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Topic: [2017-03-23]All the Evidence You Need That Bitcoin Is Turning Into aRealCurrency (Read 312 times)

legendary
Activity: 3430
Merit: 3080
However, all transactions made through Bitcoin are encrypted with military-grade cryptography, ensuring that the deals are secure.

So tired of this canard


THERE'S NO ENCRYPTION IN BITCOIN

There's cryptographic key pairs, signatures, hashes of various types and purposes, but NO ENCRYPTION



*sigh*

Well, I guess there will eventually be encrypted network traffic, once BIP152 is implemented, but that's something that's not even happened yet, and the ledger itself can never be encrypted, that would break the design (unless we stared using zero-knowledge proofs to overcome that, which is a whole other conversation)


If the transactions written on the blockchain were encrypted data, how on earth could one verify the veracity of the public ledger? It's like these so-called journalists don't even think about what any of these things actually mean Undecided
legendary
Activity: 2016
Merit: 1107
this is simply the evidence of more adoption and higher overall market cap
the number of transactions is growing exponentially same as the amount of transaction value
it doesn't mean that bitcoin is turning into real currency as it is not a real ,fiat currency but a digital currency based on a public distributed ledger
not sure what is the author trying to prove (other than advertising Bitpay) in the article
if the transaction fee increase and the blockchain is as congested as it is now
we may as well see a drop in total transactions for 2017 as compared to 2016
newbie
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
Whether or not you know what blockchain is, you have probably heard of the seemingly mysterious cryptocurrency Bitcoin. Bitcoin and its underlying blockchain network are quietly making headlines around the globe. The recent success of Bitcoin and the security of blockchain may have some consumers considering an investment in the new denomination, but others are still wary. Newly released data further legitimizing the currency could be just the thing to push the undecided into the realm of Bitcoin proponents, however.

In 2008, Bitcoin was introduced by an anonymous group of programmers under the name of Satoshi Nakamoto, and then it was released to the public as an open-source software in 2009. Unlike other online payment services like PayPal and Venmo, Bitcoin is a peer-to-peer network that takes place privately between two users — there is no intermediary involved. The virtual currency is completely decentralized from any external influence, and all transactions are accounted for through a blockchain ledger.

While Bitcoin is thoroughly anonymous, all transactions on the blockchain ledger are available publicly. Using the time and date of a particular transaction, individuals could potentially match someone’s online address to their identity. However, all transactions made through Bitcoin are encrypted with military-grade cryptography, ensuring that the deals are secure.

Sending and receiving bitcoins is already as easy as sending an email, and it’s poised to get even easier thanks to BitPay.
THE WAY TO PAY

Bitpay is a payment processing service that allows users to spend bitcoins within a larger network of merchants. With Bitcoin’s unexpected rate of growth leading to longer delays in transactions and higher fees, Bitpay developers were pushed to accommodate the sudden popularity of Bitcoin.

“This friction is making us get more creative in how we do user experience design for delayed payment states on the BitPay platform,” co-founder Stephen Pair explained at the Distributed: Markets 2017 conference. “Our designers and engineers are constantly attuned to how we can make using Bitcoin intuitive,” he added.

The frequent updates appear to be paying off as the company recently released a series of charts revealing a positive trend in Bitcoin usage. The data shows a significant increase in the number of Bitcoin payments being processed daily and in the value of the payments being processed.

https://futurism.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Bitpay-1.png

https://futurism.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Bitpay-2.png

Experts attribute this to the “wealth effect.” Essentially, people who bought Bitcoin when it was significantly cheaper want to spend it now that the value is high. The trend also affects what people are buying with bitcoins. Bitpay merchant CheapAir, a site that sells plane tickets, hotel reservations, and car rentals, has noticed a higher upper limit in the spending of their Bitcoin customers.
Quote
“With bitcoin we tend to generate more sales in premium cabins like business class or first class,” CheapAir founder Jeff Klee told Quartz. “Certainly the average spend for the bitcoin customer is higher than a non-bitcoin customer.”

https://futurism.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Bitpay-3.png

This increased movement of bitcoins from consumers to companies highlights an important moment in the history of the cryptocurrency. While people initially saw bitcoins as something they could hoard, they’re now seeing them as something to spend.“Bitcoin [is being used] as a store of value, as a currency hedge, and as a payment method for economies without widespread credit card or banking access,” James Walpole, BitPay’s marketing manager, told Quartz.

If these trends continue, the increased acceptance of the cryptocurrency as an alternative payment method might be enough to push it all the way into the mainstream.

https://futurism.com/all-the-evidence-you-need-that-bitcoin-is-turning-into-a-real-currency/
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