Pages:
Author

Topic: Selling Digital Goods with Bitcoin - page 2. (Read 17235 times)

member
Activity: 100
Merit: 10
Psalm 15
July 04, 2013, 10:20:02 AM
#23
Presently, it's just that it seems like it's easier for frozen molasses to run uphill in winter than it is to sell a digital product with a bitcoin payment gateway.



CoinDL makes selling or bitcoins and delivering digital goods very easy.

It would be if they were actively approving new applications for sellers and affiliates.
sr. member
Activity: 359
Merit: 250
June 20, 2013, 07:20:39 AM
#22
It's a wide range issue. I suppose you meant selling digital "goods and (also) services". As a developer of wordpress, a blogging tool and a content management system, i've recently made a "trade", offering some customizations on one of my clients' website in exchange for LTC where the transaction was relatively slow but it's a thing we agreed upon. It was a little work and experimental but i will gladly accept BTC, LTC and even some other coins like YAC, WDC, ONC (and many more, who knows) in exchange for my service in the future.
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 500
It's all fun and games until somebody loses an eye
June 19, 2013, 08:14:35 AM
#21
Presently, it's just that it seems like it's easier for frozen molasses to run uphill in winter than it is to sell a digital product with a bitcoin payment gateway.



Digital goods are a natural use of bitcoins, the digital cash.

I have bought digital books using bitcoins, I have also used bitcoins to buy amazon credit to buy other digital books.

One problem with selling for bitcoins is that transaction confirmation takes too long. I suppose users could be emailed the link to download after confirmation. But there are problems with that approach as well. For instance what do you do if the email ends up in the spam folder and the user doesn't see it? Email tends to be unreliable.

This goes into the issue of real-time payments. For small purchases it might even be acceptable to do 0 confirms, 1 is plenty.
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
June 18, 2013, 11:22:51 PM
#20
One problem with selling for bitcoins is that transaction confirmation takes too long. I suppose users could be emailed the link to download after confirmation. But there are problems with that approach as well. For instance what do you do if the email ends up in the spam folder and the user doesn't see it? Email tends to be unreliable.

That's what I plan to do. Once transaction confirmed 3 times (6 seems excessive for most transactions), product is theirs for the download.

It's up to them to check their spam filter.

Several places have APIs that make it easy to see when transactions have been confirmed X amount of times.
Using unique address for each transaction, it largely can be automated.
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
June 18, 2013, 03:48:49 AM
#19
Well there has been softwares being sold for BTC, it's growing daily however it hasn't grown commercially.
Most of these sellers are personal sellers that sell their own products.
No serious business paying rent in fiat, with employees who need paying can sell goods in BTC with the price fluctuating so wildly.  It would be irresponsible to do so.

I would not put a major portion of my turnover at risk by selling in fixed BTC prices, it would be suicidal if it was serious money.  Bit coin is just speculative unless it has a (relatively) stable price and can actually be exchanged for real items of value with confidence.




kurios is right it lost $30 value a week ago.
newbie
Activity: 8
Merit: 0
June 17, 2013, 10:53:30 PM
#18
Actually, it's really easy to sell your digital goods for Bitcoin!

Check out Yumcoin, our service that lets you upload your product and set a price, and get paid instantly with Bitcoin:

  • Upload a digital product (eg. music, videos, ebooks -- anything that's a file)
  • You'll get a unique short link you can share anywhere with your audience, fans and followers.
  • There's no setup or monthly fees. Yumcoin takes an extremely low commission of just 1% + .0025 BTC per sale.
  • Payouts are quick. Once a sale's transaction is confirmed, you can send your balance to any Bitcoin address of your choice.

Sign up here: https://yumcoin.com

Here's a sample product on Yumcoin: https://yumcoin.com/p/osZO

Check it out and let us know if you have any questions or comments. Follow @Yumcoin on Twitter for the latest updates.

Cheers!

-Yumcoin 
legendary
Activity: 3682
Merit: 1580
May 17, 2013, 09:34:21 AM
#17
One problem with selling for bitcoins is that transaction confirmation takes too long. I suppose users could be emailed the link to download after confirmation. But there are problems with that approach as well. For instance what do you do if the email ends up in the spam folder and the user doesn't see it? Email tends to be unreliable.
sr. member
Activity: 359
Merit: 250
May 17, 2013, 07:31:51 AM
#16
BTC price curve has been flat recent weeks. This is reinforcing these sort of ideas i think.
newbie
Activity: 18
Merit: 0
May 17, 2013, 06:16:10 AM
#15
But maybe you meant ads only for people who bought items hosted on btcfile?

