From what I can see Nakamoto Satoshi wanted to bypass merchant services allowing seamless and free transactions to take place between two parties (buyer and seller or sender to sender) with no need for any merchants to take chunks of transactions fees.
Coinbase, Bitpay and so many others that provide merchant and/or exchange facilities have raised hundreds of millions for expansion.but the news I read today about Coinpayments brought back a lot of memories.
Coinpayments is currently looking to raise $10 million by giving away 5% equity of its business, so that gives it a valuation of a staggering $200 million. They claim on their fund raising page they have carried out $1 billion in transactions since going live back in mid-2013. It was purchased by a Bitcointalk user (Alex Alexandrov) in mid-2014 for an undisclosed amount and the terms were never made public.
Nowadays there are many options if people want to accept Bitcoin or altcoins as a method of payment on their websites but once upon a time it was not that easy.
So Coinpayments.net is doing very well as a company today, it has been doing very well since day one but it was two Bitcointalk users called
pr0d1gy and
MrData that created the original project and only sold it because they were on the verge of closing down. They even made an announcement telling all clients to make alternative arrangements because of impending US regulations. That was when Alex Alexandrov the now CEO of Coinpayment made an offer to buy their project because he was based in Canada and there was no crypto regulation there at the time.
It seems Alex Alexandrov was there in the right place at the right time and the two founders and creators of Coinpayments sold up to Alexandrov rather than close down their business. The smart idea probably would have been to 'relocate' the business themselves by registering a company or LLC elsewhere (maybe across the border in Canada or several places offshore in Caribbean or Europe) and trade as normal but they sold up. I never understood the logic about that move when it happened and still do not understand it. I am disappointed to read the 'team' and 'about' links on coinpayments.net and coinpaymentscoins.com with no mention of these two pioneers who were well ahead of their time.
pr0d1gy and
MrData might not be as well known as
laszlo from the great pizza event of 2010 but they have contributed a great amount through their vision of crypto payments. Maybe in future people will understand how pioneering their vision was.
The idea that readymade plugins for popular (and not so popular) shopping carts including Prestahop, Wordpress, Woocommerce, Xcart and Magento could be downloaded and immediately allow customers to pay at checkout using Bitcoin and other coins was a huge step forward in crypto-technology. Yes a few others were providing an almost identical service too but the ease and simplicity along with the number of supported coins by Coinpayments were unmatched.
pr0d1gy and
MrData were way ahead of their time.
Thanks to
pr0d1gy and
MrData for paving the way for other crypto enthusiasts to follow in the crypto payment processing field. I hope they both retained some portion or stake in the company because it was their innovation, hard work and efforts that got Coinpayments off the ground.
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A great alternative is BTCPayServer because it is a great step forward to allowing fee-free transactions. Over time the system will become more simple and eventually there will not be a need to pay fees to merchant service providing companies such as Coinpayments, Bitpay, Bitcoinpay, Coingate, SetGetGo and so many others. It will fulfill the vision of Satoshi having P2P payments without third parties taking commission or fees.
BTCPayServer is accepting several coins including Bitcoin, BGold, Bitcore, Dash, Dogecoin, Feathercoin, Groestlcoin, Litecoin, Monacoin, Polis, UFO and Viacoin. These will probably increase as time goes by and the service is more widely used and becomes more popular.
The down-side is most merchants probably never used command line coding and in some cases those that can get this running on a low cost server will incur mini-costs on hosting and the whole blockchain when syncd which might result in it not being a viable option for some.
A third-party solution for merchants to use BTCPayServer for free on hosted providers who basically ask for donations to offer the free service can be found here:
https://github.com/btcpayserver/btcpayserver-doc/blob/master/ThirdPartyHosting.md