值或小额交易成本。

微软说:“虽然这些系统一般都在这个时间点关闭,可以预见的是,消费者可能在未来的愿望之间,他们很可能成为更广泛和更普遍的网上零售环境内的各项计划和交换价值。”

来自监管,导致越来越多的消费者通过虚拟货币混合反应。举例来说,中国当局提出禁止使用的虚拟货币在真实的商品和服务贸易中,以限制其对金融系统可能造​​成的影响。

同时,法国法院正在要求定义的虚拟货币Bitcoin的地位后,本地银行关闭占处理上的推定,Bitcoin应当符合电子货币的规定,货币的交流。

目前,微软点数不可兑换货币相当于,但仅用于数码产品获得许可证。然而,隐含在其提交​​给澳洲联储,红木显然是寻找到一个存储点的内在价值可以超越Xbox Live和MSN的社区交易的未来。

澳洲联储提交的结论是:“从系统的角度来看这样的一个未来展望,引发国内支付基础设施是否可以以某种方式,以促进和管理超越了传统的货币价值交换的修改或调整的问题。”

原文:(以上GOOGLE翻译如有出入请参阅英文原版)

Microsoft presses RBA on virtual currencies

Microsoft is pressing the Reserve Bank of Australia to consider adjustments to the domestic payments markets to help consumers conduct transactions in virtual currencies, such as Facebook Credits and Microsoft Points.

2147 views 1 comment Responding to the RBA's call for submissions relating to innovation in payments systems, Microsoft points out that virtual currencies have some key advantages driving their adoption including the removal of the cost of multiple card processing interchange fees for low value or micro-transactions.

Says Microsoft: "While these systems are generally closed at this point of time, it is foreseeable that consumers may desire in the future to exchange value between the various schemes and that they could well become more widespread and prevalent within online retail environments."

Growing consumer adoption of virtual currencies has led to a mixed response from regulators. Chinese authorities, for instance, have moved to ban the use of virtual currency in the trade of real goods and services in a bid to limit its possible impact on the financial system.

Meanwhile, the French law courts are being asked to define the status of the virtual currency Bitcoin, after local banks switched off accounts for exchanges handling the currency on the presumption that Bitcoin should conform to electronic money regulations.

At the moment, Microsoft Points are not convertible to a monetary equivalent, but are used solely to gain licenses to digital products. However, implicit in its submission to the RBA, Redwood is clearly looking to a future in which the store of value inherent in Points can be used for transactions beyond the XBox Live and MSN community.

The RBA submission concludes: "Looking into such a future from the perspective of today's systems raises the question as to whether the domestic payments infrastructure could be modified or adjusted in some way to facilitate and manage the exchange of value beyond traditional currencies."