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Fireblocks partners with South Korean bank on VAT tokenization 

Fireblocks extends its services with the tokenization of tax refunds through NongHyup Bank.

Digital assets platform Fireblocks has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with NongHyup Bank, a large South Korean bank specializing in commercial credit and banking services for the agricultural sector. They hope to launch a prototype for tax refunds.

Fireblocks and NongHyup Bank will use the Fireblocks Tokenization Engine in a pilot project to refund value-added tax (VAT) and goods and services tax (GST) on purchases at retail outlets. Fireblocks co-founder and CEO Michael Shaulov told Cointelegraph that they are looking to increase transparency and security. He said:

“This not only reduces operational costs but also ensures a secure, immutable record that strengthens trust between banks and their clients,” he added.

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What is Operation Choke Point 2.0? Trump vows to end it

Bithumb to block crypto withdrawals to unverified private wallets

Bithumb users in South Korea have just two days to perform another round of KYC in order to whitelist their personal wallets, or crypto withdrawals will be blocked.

Starting on Jan. 27, the South Korean crypto exchange Bithumb will not allow users to withdraw their crypto assets to unverified private wallets.

On Jan. 24, the exchange announced that it would be the second of the four major exchanges in the country to ban withdrawals to unverified wallets. Coinone enacted a similar policy late last month and the other major exchanges are Upbit and Korbit.

The new policy states that users may only register their own private wallets. In order to perform the registration process, users must undergo an additional battery of know-your-customer identity verifications.

Withdrawals to any domestic centralized exchange and foreign centralized exchanges with a stringent KYC process such as Kraken, Bitstamp, Blockchain.com, Bybit, and Binance.US are still universally approved.

Local news outlet Money Today reported that the exchange faced pressure from its partner bank, Nonghyup Bank, to make the policy change in order to comply with the FATF Travel Rule. The Travel Rule is designed to let financial institutions know the identity of the senders and receivers of funds across borders.

The bank “strongly demanded” that the exchange “block all personal wallets that do not have their own KYC system.” Such wallets include MetaMask and MyEtherWallet, among others.

Every South Korean crypto exchange that offers Korean Won (KRW) trading pairs is required to have a domestic partner bank that issues real-name bank accounts to its users. A partner bank can have a strong impact on the exchange’s policies, as is the case with Nonghyup to Bithumb and Coinone.

Real-name bank accounts ensure that the person accepting fiat withdrawals from an exchange is the same person trading crypto on its platform. This policy helps exchanges come into compliance with the Travel Rule by the deadline of Mar. 25.

As yet, exchanges Upbit and Korbit have not issued any policy changes pertaining to personal crypto wallets. Exchanges will be required to set those policies by March 25 when the Korean government has deemed it necessary for all exchanges to adopt such policies.

Related: Korean Bithumb exchange to launch NFT marketplace

According to Statista, Upbit handles roughly 76% of domestic trading volume while second-place Bithumb handles about 13%.

Failure to comply with the Travel Rule could result in increased anti-money laundering and combatting the funding of terrorism (AML/CTF) monitoring.

What is Operation Choke Point 2.0? Trump vows to end it