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Topic: Now On CNN: Can Bitcoin Replace PayPal? - page 2. (Read 2835 times)

legendary
Activity: 4424
Merit: 4794
December 11, 2013, 03:14:36 AM
#13
I'd originally thought that Bitcoin would become a useful alternative to Paypal and remittance services. But it's not happening. Bitcoin prices are too volatile and the exchanges are too flaky.

May be in a year or so, the prices will stabilize. And exchanges such as BTC-E and Mt Gox will also become more reliable. And for remittances, Bitcoin is already popular in some of the smaller nations such as Kenya.

remember when you were a toddler and you began to walk.. you began thinking the world is at your feet and you can do anything..

.. and then you fell down and began cryng thinking your whole world has ended.
this is bitcoin 2013

now rush forward a few years your now a teenager looking back at family videos (chat/forum history) and laughing at the silly things you said as a toddler. you start forming relationships with inexpereinced and flaky counterparts which parents(authorities) wouldnt approve of. and then you would breaking up. With each break up you think again, your world has ended and no one wants you. this is bitcoin 2014

now rush forward a few years, you are now with someone dependable, smart, experienced and you start to settle down, realising that you have many years of happiness ahead of you.

this is what we have to look forward too.

bitcoin is still young, so grow up and stop crying kids
legendary
Activity: 952
Merit: 1005
--Signature Designs-- http://bit.ly/1Pjbx77
December 11, 2013, 03:04:50 AM
#12
I would love to see PayPal replaced by Bitcoins,
but Bitcoin need to sort a few things out before it can replace PayPal
on auction and trading sites

I believe Bitcoin's price volatility is discouraging people to spend Bitcoins
and shop owners aren't very keen on pricing items in Bitcoins
cos they might have to change bitcoin prices every day

Transaction fee is a small problem when the items being traded is cheap
(I believe bitcoin devs are working on this??)

Since there is no chargeback, Bitcoin escrow service seems quite necessary
and there is no elegant solution to this...
(PayPal can't solve this one either)
legendary
Activity: 3766
Merit: 1217
December 11, 2013, 02:57:52 AM
#11
I'd originally thought that Bitcoin would become a useful alternative to Paypal and remittance services. But it's not happening. Bitcoin prices are too volatile and the exchanges are too flaky.

May be in a year or so, the prices will stabilize. And exchanges such as BTC-E and Mt Gox will also become more reliable. And for remittances, Bitcoin is already popular in some of the smaller nations such as Kenya.
legendary
Activity: 1204
Merit: 1002
December 11, 2013, 02:08:08 AM
#10
I'd originally thought that Bitcoin would become a useful alternative to Paypal and remittance services. But it's not happening. Bitcoin prices are too volatile and the exchanges are too flaky.
NWO
sr. member
Activity: 392
Merit: 250
December 11, 2013, 01:00:28 AM
#9
No, Bitcoin will not replace Paypal. However, Ripple will.
member
Activity: 150
Merit: 10
December 11, 2013, 12:23:15 AM
#8
I really hope so... I hate paypal so much ever since they robbed me of an ipad. Assholes.

Hmmm.... It seems that Payapal bosses are out there on a PR-enhancement exercise. Check this.

BTW... how did you lost that ipad?

I sold my ipad to a guy who asked for a chargeback after a month and paypal just snatched the money from the account. Supposidly they said that the credit card was a stolen credit card and they never fought for my case and never got my money back. Sad
legendary
Activity: 3766
Merit: 1217
December 10, 2013, 11:33:21 PM
#7
I really hope so... I hate paypal so much ever since they robbed me of an ipad. Assholes.

Hmmm.... It seems that Payapal bosses are out there on a PR-enhancement exercise. Check this.

BTW... how did you lost that ipad?
member
Activity: 150
Merit: 10
December 10, 2013, 11:11:19 PM
#6
I really hope so... I hate paypal so much ever since they robbed me of an ipad. Assholes.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 500
Small Red and Bad
December 10, 2013, 08:57:46 PM
#5
Their main concern is volatility. This means we have to wait for some giants to make a move. If more people and companies join the party BTC will boom and then stabilize.
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1029
December 10, 2013, 08:19:23 PM
#4
The bitcoin system is vastly superior to paypal.
newbie
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
December 10, 2013, 07:58:52 PM
#3
We all know that bitcoin is still in infancy but its popularity really does continue to grow.
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
December 10, 2013, 07:55:29 PM
#2
Bitcoin is so much better than PayPal imo. You can do transactions with anyone without worrying about chargebacks or fraudulent transactions conducted with hacked accounts. Plus you don't have to worry about banks locking your account or e-wallets holding your funds hostage until you provide identification which satisfies them. And no currency exchange fees...

Go Bitcoin!
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
December 10, 2013, 05:44:22 PM
#1
http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/10/business/will-bitcoin-replace-paypal/index.html?iid=article_sidebar

"(CNN) -- When Bitcoin's architect first unleashed the idea of creating a decentralized virtual currency on the internet, the tech-savvy elite sat up and listened.

That was in 2008. Just a year later, operating under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto, the unknown developer took the concept live. By year-end, over 1.6 million bitcoins had been mined.

Since then, the meteoric rise of the digital currency has continued to capture the world's attention as financial institutions now examine its viability.

At a time when many have lost faith in the global financial system, Bitcoin is being hailed as the future of e-commerce.

"It's lower cost, lower risk and a more accessible form of payment from anything else we have today, especially for shopping online," says Tony Gallippi, founder of BitPay, a Bitcoin payment processing service.

"Credit cards were designed in the 1950s and were never designed for the Internet. It leads to issues like identity theft and payment fraud."

Gallippi -- who recently testified before a U.S. Senate committee on the growth of Bitcoin -- explains that the virtual peer-to-peer currency was created to be "borderless by design," thus opening the door to the international marketplace for smaller merchants.

The anonymity of the currency is also a plus for Bitcoin users as no verified personal data is required for making online transactions. This has led many to speculate that Bitcoin will be mainly used for illegal online transactions.

"For small businesses that have unique items, it really opens up their business to a truly worldwide customer base ... It's going to become the default payment system for the internet by the end of this decade," adds Gallippi.

While Bitcoin's electronic nature makes it appealing for e-commerce, Gallippi acknowledges that there are still some kinks in the system that need to be ironed out.

"Tax implications and potential regulation are some obstacles we face ... the other issue is that perhaps [Bitcoin] is not quite ready for mainstream consumers just yet.

"I think we've got quite a bit more work to do on the engineering side ... But I would expect Bitcoin will soon become the preferred method of payment for connecting businesses over the Internet," predicts Gallippi.
"It's going to become the default payment system for the internet by the end of this decade.
Tony Gallippi, founder of BitPay

The implications for e-commerce from the Bitcoin experiment continue to intrigue economists and financial analysts as some believe the crypto-currency could revolutionize the global marketplace.

Bitcoin to replace traditional banking?

"For more conventional businesses, I think the advantages are really in international commerce," says Tom Elliott, director for the Emerging Markets Communications Strategies service at Strategic Analysts.

"You have significantly reduced transaction costs compared to converting one international currency to another international currency -- it's typically cheaper."

Meanwhile, Jon Rushman, an economist and professor at Warwick Business School says: "The brilliance behind the technical design of Bitcoin is the fact that the mechanism for payment is a distributed network. No one owns it. It doesn't run in a data center owned by PayPal or Mastercard or Visa."

The added bonus? No middlemen taking a cut from the transaction, he says.

Rushman explains the currency's recent surge is largely responsible for grabbing the financial world's attention.
With bitcoin now reaching prices equivalent to an ounce of gold, more investors are turning toward the digital currency for a return on investment.

In January 2013, one Bitcoin was worth around $13, surging in November to a staggering all-time high of $1,242 -- almost the same price as an ounce of gold. But since then, its value has dropped again to around $925, according to Mt.Gox exchange rates.

And, according to Rushman, Bitcoin's erratic fluctuation is exactly what deters some businesses from adopting the currency: "You wouldn't want to reprice every article in your shop everyday, which is why we like standard exchange rates."

"[If] you're a retailer and you carry £100 ($164) in your till overnight, normally you're not really worried about the fact that it's going to still be £100 in the morning.
"Traders don't want volatility in the currency that they are taking in.
Jeremy Cook, Chief Economist at World First

"It could indeed become the system of payment [online], but it has to get over this hurdle of volatility. You have to bridge that gap between what we trust today and the type of thing we might trust tomorrow."

But while some tout Bitcoin as the future of online shopping, others are describing it as the latest monetary fad.

Jeremy Cook, chief economist at UK-based foreign exchange firm, World First, says Bitcoin is a mere internet affectation."
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