psionl0
Skeptical about skeptics
Probably not but it is still a non-speculative, non-criminal use of bitcoin.Has is Bitcoin better for El Salvador's purposes than just using USD?
Probably not but it is still a non-speculative, non-criminal use of bitcoin.Has is Bitcoin better for El Salvador's purposes than just using USD?
Probably not but it is still a non-speculative, non-criminal use of bitcoin.
Except nobody is really using it. Just a few tourists in McDonalds.Probably not but it is still a non-speculative, non-criminal use of bitcoin.
More likely ignorance. Most people would realize that the price of bitcoin depends on the market and not on how difficult it is to mine. The mining difficulty is a function of the bitcoin price and not the other way around.
There is no "one size fits all" here. For domestic consumption, you would almost certainly use fiat every time (unless it was subject to hyperinflation).yes, but the original challenge, at least as far as I phrased it was, what is the legal utility of Bitcoin that isn't better fulfilled by fiat currency. That last part is critical: I don't deny that Bitcoin has some utility. My point is just that it is not worth the downside that comes with Bitcoin.
There is no "one size fits all" here. For domestic consumption, you would almost certainly use fiat every time (unless it was subject to hyperinflation).
For international transfers (especially if currency conversions are necessary) individuals may find it more convenient and cheaper to use bitcoin.
My bank will let me make an international transfer for a flat fee (£15 - less for Euros) and it's more or less instantaneous these days. Can Bitcoin match that?
I haven't done an international transfer in over 30 years, yet I've bought lots of stuff from overseas and never once had to wait for confirmation. I also sold a bit of stuff without any hassle or onerous fees. How is that possible? Perhaps all this time I've been using Bitcoin (or something better than Bitcoin) and didn't know it...So at least in this regard bitcoin matches or exceeds international bank transfer.
Sending money to a business overseas is usually not a problem. The business is usually set up for bulk international transfers.My bank will let me make an international transfer for a flat fee (£15 - less for Euros) and it's more or less instantaneous these days. Can Bitcoin match that?
I haven't done an international transfer in over 30 years, yet I've bought lots of stuff from overseas and never once had to wait for confirmation. I also sold a bit of stuff without any hassle or onerous fees. How is that possible? Perhaps all this time I've been using Bitcoin (or something better than Bitcoin) and didn't know it...
But right now I have another problem. I just turned 65, and my bank balance is mysteriously going up without me doing anything. Seems that many years ago I enrolled in a scheme called 'paying taxes', and I hodled for so long they decided I qualify for free money!
I was worried that it might be scam. Some people say they pay out with money received from new investors, and that if fewer people pay in the whole thing will collapse. But I pointed to Bitcoin as an example to show them that this won't happen. I mean, everybody's being saying it was a scam and would collapse from the beginning, and look at it now!
Sending money to a business overseas is usually not a problem. The business is usually set up for bulk international transfers.
It is when an individual wants to receive money from overseas that the fun starts.
I haven't done an international transfer in over 30 years, yet I've bought lots of stuff from overseas and never once had to wait for confirmation. I also sold a bit of stuff without any hassle or onerous fees. How is that possible? Perhaps all this time I've been using Bitcoin (or something better than Bitcoin) and didn't know it...
I was specifically talking about money transfers, not buying stuff. If I want to buy something from abroad, I just use my credit card and it is instantaneous. The fees can be a bit higher, especially if there is a currency conversion involved, but there are other advantages e.g. I am protected from fraud.
And what are the fees the banks would charge you as an individual for receiving money from a foreign bank account?What I quoted were the fees that my bank would charge me as an individual for transferring money to somebody else's foreign bank account.
And what are the fees the banks would charge you as an individual for receiving money from a foreign bank account?
Nothing as far as I can tell.
ETA. Nope £7 is the answer or zero for Euros.
They may also make money out of the exchange rate as well - at least that was the case with my father's social security payment and my mother's royalty payments.
As with any exchange rate, there is always a buy/sell spread. But that would apply to converting fiat currency to and from Bitcoin as well.
That was originally part of the design spec. The hope was that the price of bitcoin would get so high that you had to break it up into smaller units.Unless ways can be thought to cut it up into pieces somehow, like share splits, or some shadow currency of smaller denomination . . .