Utrust Joins Hand With Alternative Airlines To Ensure Secure Crypto Payments For Users

Utrust, a blockchain-powered payment technology that enables online businesses to accept cryptos, announced its collaboration with the travel industry, Alternative Airlines, their first merchant to allow its users to pay via cryptocurrencies. Reported on October 13 via Utrust’s blog post, Utrust’s mission is to encourage the mass adoption of cryptocurrencies, making it easy for people to utilize it on their daily activities. The company is not far from actualizing its mission since this collaboration with Alternative Airlines will make it possible for their customers to pay from flights using Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), DASH, DigiByte (DGB) and UTK, Utrust’s coin.

This partnership will help to expand the reach of Utrust and would also help the company to get the best and trusted merchants they ever wanted. Now merchants quickly and conveniently book their flights to any known locations in the world with cryptos.

On this, Nuno Correia, the CEO of Utrust, said:

“For business or leisure, flight travel can be expensive with consumers saving for months to afford a trip. Considered a high ticket item, it is imperative that consumers are protected when booking flights. Utrust is providing Alternative Airlines’ customers with the increased security and convenience of cryptocurrency payments, and reducing processing fees, to bring greater transparency and trust to the world of online payments.”

Utrust believes that their catch is impressive given that Alternative Airlines provide their available customers, over 650 carriers, with the most varied, complete and exciting service. The company also provides services for flights across smaller, regional, and national airlines at competitively reasonable prices. The company also works with major airlines, such as United, Delta, British Airways, Virgin, and Emirates.

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Blockchain Got Down to Business in 2019

According to Deloitte, the blockchain story is beginning a new chapter, one in which the questions executives go beyond the potential and philosophy of the technology and are now more specific, focused and pragmatic. Executives are no longer asking, “Will blockchain work?” but, “How can we make blockchain work for us?”

Blockchain has been a technology of promise and potential for the last ten years but so far, corporate leaders across industries have often seemed unsure how to leverage it. According to Deloitte’s 2019 Global Blockchain Survey, 2019 has been a year of shared enterprise recognition that blockchain is a real and viable technology that can be utilized pragmatically to solve limitations within their businesses.

Executives who took part in Deloitte’s survey are confident about the new and evolving use-cases of blockchain. In comparison to Deloitte’s 2018 survey, respondents report that overall corporate blockchain investment is expanding across most sectors and practical applications are gaining traction.

2019 has shown some stage of blockchain’s metamorphosis from a capable yet underdeveloped technology into a more refined and mature solution poised to deliver on its initial promise to disrupt everything.

Survey HighlightsAccording to the survey, the technology’s momentum has begun shifting from “blockchain tourism” and exploration toward the building of practical business applications. Financial services and, more specifically, the FinTech sector were leading in blockchain development in 2018, while other industries were cautious in their search for use cases to provide a return on investment to justify the cost and effort of implementing blockchain solutions.In 2019, FinTech remains a blockchain leader, but more organizations in more sectors – such as technology, media, telecommunications, life sciences and health care, and government – are expanding and diversifying their blockchain initiatives. The researchers’ highlight that despite these advances, progress remains measured in the wake of blockchain’s first cyclical rise and fall, and the resulting attitude shifts following the initial blockchain buzz.An extremely positive finding for blockchain adoption in Deloitte’s 2019 survey reveals continued strong investment, with those willing to invest US$5 million or more in new blockchain initiatives over the next 12 months, holding steady at 40 percent (up a point from 2018). Simultaneously, 53 percent of respondents say that blockchain technology has become a critical priority for their organizations in 2019 – a 10-point increase over last year. Moreover, 83 percent see compelling use cases for blockchain, up from 74 percent, and respondents’ overall attitudes toward blockchain have strengthened meaningfully. Other 2019 survey data points to signs of blockchain’s increased maturity. For example, respondents saw blockchain providing more diverse advantages than in 2018. Similarly, the increasing diversification of potential use cases for blockchain – and the wider array and greater parity of identified barriers to blockchain adoption – suggest further signs of maturation.

To read the full report please go to –Deloitte’s 2019 Global Blockchain Survey.

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With 245 Investments and Financing Deals in Blockchain, Will China Carry on Its Expenditure in the Future?