Yes that would be only for people who use our checkout page, 3rd parties who use the API A to Z wouldn't be affected. We wouldn't inject ads into the content, that would just be obnoxious.
legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1001
May 17, 2013, 03:43:24 AM
#14
Presently, it's just that it seems like it's easier for frozen molasses to run uphill in winter than it is to sell a digital product with a bitcoin payment gateway.



It works for us.  Its not a big earner as most Bitcoin get hoarded but the gateway works fine.
hero member
Activity: 490
Merit: 500
May 17, 2013, 02:25:20 AM
#13
A fair point.  I think you may have problems with the advertising model, because I can't comment on other business people, but I personally would want to use the API approach where people wouldn't know that I'd be using your site since I'd only interface with it through the API.  I can't think of anyway you'd be able to deliver ads using this interface that wouldn't negatively impact the user experience of the customer downloading whatever the item is. 

But maybe you meant ads only for people who bought items hosted on btcfile?  That would make more sense.  I hope you succeed with your business, anything to make bitcoin more frictionless is a good thing in my book.
newbie
Activity: 18
Merit: 0
May 17, 2013, 01:55:37 AM
#12
We don't know yet, it really depends on what the costs of running the service end up being once the site attracts a lot of users. It's also possible that we try an advertisement-based model first, which would allow us to keep the service free. We could also keep the existing service free forever and only charge for special features that don't exist yet. There are a lot of possibilities and we'd prefer to avoid using a percentage fee is we can. There's no hurry to start charging at this point, building up our user base is more important.
hero member
Activity: 490
Merit: 500
May 16, 2013, 08:52:13 PM
#11
I plan on selling books for bitcoins when the novel I'm working on is finished - in addition to selling them on Amazon, of course. 

btcfile, what do you plan on charging merchants once the launch period is finished?
newbie
Activity: 18
Merit: 0
May 15, 2013, 05:35:03 PM
#10
We've just launched a service that covers what you're looking for: http://btcfile.com Should take you seconds to sell any digital goods. No registration needed, just upload files and set a price.
hero member
Activity: 700
Merit: 500
May 06, 2013, 04:22:55 PM
#9
Presently, it's just that it seems like it's easier for frozen molasses to run uphill in winter than it is to sell a digital product with a bitcoin payment gateway.



CoinDL makes selling or bitcoins and delivering digital goods very easy.

But how does CoinDL deal with disputes? (Or any other merchant. Would seem like a trouble.) Sure there's a receipt to show something was accessed or downloaded. But what about "goods not as described."
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1000
May 06, 2013, 01:42:55 AM
#8
Quote

If you have your own website this is a good option Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1031
Merit: 1000
May 05, 2013, 07:39:56 PM
#7
Presently, it's just that it seems like it's easier for frozen molasses to run uphill in winter than it is to sell a digital product with a bitcoin payment gateway.



CoinDL makes selling or bitcoins and delivering digital goods very easy.
hero member
Activity: 700
Merit: 500
May 05, 2013, 07:33:01 PM
#6
Well there has been softwares being sold for BTC, it's growing daily however it hasn't grown commercially.
Most of these sellers are personal sellers that sell their own products.
No serious business paying rent in fiat, with employees who need paying can sell goods in BTC with the price fluctuating so wildly.  It would be irresponsible to do so.

I would not put a major portion of my turnover at risk by selling in fixed BTC prices, it would be suicidal if it was serious money.  Bit coin is just speculative unless it has a (relatively) stable price and can actually be exchanged for real items of value with confidence.





I believe there are services to convert BTC to USD real time for merchants who don't want to deal with fluctuation risk. It's a small fee to pay to not deal with chargebacks or disputes.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 1643
May 05, 2013, 06:17:47 PM
#5
Well there has been softwares being sold for BTC, it's growing daily however it hasn't grown commercially.
Most of these sellers are personal sellers that sell their own products.
No serious business paying rent in fiat, with employees who need paying can sell goods in BTC with the price fluctuating so wildly.  It would be irresponsible to do so.

I would not put a major portion of my turnover at risk by selling in fixed BTC prices, it would be suicidal if it was serious money.  Bit coin is just speculative unless it has a (relatively) stable price and can actually be exchanged for real items of value with confidence.



newbie
Activity: 29
Merit: 0
May 05, 2013, 04:33:53 PM
#4
Well there has been softwares being sold for BTC, it's growing daily however it hasn't grown commercially.
Most of these sellers are personal sellers that sell their own products.
Pages:
Jump to: