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Topic: Please explain this to a total newbie (Read 1669 times)

newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
May 08, 2013, 02:53:35 PM
#35
Yes. Coinbase is very easy to use. Set up a free account, link a verified bank account, go to the merchant tools and check the box that says "instantly convert to USD" (or whatever it says), make sure the "Keep at least xx BTC in my account" box is unchecked. Now, anytime someone sends bitcoins to that address, they will be sent to your bank account at the end of the day at the exact value that they were when they were sent to you, minus a 1% + $0.15 fee. It's really super simple.

For example, if you make 10 $10 USD sales throughout the day, you will get $100 - $1.15 = $98.85 USD sent to your bank at the end of the day, regardless of the value of BTC.

I hope this helps!
newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
Another newbie question. If the company that owes me money uses EUR currency how would I get the USD equivalency of that if they pay me in bitcoins?
You sell your bitcoins for USD. Doing that while getting the best exchange rate without getting ripped off (hint: don't use PayPal or eBay, no matter what) is entirely your problem, not theirs. That's why I strongly recommend you don't use Bitcoin for large transactions until you're confident that you've got it all figured out. Again, you don't have to accept bitcoins unless you have a contract that says you do.
Why not use PayPal? People here and other places have recommended exchanges that offer PayPal payouts like fastcash4bitcoins and bitcointopaypal. Are these not safe to use?
legendary
Activity: 4551
Merit: 3445
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
Another newbie question. If the company that owes me money uses EUR currency how would I get the USD equivalency of that if they pay me in bitcoins?
You sell your bitcoins for USD. Doing that while getting the best exchange rate without getting ripped off (hint: don't use PayPal or eBay, no matter what) is entirely your problem, not theirs. That's why I strongly recommend you don't use Bitcoin for large transactions until you're confident that you've got it all figured out. Again, you don't have to accept bitcoins unless you have a contract that says you do.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
Sounds like a good deal.
newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
Another newbie question. If the company that owes me money uses EUR currency how would I get the USD equivalency of that if they pay me in bitcoins?
newbie
Activity: 12
Merit: 0
 I would accept fiat currency only and not bitcoin.
newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
A company outside the U.S. owes me money. They want to send it to me with Bitcoin. It appears to me the value of a bitcoin varies greatly from one day, or sometimes one hour, to the next. My question is, if the company pays me in bitcoins what happens if the value drops significantly before I can sell them and convert them to cash? Also, where is a trusted place to sell bitcoins?

Thank You

Hi - the volatility of bitcoin is the issue. They could send you the bitcoins at a value and it could drop greatly, or, it could in fact increase greatly. Essentially to clear the debt, say it's $100 you might say 1btc for $100. By the time you "convert" it might be 95 it might be 105.

fastcash4bitcoins is my preferred vendor.
I checked out fastcash4bitcoins but they appear to have a problem keeping enough funds on hand. Their PayPal payout option runs out of funds just a few hours after they refund it. Do you know of any other vendors that have a PayPal payout option?
member
Activity: 91
Merit: 10
no different than if they paid you in dollars, the value of the dollar is always losing value as well, its just harder for the average person to see that...

Not nearly at the rate bitcoins can lose value though.

If OP has the money to potential lose then I would suggest holding on to the coin.
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
Bitcoins are extremely divisible! i.e. 3.2345645645 BTC is a real figure that can exist! It depends on the total amount owed, but personally I'd probably prefer payment in BTC Smiley

Most of the trades below 1.0 will be far less interesting due to validation, it needs 0.1 (10%!) to get validated in a less-than-year time, for small transaction it's not interesting.

Even ripple which is meant to be able to easily do small trades, usually gateways will refuse trades which are too small, sadly.
newbie
Activity: 13
Merit: 0
If you are interested to withdraw your USD funds into a EUR or GBP bank account, I can make a payment at current USD/EUR or USD/GBP exchange rate to your bank account with 0% commission.

If you want more info, please check my post:

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.2034134

The easy part is sending the BTC's and getting them into dollars at MtGox or another exchange. The problem is getting the dollars from the exchange and to your bank account. If you are in the US, I thing dolla might be the best route. Otherwise you are likely to be forced to use bank wire that is slow and may have some uncool fees.
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 0
A company outside the U.S. owes me money. They want to send it to me with Bitcoin. It appears to me the value of a bitcoin varies greatly from one day, or sometimes one hour, to the next. My question is, if the company pays me in bitcoins what happens if the value drops significantly before I can sell them and convert them to cash? Also, where is a trusted place to sell bitcoins?

Thank You

There is a good chance the price of bitcoin could skyrocket over the next few years. Hold on to them.
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
everybody thinks now is a good time to buy btc.

in any market, that sentiment usually precedes a crash.
newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
you never know, they value might double by the time you get your btc, anyway, everybody thinks now is a good time to buy btc.
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
no different than if they paid you in dollars, the value of the dollar is always losing value as well, its just harder for the average person to see that...
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
At the moment the vast potential of cryptos is 99% unrealized.  These are just the very first days - the genesis of a new paradigm.  It might succeed, or it might fail.  Only time will tell.

The current volatility mitigates cryptocurrencies' veracity as true currency.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
.... and inflation, taxes, confiscations, devaluations, etc
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
Trying hard To Keep Things POSITIVE
A company outside the U.S. owes me money. They want to send it to me with Bitcoin. It appears to me the value of a bitcoin varies greatly from one day, or sometimes one hour, to the next. My question is, if the company pays me in bitcoins what happens if the value drops significantly before I can sell them and convert them to cash? Also, where is a trusted place to sell bitcoins?

Thank You


I would Take the Bitcoins. In my opinion that's better than losing half the fiat money due to conversion fees or wire fees.
But do what feels best for you!
newbie
Activity: 30
Merit: 0
A company outside the U.S. owes me money. They want to send it to me with Bitcoin. It appears to me the value of a bitcoin varies greatly from one day, or sometimes one hour, to the next. My question is, if the company pays me in bitcoins what happens if the value drops significantly before I can sell them and convert them to cash? Also, where is a trusted place to sell bitcoins?

Thank You

Your safest bet is probably to have them transfer during the weekends (saturday is usually calm, today not so much though) or not before a quick rise in price. You can also negotiate an extra fee to account for volatility, which would be what you deemed fair. I guess you could also accept pending that they match the difference in exchange price at the time you sell, since this is easy to verify by them as it takes almost precisely an hour for a transaction to confirm.

You should also ask them to sent directly to an address you have on a BTC exchange, so withing an hour of them sending it you can exchange for $/€/Yen/etc. I would test this first with a small amount first since I don't hold much BTC in exchanges - I know you can do it that way.

I would also verify my personal information first, so you can transfer the money out as soon as you receive and exchange the BTC for cash.
legendary
Activity: 2324
Merit: 1125
Thanks for the info. What do you mean by you would prefer payment in BTC?

That he would rather receive Bitcoins than an equivalent value in fiat (e.g $, Euros, or Pound Sterling)
newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
Bitcoins are extremely divisible! i.e. 3.2345645645 BTC is a real figure that can exist! It depends on the total amount owed, but personally I'd probably prefer payment in BTC Smiley
Thanks for the info. What do you mean by you would prefer payment in BTC?
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