According to a study from Xinhua, a Chinese government-run financial media, and Rhino Data, revealed that the total amount spent in investment deals pertaining to blockchain is responsible for 24 billion yuan ($3.6 billion). On Jan. 15, an official figure has been released by Xinhua, showing that the figures mentioned earlier have declined by 40.8%, within one year. 

Nonetheless, the value and number of deals have substantially risen since 2018 as per the report. The yearly analysis shows that 2018 remains the most advantageous year for Chinese blockchain investment spending to date, as more than 600 deals took place throughout the year. Whereas in contrast, 2017 only witnessed 168 deals. Included in the Xinhua study were disclosures such as Series A funding rounds accounting for 43.3% of early-stage investments in 2019. In addition to this, 292 institutions supported those investments in Beijing, Shenzhen, and Hangzhou.

The Chinese president’s encouragement of blockchain has augmented its adoption. In the latter half of 2019, Xinhua referenced an American study forecasting that China’s overall expenditure of blockchain technology would increase by $2 billion by 2023.  

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IRS Crypto Disclosure Letters Violated US Taxpayer Rights in 2019

The IRS shook up the US crypto sector last year when it issued Letter 6137 to American taxpayer’s which demanded that all citizens declare any unreported crypto gains within 30 days. One year on and an IRS watchdog has slammed the letter as a violation of the Taxpayer Bill of Rights.

On July 26, 2019, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) came at the cryptocurrency community with a not so “soft letter”—demanding that all United States taxpayers reveal any unreported crypto gains within 30 days. A year later, and the IRS’s own watchdog has suggested that the letter violated the taxpayers’ right to privacy and their right to information.

Soft Letter 6173

The core message of the IRS’s letter was that the tax agency was already aware of the information on all US taxpayer’s digital assets and crypto accounts and demanded that they report their gains.

Letter 6137 did not explain how the IRS had gained this information or exactly what they had uncovered. The agency was clear, however, that unless these taxpayers refiled their tax returns addressing potential discrepancies in crypto gains, or provided a sworn response that they were in compliance—they would be subjected to an audit.

The letter was vague regarding whether or not these crypto tax dodgers were already under IRS examination and demanded answers with little explanation beyond the consequences of not replying within 30 days.

Almost one year later, the Taxpayer Advocate Service, an independent department of the IRS and its official watchdog, has alleged that Letter 6137 has violated the congressionally enforced Taxpayer Bill of Rights.

Taxpayer Advocate Services Allegations

According to the Erin M.Collins of Taxpayer Advocate Services, Letter 6137 ignored the rights of taxpayers as declared in the Taxpayer Bill of Rights—which the IRS adopted in 2014.

In her report on June 29 entitled “2021 Objectives Report to Congress”, Collins wrote:

“The Code, Congress and the IRS have repeatedly acknowledged taxpayers’ rights and protections, and this letter not only does not provide them—it undermines them.”

Letter 6137 overreached with their demands that taxpayers submit their entire virtual asset trading history, nearly 5 years of tax document copies, and a sworn explanation of their compliance under “penalty of perjury.”

Collins asserts that by demanding that taxpayers who were not under audit submit information under such conditions, the IRS 2019 letter specifically violated two of the tenets within the Taxpayer Bill of Rights—specifically the right to privacy and the right to be informed.

Disclosure of Crypto Tax Info not IRS Strong Suit

The lack of clarification on crypto taxes appears to be a running theme with the Internal Revenue Service and it was reported by a US congressional watchdog in February—that the agency will not clarify how taxes work with cryptocurrencies and digital asset transactions.

Following Rep. Ken Brady’s (R-TX) request for clarity on how taxes are levied against cryptocurrency, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) published a report evaluating the IRS’ current approach and public guidelines on cryptocurrency.

Following the report, GAO made recommendations to the IRS, as well as an additional recommendation to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEn).

The recommendations were, “GAO is recommending that IRS clarify that part of the 2019 guidance is not authoritative and take steps to increase information reporting; and that FinCEN and IRS address how foreign asset reporting laws apply to virtual currency.”

In response to the recommendations, GAO reported that the IRS, “Agreed with the recommendation on information reporting and disagreed with the other two, stating that a disclaimer statement is unnecessary and that it is premature to address virtual currency foreign reporting.”

Despite the IRS’ refusal to disclaim the guidelines as non-authoritative, GAO believes a disclaimer would increase transparency and that IRS can clarify foreign reporting without waiting for future developments in the industry.

FinCEN agreed at the time with GAO’s recommendation.

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