èƵ

El Salvador revamps bitcoin wallet after complaints of theft and fraud

The Central American country's experimental adoption of bitcoin has been beset by problems including identity theft and missing funds. Now the system is being relaunched with a US company providing the infrastructure
A vendor hods a sign reading "Bitcoin accepted" at a store in San Salvador, on January 26, 2022. - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) urged El Salvador to withdraw bitcoin as a legal tender, pointing to "great risks associated" with the use of cryptocurrency, a blow to President Nayib Bukele, his enthusiastic promoter. (Photo by MARVIN RECINOS / AFP) (Photo by MARVIN RECINOS/AFP via Getty Images)
A vendor holds a sign reading “Bitcoin accepted” at a store in San Salvador, on January 26, 2022
MARVIN RECINOS/AFP via Getty Images

El Salvador passed legislation to make bitcoin legal tender in September 2021, the first country in the world to do so, but the bold experiment has enjoyed limited success. Hundreds of citizens claimed that payments weren’t being received by shops, or that funds were disappearing from their accounts. Traders also briefly exploited a loophole in the state-issued wallet app to turn a quick profit. Now a US company is being drafted in to replace the infrastructure and fix these issues, and the project is being entirely overhauled just months after launch.

A that financial services company will be providing technology for an updated Chivo Wallet – the state-controlled service that handles bitcoin payments. Igor Telyatnikov at AlphaPoint confirmed to èƵ that the company would be providing technology “at the heart” of the Chivo system, including the smartphone app, sales processing for shops and core infrastructure.

“Most of the changes are indeed behind the scenes focusing on enhanced usability, uptime and scalability,” he says. “But there are some notable improvements to the Lightning integration for nearly instantaneous Bitcoin transactions.” Lightning is a technology that sits above the core bitcoin protocol and enables faster and more seamless transactions, because bitcoin transactions can ordinarily take up to an hour to process.

Telyatnikov didn’t address questions about problems with the original system or provide technical details of the new infrastructure. But a representative working for AlphaPoint said that the original system had “initially opened the door to identity theft and false identity sign-ups”.

El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, made bitcoin legal tender in a bid to alleviate the country’s prickliest economic problems: citizens sending money home from abroad account for up to one-fifth of the country’s GDP, but they have to pay high transaction fees, and 70 per cent of people have no bank account. Bitcoin enables quick, cheap payments across borders, and doesn’t require banks.

In September last year, the government gave each citizen a Chivo wallet containing US$30 in bitcoin. The currency could be used for shopping, or to pay taxes. Chivo is run by a state-owned company, also called Chivo, and its source code is private.

While bitcoin is an open source and decentralised technology, El Salvador has opted for a state-controlled version with wallets created and issued by the government and back-end infrastructure operated by a company. This unusual approach attempts to centralise and impose government control on a system that was designed to avoid both.

Last week, the International Monetary Fund advised the country to drop bitcoin as legal tender, but the suggestion . Treasury minister Alejandro Zelaya said that “no international organisation is going to make us do anything, anything at all”.

The company behind Chivo and the president’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Topics: bitcoin & cryptocurrency / cryptocurrency