Russian Payments Firm Qiwi Seeks 'Bitruble' Trademark
A Russian payments firm is pushing ahead with its plan to release a cryptocurrency by submitting an application to register a trademark for it.

A Russian payments firm is pushing ahead with a plan to release its own cryptocurrency, reportedly submitting an application to register a trademark for the initiative.
According to Russian news agency Interfax, Qiwi is seeking to trademark the term "Bitruble". An application has been sent to the Federal Service for Intellectual Property.
The filing follows the company's move to acquire domain name space related to the term "bitruble", as reported by Kommersant earlier this month. Qiwi has also indicated that the cryptocurrency could be backed by some form of commodity.
The proposal drew attention given Russia's still uncertain stance on bitcoin and digital currencies.
Shortly after the payments firm disclosed its plans, Russian government officials denounced the concept as "illegal". More recently, the country's Ministry of Finance has moved to endorse criminal penalties for activities connected with "money substitutes" such as bitcoin.
that would prohibit money substitutes remains under consideration.
The developments further follow statements earlier this summer from Russian President Vladimir Putin, who entered the country's ongoing debate about digital currencies by stating during a television appearance that "there are serious, really fundamental issues related to its wider use, at least, today."
Image via Shutterstock
More For You
Crypto custodian BitGo a potential acquisition target for Wall Street firms, analysts say

Compass Point and Canaccord call BitGo a potential acquisition target and defend the stock despite its weak debut, citing growth in institutional crypto infrastructure.
What to know:
- Wall Street analysts say BitGo’s expansion into full-service institutional crypto finance could drive long-term growth and make it an attractive acquisition target for traditional financial firms.
- Analysts argue that investors are overlooking BitGo’s potential to cross-sell prime brokerage-style services, which could significantly boost revenue if it can narrow the gap with rivals like Galaxy and Coinbase.
- Despite BitGo’s stock falling more than 40% since its January IPO, some analysts view the selloff as an overreaction and maintain buy ratings, citing the company’s solid competitive moat and strategic value to big banks entering crypto.












