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Topic: Money over IP a threat to bitcoin (Read 9039 times)

newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
October 22, 2013, 12:58:24 AM
#73
These are the reason why I believe bitcoin will succeed.

All of this video:
http://www.ted.com/talks/simon_sinek_how_great_leaders_inspire_action.html

This article:
http://news.rpi.edu/luwakkey/2902

Second half of this video (entire thing is worth watching):
http://www.ted.com/talks/seth_godin_on_sliced_bread.html

Payment processors don't have the above. Bitcoin enticed a variety of people with its pseudo-anonymity, volatile market, and decentralization. Those users came to understand the brilliance of bitcoin which led them to become proponents of bitcoin. That's what happened to me anyway.

None of those payment processors have a user base like bitcoin does. They don't even get half the publicity bitcoin does.
legendary
Activity: 896
Merit: 1006
First 100% Liquid Stablecoin Backed by Gold
October 20, 2013, 11:09:18 PM
#72
The weakness of many of the pro-bitcoin arguments in this thread, is Bitcoin's success depends on the failure of fiat.  Not a viable business model, IMO.  The masses aren't ideological.  They just want simple and cost effective means to move money.  Digital, fiat...who cares.....
When you say "failure of fiat" you mean what exactly?  Every single fiat in the history of mankind has failed either outright or by massive inflation.  100% failure rate.  There's plenty of issues for bitcoin but depending on failure of fiat isn't one of them.
sr. member
Activity: 1078
Merit: 254
October 20, 2013, 10:47:36 PM
#71



Simply because this is a POSSIBLE solution (not saying it will happen) is essentially why this is no threat to Bitcoin.

it will never happen because then venmo loses the float, they have nothing to gain and everything to lose....especially since at this point in time the success of their business is contingent on the banks goodwill
sr. member
Activity: 1078
Merit: 254
October 20, 2013, 10:45:01 PM
#70
I think venmo is the biggest threat to bitcoin. If money over IP becomes prevalent without the need for bitcoin/cryptocurrencies, than the only benefit they really offer is for ideologist/criminals/economic reasons. But a lot of the added utility that we emphasize will disappear. And I ask myself, why don't we have that kiiler app yet?

Maybe we have all been fooled, maybe bitcoin will never go mainstream by the average joe that doesn't own gold and has his money run by a financial manager.
I was an Über-bull, but the realization that i see my friends using venmo, and not even close to understanding bitcoin, just made me extremely bearish

Just got back from speaking at a conference at Wharton- some kid showed me this app, it's really sick. I have no idea how they move the money so quickly tho.

They don't move the money, its just a float that credits your venmo account, to actually receive the funds in your bank account/use the funds for payment outside the venmo network would still require the standard 1-5 business days. There propostition is that it will hit a network effect and you will never need to go in and out of the venmo network i.e. venmo replaces the utility of bitcoin, or a venmo dollar is a different dollar in terms of liquidity as we currently see on mt gox

PS how the fuck did you get to speak at wharton Smiley?
jav
sr. member
Activity: 249
Merit: 251
October 20, 2013, 03:05:13 PM
#69



Simply because this is a POSSIBLE solution (not saying it will happen) is essentially why this is no threat to Bitcoin.

I am trying to do something like that with Bridgewalker (https://www.bridgewalkerapp.com/ - "a euro-denominated wallet for the Bitcoin economy"). It currently doesn't have a focus on "social features", but it would be possible to add that. Hit me up if you have any feedback!
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1015
October 20, 2013, 09:25:50 AM
#68
Only thing they appear to have over Dwolla is that they take plastic (with roughly the same fee as Paypal), which makes it irrelevant since Paypal is generally used in conjunction with Dwolla, instead of Dwolla being the only choice. For mobile payments, at least in the US, this is taken care of with direct billing on cell charges (though most [all?] app stores have their own payment processor, too] - so I can't think of a market they're filling there. Unlike Bitcoin, Venmo has many direct competitors they don't offer something significant over. Dwolla's obscure -- why will Venmo be any different?

What is the advantage of Dwolla over Paypal, then?  (The disadvantage of Dwolla, of course, is that 96% of the world can't use it - but just curious as to what the advantage is for those of you who can.)
Way lower fees for most transactions.
hero member
Activity: 563
Merit: 500
October 20, 2013, 07:25:18 AM
#67
Only thing they appear to have over Dwolla is that they take plastic (with roughly the same fee as Paypal), which makes it irrelevant since Paypal is generally used in conjunction with Dwolla, instead of Dwolla being the only choice. For mobile payments, at least in the US, this is taken care of with direct billing on cell charges (though most [all?] app stores have their own payment processor, too] - so I can't think of a market they're filling there. Unlike Bitcoin, Venmo has many direct competitors they don't offer something significant over. Dwolla's obscure -- why will Venmo be any different?

What is the advantage of Dwolla over Paypal, then?  (The disadvantage of Dwolla, of course, is that 96% of the world can't use it - but just curious as to what the advantage is for those of you who can.)
hero member
Activity: 811
Merit: 1000
Web Developer
October 19, 2013, 09:21:59 PM
#66



Simply because this is a POSSIBLE solution (not saying it will happen) is essentially why this is no threat to Bitcoin.
full member
Activity: 233
Merit: 101
October 19, 2013, 08:55:03 PM
#65
Venmo isn't money over IP - it's Paypal with a mobile/social interface. Bitcoin is money over IP because it's a protocol for transferring value between users on the internet, and it's a platform for higher-level services.

Venmo isn't a distributed protocol or platform, it's a centralized single entity that removes some of the friction in transferring USD within US borders. It's still subject to all the problems of Paypal - that of arbitrary account suspensions, seizures, and blocking of payments.

You can't use Venmo to transmit money internationally, store value without fear of seizure, hedge against inflation, purchase goods/services with relative privacy, activate an online business instantly, engage freely in voluntary transactions with anyone on the planet, accept payments without risk of chargebacks, and so on.

Bitcoin and Venmo offer different value propositions. Venmo is more of a threat to Paypal than it is to Bitcoin.






+1
+1
full member
Activity: 193
Merit: 100
Always riding the Bull...
October 19, 2013, 06:29:06 PM
#64
Venmo isn't money over IP - it's Paypal with a mobile/social interface. Bitcoin is money over IP because it's a protocol for transferring value between users on the internet, and it's a platform for higher-level services.

Venmo isn't a distributed protocol or platform, it's a centralized single entity that removes some of the friction in transferring USD within US borders. It's still subject to all the problems of Paypal - that of arbitrary account suspensions, seizures, and blocking of payments.

You can't use Venmo to transmit money internationally, store value without fear of seizure, hedge against inflation, purchase goods/services with relative privacy, activate an online business instantly, engage freely in voluntary transactions with anyone on the planet, accept payments without risk of chargebacks, and so on.

Bitcoin and Venmo offer different value propositions. Venmo is more of a threat to Paypal than it is to Bitcoin.






+1
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
October 19, 2013, 05:55:16 PM
#63
Venmo isn't money over IP - it's Paypal with a mobile/social interface. Bitcoin is money over IP because it's a protocol for transferring value between users on the internet, and it's a platform for higher-level services.

Venmo isn't a distributed protocol or platform, it's a centralized single entity that removes some of the friction in transferring USD within US borders. It's still subject to all the problems of Paypal - that of arbitrary account suspensions, seizures, and blocking of payments.

You can't use Venmo to transmit money internationally, store value without fear of seizure, hedge against inflation, purchase goods/services with relative privacy, activate an online business instantly, engage freely in voluntary transactions with anyone on the planet, accept payments without risk of chargebacks, and so on.

Bitcoin and Venmo offer different value propositions. Venmo is more of a threat to Paypal than it is to Bitcoin.




full member
Activity: 227
Merit: 100
October 19, 2013, 05:10:55 PM
#62
A service that provides the ability to easily transfer a medium of exchange with no value has no value.

For all those who are criticizing others as "fiat currency fear mongers" I suggest you read history. Go read the the recent IMF report that explains how to steal 10% of people's wealth. Go ask a Cypriot how easy it is to access what's left of their money.

Gold as a store of value. Sure, but it has counterparty risk unless you have it on hand. Also, many claim that the amount of physical gold is dwarfed by the paper claims on the metal thereby preventing true price discovery. It's much easier, safer, and transparent to store bitcoins either in your own wallet or for a small fee with a trusted third party where the actual bitcoin's existence can be audited with a quick look at the blockchain.
There will never be an "Audit the Bitcoin" movement.

Venmo can kiss my bitcoin ass.  Wink
rpg
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
October 19, 2013, 03:46:08 PM
#61
I think venmo is the biggest threat to bitcoin. If money over IP becomes prevalent without the need for bitcoin/cryptocurrencies, than the only benefit they really offer is for ideologist/criminals/economic reasons. But a lot of the added utility that we emphasize will disappear. And I ask myself, why don't we have that kiiler app yet?

Maybe we have all been fooled, maybe bitcoin will never go mainstream by the average joe that doesn't own gold and has his money run by a financial manager.
I was an Über-bull, but the realization that i see my friends using venmo, and not even close to understanding bitcoin, just made me extremely bearish

BTC is a store of value and trade first and, an everyday currency next. Most ALTs are better at currency as they confirm in seconds
full member
Activity: 193
Merit: 100
Always riding the Bull...
October 19, 2013, 03:35:05 PM
#60
I think venmo is the biggest threat to bitcoin. If money over IP becomes prevalent without the need for bitcoin/cryptocurrencies, than the only benefit they really offer is for ideologist/criminals/economic reasons. But a lot of the added utility that we emphasize will disappear. And I ask myself, why don't we have that kiiler app yet?

Maybe we have all been fooled, maybe bitcoin will never go mainstream by the average joe that doesn't own gold and has his money run by a financial manager.
I was an Über-bull, but the realization that i see my friends using venmo, and not even close to understanding bitcoin, just made me extremely bearish

Just got back from speaking at a conference at Wharton- some kid showed me this app, it's really sick. I have no idea how they move the money so quickly tho.
legendary
Activity: 2576
Merit: 1087
October 19, 2013, 03:12:45 PM
#59
It doeasnt depend on the failure of fiat, so much as the fear of failure of fiat. FOFOF!
hero member
Activity: 826
Merit: 1000
°^°
October 19, 2013, 03:07:25 PM
#58
The weakness of many of the pro-bitcoin arguments in this thread, is Bitcoin's success depends on the failure of fiat.  Not a viable business model, IMO.  The masses aren't ideological.  They just want simple and cost effective means to move money.  Digital, fiat...who cares.  Their lives are not dominated by economic paranoia or some desire for decentralization and thus any simple and safe service will do.  Bitcoin is not yet on that level of simplicity and it's for this reason that other services are crushing Bitcoin in adoption rates.  As has been said over and over again...when people stop following the Bitcoin zeolots into the obscurity, maybe some real innovations will come about to put Bitcoin on a level that's actually appealing to the masses.  That said, a 20% Bitcoin success rate is probably very generous.

+1 exactly that
sr. member
Activity: 294
Merit: 250
This bull will try to shake you off. Hold tight!
October 19, 2013, 02:00:42 PM
#57

RationalSpeculator I like the cut of your jib Smiley


Made my day, thanks afbitcoins Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
September 28, 2013, 11:38:41 PM
#56
Um
Ok another thread where people talk about something that isn't a threat to bitcoin as if it has any possibility of ever becoming a threat to bitcoin.

MoIP? V whatever? RIPPLE? Come on guys. Next thing you know someone is going to make a thread "Is Square a thread to bitcoin?"
Bitcoin is clunky beta shit with bugs and a roller coaster exchange rate and is under heavy attack from banks and regulators. It's achieved widespread success not because of a flashy name and hip product branding but becuase it has the potential to free us from the tyranny of the [insert whatever group of tyrants you think is fucking with the economy]

I mean come on. AmazonCoins a threat to bitcoin? Get a clue, people.

b!z
legendary
Activity: 1582
Merit: 1010
September 28, 2013, 10:59:48 PM
#55
I don't think it is a threat. BTC has so many advantages over services like PP.
legendary
Activity: 2101
Merit: 1061
September 28, 2013, 06:45:55 PM
#54
The issue with btc is that the price is volatile, thus the utility of btc must surpass the costs associated with hedging against volatility

There are a limited number of applications were the anonymity and cross border functionality make use of btc a net positive, buying coffee, buying gas, grocery shopping or paying your rent is not among them.

gambling, remittances, bypassing intl wire and exchange fees, investment in the thing, buying herb online, avoiding merchant tx fees and not waiting a couple weeks to get your money from visa/mc

As an inflationary hedge it has a limited audience.  

+1

I like to add donations though.

I notice that I am much quicker donating to people thanks to btc. Donating with paypal is less fun and if I do it I pay less. Ie: I donate much more easily higher value with bitcoin.

When I donate in bitcoin I know people will remember how many btc I gave, and likely in a few years when btc is up, my donation to them will go up in value in their mind.

It's like donating a valuable stock, or precious metals, something you think will go up in value considerably, much cooler to do then donating fiat that will go down in value.

Also by donating btc I am actually building the value of my remaining btc because more people have btc and start valuing it.

I think donations make a chance to become the killer app of bitcoin.





RationalSpeculator I like the cut of your jib Smiley


In response to other comments there is no point comparing bitcoins to things like paypal or whatever, bitcoins is like gold Smiley

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