http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR1231.html
Key Findings

Non-State Actors Can Use VCs to Disrupt Sovereignty and Increase Political 
and/or Economic Power, but Unlikely to Use Established VC; Many Challenges 
Posed by Creation of VCs

- VC deployments are attractive in developing countries and in countries 
undergoing internal turmoil, where the existing financial infrastructure is 
either insufficient or weakened.
- The rapid deployment of a VC over a large geographic area would likely be 
less complicated than deploying more common currencies, such as those based on 
commodities or paper-based currencies.
- A non-state actor's VC (including Bitcoin-like currencies) would likely be 
vulnerable to cyber attack by a sophisticated adversary; more generally, 
creating new, usable yet reliable VC may pose great challenges, particularly 
for a non-state actor without technical sophistication.
- Promoting adoption of VCs among population is difficult due to newness, lack 
of legitimacy, and familiarity with physical tangibility of currency.
- Deployment of a VC by non-state actors, such terrorist organizations, 
insurgent groups, drug cartels, and other criminal organizations, would be 
easier if supported by a nation-state with advanced cyber expertise.
- Despite numerous hurdles, trends indicate a future in which VCs could be 
deployed by non-state actors or other organizations.

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