Colu, an Israeli blockchain startup and one of the developers of the Colored Coins protocol, has unveiled the accessible sourcing of Bankbox, a recent solution for digital currency issuers. Bankbox is a wallet application for digital currency issuance and management that allows participants to provide asset verification credentials, issue digital currencies, track assets, and manage distribution, among many other things. Bankbox consists of a full Colored Coins node, API, SDK, an explorer, issuance tool and an accessible source wallet. In the future, it will also allow issuers to launch payment hubs to enable scalable payment infrastructure. Bankbox, Colored Coins The latest solution aims to increase adoption and address the needs of digital currencies issuers around the world. It will provide access to public source tools that are “battled tested and could dramatically reduce banking IT costs,” according to Mark Smargon, co-founder of Colu. Bitt, a Bitcoin startup based in Barbados and a Colored Coins member and contributor, will be the first deployment of Bankbox. The startup will use Bankbox to issue a digital Barbadian dollar using Colored Coins technology and in partnership with the Barbados central bank. Bitt aims to provide a local banking infrastructure for the entire Caribbean area. The announcement comes as the Colored Coins project is undergoing a rebrand and refocus push, moving from being a generic protocol to becoming a blockchain agnostic framework focused on digital currencies and serving the specific needs of issuers. Colored Coins started in 2013 as a method that facilitates the creation and transfer of digital assets on the Bitcoin blockchain. Throughout the years, the community has grown into a vibrant ecosystem that’s been applying the technology to a broad range of use cases including crypto shares, real estate, digital cash, healthcare, copyrights, and government ledgers. While the Colored Coins protocol and code are running on top of Bitcoin, the team is exploring ways to integrate its tools with different blockchains. Colored Coins has recently joined the Hyperledger project as an associate developer community and explained it will promote interoperability with the Hyperledger ecosystem. The team also remarked it is working on adding native support for Colored Coins as part of the official Lightning Network protocol to enable scalability. “As the ecosystem evolves, we are seeing a consolidation of ideas in the crypto-space, specifically around ‘layer 2’ […] to provide a scalable payment infrastructure on top of a blockchain,” stated Smargon. “Another realization that seems evident is that we will not hold the entire human knowledge on one ledger – we will see different ledgers for different use cases and sovereign ledgers across different jurisdictions.” “The Bitcoin blockchain is still the biggest and most secure digital currency ecosystem in the world and while Colored Coins always was focused on the Bitcoin blockchain in its early days, it has to evolve to stay relevant,” he stated.
Bitcoin Exchange Wins Payment Institution License From Luxembourg
Leading Europe-based bitcoin exchange Bitstamp, has been granted a license as a regulated Payment Institution by Luxembourg.

Key Points
- Leading Europe-based bitcoin exchange Bitstamp, has been granted a license as a regulated Payment Institution by Luxembourg.
MiningPool content is intended for information and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice.
Advertisement
728×90
Related Stories

NYSE Texas Filed for Tokenised Stock Trading on May 5 — and the Rule Took Effect the Same Day
NYSE Texas filed Rule 7.39 with the SEC on May 5 to allow tokenised versions of Russell 1000 stocks and major-index ETFs to trade alongside their traditional shares. The exchange used a procedural shortcut that made the rule effective on filing.

Litecoin's Privacy Layer Suffered a Zero-Day Exploit That Forced a 13-Block Reorg, and the Patch Timeline Doesn't Add Up
A vulnerability in Litecoin's MimbleWimble Extension Block allowed attackers to forge invalid peg-out transactions and attempt double-spends, triggering the deepest chain reorganisation in the network's history. GitHub commits show developers had a fix weeks before the exploit landed.

South Korea Will Put Government Spending on a Blockchain, Starting With Nine Banks and Programmable Deposit Tokens in Sejong City
The Ministry of Economy and Finance will pilot blockchain-based deposit tokens for government procurement in Sejong City during Q4, part of a broader plan to digitise a quarter of all treasury fund executions by 2030.

Visa Becomes an Anchor Validator on Stripe's Tempo Blockchain After Six Months of Quiet Engineering
Visa will operate critical blockchain infrastructure on Tempo, the Stripe-backed layer-1 network built for AI-driven payments, alongside Stripe itself and Standard Chartered's Zodia Custody.

HSBC Takes Its Tokenised Deposit Service Onto a Public Blockchain for the First Time With Canton Network Pilot
HSBC's Global Payments Solutions unit has completed a pilot issuing and settling tokenised deposits on the Canton Network, marking the bank's first use of a public blockchain for the service.

China Orders Banks to Use Blockchain for Tax Data Sharing in $58 Billion Push to Digitise Lending
The State Administration of Taxation and the National Financial Regulatory Administration jointly issued guidelines on 5 April that embed blockchain into the country's bank-tax data infrastructure, with a nationwide rollout targeted for 2029.
Stay informed
Verifiable crypto journalism, delivered to your inbox.
Weekday mornings. No hype. No financial advice. Just what happened and why it matters.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Read our privacy policy.
