
Wisconsin legislators make a renewed thrust to curb cryptocurrencies’ kiosks, tabled a second bill in two weeks aimed at reducing the fraud linked to machines.
The main dishes to remember:
- Wisconsin legislators have presented twin bills to regulate the 582 state crypto kiosks.
- Fincen reported a 99% increase in the scams linked to the kiosk in 2024, with losses reaching 247 million dollars.
- Proposals caps daily transactions at $ 1,000.
Bill 386 of the Senate, presented Monday by Senator Kelda Roys and six colleagues, Mirrors Assembly Bill 384, tabled last month by representative Ryan Spaude and ten co-sponsors.
The two measures target the 582 Bitcoin automatic counters dispersed in service stations, grocery stores and state-of-the-fee stores.
Fincen Flags 99% Surfect of Cryptographic Kiosk Skills, $ 247 million in losses
The draft laws take place while the network of application of the financial crimes of the Treasury (Fincen) warns against a sharp increase in the scams of cryptographic kiosk, with fraud complaints of 99% in 2024 and said that losses rose from 31% to almost $ 247 million.
Wisconsin’s proposals would place kiosk operators as part of the state silver transmitter license system and impose strict protections on consumers, including fraud alerts, transaction ceilings and more strict identity checks.
If adopted, the two invoices caps the daily exchanges to $ 1,000 per customer and would limit operator costs to 5 or 3% of the amount of the transaction.
The machines would be required to display daring warnings, such as: “Fraud alert!” Criminals seek to defraud customers into virtual currencies by usurting the identity of their loved ones, government officials, law enforcement agents or charities. ”
The legislation also requires a robust verification of the identity before any transaction, collecting the name of a customer, the date of birth, the address, the telephone number and the identification of the photo issued by the government.
Supporters say that these measures, while reducing anonymity, are essential to establish public confidence.
“While the automatic distributors of crypto tickets have been developed as a natural extension of the cryptography ecosystem … The absence of Robust KYC protocols made them vulnerable to money laundering and illicit activities,” said Arjun Vijay, founder of the Giottus exchange.
The bills go further by demanding reimbursements for the victims of fraud who inform the authorities within 30 days, a decision designed to protect elderly and vulnerable residents which were privileged targets in scams.
Wisconsin’s efforts are followed by similar repression abroad, in particular the transaction limits of Australia and the planned ban on New Zealand on cryptographic kiosks.
In the United States, the Spokane municipal council of Washington State recently voted to withdraw all the kiosks after the federal probes linked them to billions of losses related to fraud.
The two bills are now before the Commission of Financial Institutions, the identification requirements which should take effect 60 days after the passage if they are approved.
More countries are accompanied by automatic distributors of Crypto tickets
The move of Wisconsin follows similar efforts abroad. In Australia, Austrac recently introduced stricter rules for cryptographic atmctors, including stricter cash limits and surveillance.
Last month, the regulator refused to renew the recording of a local Cryptographic ATM operator, Harro’s Empires. The agency has placed operating conditions, including transaction limits, on them.
In the United States, Spokane, Washington, completely prohibited automatic crypto ticket distributors, citing their use in scams targeting vulnerable residents.
The legislators of the American Senate also try to tighten the laws at the level of the state and the local level, with an attempt led by the Senator of Illinois, Dick Durbin.
It introduced the Atm Fraud Prevention Act Crypto, which would provide legislative measures designed to protect the public, while trying to limit the disadvantages of laws that respectful of law.
New users are said to be prevented from spending more than $ 2,000 per day in one of these machines, going to $ 10,000 in 14 days.
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