Copy+ paste
Aemelia:
Snipets from Today's session on Cryptocurrency at Strathmore Business School.
1. Dr. Bitange Ndemo, Professor of Entrepreneurship and innovation at UoN Business school.
-No Government in the world can succeed in fighting technology.
-Banks are the largest corporate investors in crypto currencies.. I will not tell you to be cautious.. Go ahead and Invest.. Amid applause.
-I have a gut feeling Bitcoin will soon hit $50,000.
-It is may be a risky investment but it will definitely change the world.
-If Africa wants to move out of poverty, the only way out is to adopt crypt currencies.
-If possible launch our own African crypto currency.
-Hanging on the dollar or even to our shillings will not take us far.
-BTC dispensing machines to be launched next month in Kenya.
2. Dr. Robert Muthuri, Legal Knowledge Engineer in Kenya
-The legal environment is evolving fast around crypto currencies.
-The internet was initially thought to be immune to regulation.. The same will happen to Crypto currencies.. Some form of regulation will eventually take root in Kenya.
-For now It’s advisable you only deal with traders that have have verifiedY their identities at the Bitcoin & other crypto exchanges.
-In the eyes of conventional eco system.. Bitcoin is currently unregulated but in the eyes of the developers it is self regulated.. Is it a matter of perception? Perhaps they will meet in the middle at some point.
-There are 3 types of regulation: 1. State regulation, 2. Core regulation 3. Self regulation... Usually state regulation comes when self regulation in non existent or fails and eventually the ideal is core regulation - a balance of the two.
-Mpesa was once described as a form of Anglo leasing and the president was being urged to stop it by the then Minister of Finance...
-We are still in the phase of early adoption.. It looks disruptive.. It looks primo... Will you be part of the early majority or the laggards who will have no choice but to adopt? Only time will tell.
In the business world, everyone is paid in two coins - cash and experience. Take the experience first; the cash will come later - H Geneen