Silk Road bitcoins worth $18M US to be auctioned off - Action News
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Silk Road bitcoins worth $18M US to be auctioned off

The U.S. Marshals Service says it will auction roughly $18 million US in bitcoins seized last fall from Silk Road, a website that was effectively the eBay of illegal drugs.

Virtual currency was generated by anonymous online marketplace for illegal drugs

The bitcoin has been around since 2009 and is still a relatively volatile currency. The virtual currency is transacted independent of central control and is not backed by any government or central bank. (Jim Urquhart/Reuters)

The U.S. Marshals Service said Thursday it will auction roughly $18 million US in bitcoins seized last fall from Silk Road, a website that was effectively the eBay of illegal drugs.

The marshals said Thursday that they will auction the virtual "coins," consisting of sets of numbers entered in an online public ledger, via the web on June 27.

Authorities say Silk Road generated more than $1 billion in illicit business from January 2011 to October 2013, when alleged operator Ross WilliamUlbrichtwas arrested in a public library in San Francisco.Ulbrichthas pleaded not guilty. The website took commissions inbitcoins, which are hard to track.

The marshals are auctioning off 29,657bitcoinsin 10 blocks, which means buyers will need to pony up nearly $1.8 millioneach.
An artist rendering of Ross William Ulbricht, the alleged operator of the black market website Silk Road, appearing in U.S. Federal Court in San Francisco in October. (Vicki Behringer/Associated Press)

The bitcoins up for auction were contained in wallet files on the Silk Road servers and do not include the bitcoins contained on the computer hardware belonging to Silk Road owner Ross William Ulbricht, known online as "Dread Pirate Roberts."

The Marshals Service is keeping another 144,342bitcoins, worth about $87 millionat current rates, that were found onUlbricht'scomputer. He's contesting their forfeiture.

Bitcoin prices fell about 6.74 per cent to $585.56today, on the news, according to the digital currency exchange Coindesk.com.

Bitcoinvolatility

Silk Road's closure waswelcomed by Canadian bitcoin users, who saidthat the site had brought unwanted attention to the digital currency.

In the days followingUlbricht'sarrest, the focusturned to how the shutdown of one of the most notoriousbitcoinusers wouldaffect the reputation of the currency, one that hasalready been tarnished by its association with money laundering, tax evasion and other criminal activities.

Somespeculated that the scandal might mark the start of the virtual currency's collapse. However, members of theCanadianbitcoincommunity feltthat the shutdown of the site itself and the arrest of its owner wereenough to repair the currency's tainted image.

Bitcoin users describe the currency as the first decentralized electronic currency that isn't controlled by any government or organization. Bitcoins can be purchased with traditional currency and traded anonymously for goods and services. There are no set transaction fees and the currency can be sent anywhere around the world in a similar fashion to the way electronic transfers are done in online banking but using bitcoin-specific digital addresses and encryption protocols.

The digital currency is generated by thousands of so-calledminers.These are people who, working individually or in groups called "mining pools,"use powerful computers to run software that solves a series of mathematical puzzles. Each time theminer solves the puzzle,they receive bitcoins, which they can trade for currency or otherwise put into circulation.

The Silk Road raid is notthe first time bitcoins have attracted negative attention. In May 2013, competitive video game league E-Sports Entertainment League (ESEA)apologizedto its users after admitting to harnessing their computer power to generate bitcoins without consent. The ESEA donated the $3,713worth of bitcoins it mined to the American Cancer Society and matched that amount with an additional company donation.

With files from CBC News and Reuters