Didn't realize coinpal was so high.
One of my banks does free transfers so it's not as bad for me.
If you're doing a good size trade then the $15 isn't that bad, but if it's just for 100 or 200 it's pretty rough.
Taking off for the day, good luck.
If people didn't try to defraud bitcoin exchange services, it wouldn't be so hard to convert dollars into bitcoin.
Absolutely, so there is an opportunity to prevent fraud more cheaply.
I don't know enough about the network of trust or how that works, but it seems like an opportunity. I come from a gambling background so there is a lot of similar types of transactions (rather than trading USD for BitCoin, they trade money on a poker site for USD, or money on site A for site B). People get scammed, but having a feedback system and a method of tracking trustworthiness is a way to prevent being scammed.
I don't know enough about PayPal to know its limitations, but I do know I have a friend of mine send me cash on PayPal without fees through his bank account, so I'm thinking this could be expanded somehow. But if PayPal still allows chargebacks in this case, it's a huge possibility for fraud. If not, then it's just a "buyer beware".
I'm mainly trying to brainstorm ideas on how we could make the USD (or any other currency) to BTC transactions more useful. I know Neteller had a way that you could use a "credit card" linked to your account to spend money, that would be useful for a BTC eWallet as well.
The road to widespread adoption seems to be this:
BitCoin is pretty clearly left of the chasm right now. Innovators got in early. Early adapters are starting to get in now. But there's a huge gap before things really take off. Trying to figure out how to get across that gap is an important part of the process.
The biggest challenges I have seen are 1) Currency conversion and 2) speed of transactions. If we can solve those, more people can easily adopt BTC.