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Topic: Strike has launched in Argentina (Read 222 times)

sr. member
Activity: 2800
Merit: 344
when lambo...
January 14, 2022, 08:38:20 AM
#29
I think the main reason to fight with inflation is the use of Bitcoin. However, strike is the most easiest way to buy bitcoin. These makes bitcoin simple and cheap.
What will happen to fiat money will likely happen to Bitcoin someday. The market is so tricky, as well as manipulation. Bitcoin could help but not literally it will stop inflations, not for sure.

May the Argentinian leaders will take this as an opportunity to help their people through Bitcoin but this will only happen if they are also interested in this. Perhaps, haven't heard that that will adopt crypto (or just missed it). I hope they will get it and officially have a plan in regards to Bitcoin adoption just like El Salvador did.
jr. member
Activity: 84
Merit: 2
January 14, 2022, 07:58:52 AM
#28
I think the main reason to fight with inflation is the use of Bitcoin. However, strike is the most easiest way to buy bitcoin. These makes bitcoin simple and cheap.
sr. member
Activity: 1246
Merit: 254
Trphy.io
January 14, 2022, 07:17:25 AM
#27
The strike has been launched in Argentina, this is the first step taken by the Argentinian government, most likely they did all of that, just in case, if one day there will be inflation in fiat currency, maybe this is one of the countries mentioned by bukele , in his interview last month. hopefully in the future bitcoin will be better, and more countries will legalize bitcoin..
sr. member
Activity: 1988
Merit: 283
January 14, 2022, 07:02:04 AM
#26
Strike is one of the simplest and cheapest ways to buy Bitcoin and pay using lightning.

Argentina has one of the largest inflation problems in the world. In about a decade, one Argentinean peso went from roughly $1 to roughly one cent.

Here's the announcement:

https://twitter.com/jackmallers/status/1480964517169410055?s=21

I can see this as the beginning of a new era for Bitcoiners in Argentina. The ability to exchange their fiat for Bitcoin in an easy and cheap way will help many in there.

This might even position Argentina as a candidate for becoming the next country that makes Bitcoin legal tender.
for sure many people will appreciate such way of buying bitcoin if however it's cheaper than other service around the internet. And yes there's a chance they will become the second country that will gonna make bitcoin as a legal tender, because you know just imagine how they can buy bitcoin immediately because of that reason..
hero member
Activity: 2492
Merit: 586
January 13, 2022, 05:32:56 PM
#25
I can see this as the beginning of a new era for Bitcoiners in Argentina. The ability to exchange their fiat for Bitcoin in an easy and cheap way will help many in there.

This might even position Argentina as a candidate for becoming the next country that makes Bitcoin legal tender.
The most important thing is that their government embraces it, and continues to allow people to make use of it. If their government does not allow it, it is going to be a bit of a challenge for some people to be able to make use of it. I’m not sure about them making Bitcoin a legal tender.

El Salvador has done it, and it’s good that they did, but we are not really sure if other countries are going to follow them to do the same thing. Right now all we can be asking for is that Bitcoin continues to grow, and also that there should continue to be more adoption of Bitcoin everywhere around the world.
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 5637
Blackjack.fun-Free Raffle-Join&Win $50🎲
January 13, 2022, 06:53:18 AM
#24
Exactly! For some reason, Jack posted a tweet that would probably mislead most of the newcomers:
With Strike, the Argentinian people can now hold a stable cash balance that can be spent both instantly and with no fees.

I believe Jack meant direct transactions here when Bitcoin is used only as an intermediary between two Stike accounts that have, say, balances in $ or EUR.

Strike is an application that allows Lightning payment transactions with just a debit card or bank account. However, its peculiarity is that instead of having to buy bitcoins to load their Lightning channels, Strike users do not have to use BTC.

In other words, you pay in fiat, but you use Lightning. If you want to convert fiat to bitcoin, you transact in Lightning and pay through Strike.

According to Mallers, “This is important because Strike users are not exposed to volatility, tax consequences, custodial challenges, node management, channel management, etc. When a user makes a Lightning payment with Strike, their balance is debited. When a user receives a payment on Strike, their balance is credited.”

I have to admit that I have only looked at Stike through the prism of El Salvador so far, but some things are a little clearer to me now - because this is about paying in fiat using LN without BTC being directly involved in the transaction. In fact, person A sends $1000 to person B using Strike who transfers that amount to person B's wallet free of charge using LN and converts back to fiat.

Quote
Let’s take a practical example: Paula wants to send €1,000 (balance available in the Strike App) to her friend Ana in France. Strike debits the required amount from the user’s linked account or available balance and converts it into Bitcoin. Strike moves the Bitcoins on the Lightning network in less than a second and at no cost.

Then, the same application automatically converts the bitcoins back into euros and will credit the user’s account.
legendary
Activity: 2828
Merit: 6108
Blackjack.fun
January 13, 2022, 04:49:01 AM
#23
I am afraid that they will become the next Zimbabwe or Venezuela (I forgot which one)

Both of them  Wink

Probably Venezuela...
- A reporter "asked him [skip to 3:04]" and he responded in a tricky way!

Venezuela is going to be a tricky one, the laws there is a mess, I seriously doubt they would allow such service in the country where it's so easy to see what the citizens will use it for, rush from the bolivar to other currency, and then hiding their assets, so not going to happen without strike agreeing to give the government access to all the information on the platform.
Plus the fact that they're still pouring money and resources into both the petro and Sunacrip, the government overseers of cryptocurrencies.

But who knows..
My bet before this for the next country they would expand would have been Mexico but seems like I was way off.




legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 3406
Crypto Swap Exchange
January 13, 2022, 02:51:59 AM
#22
I was expecting the UK or a European country to be the next in line for their expansion plans [like how most US-based companies normally expand], but I was wrong and I'm glad that they have a different kind of approach, as opposed to others.

In addition, Bitcoin sometimes loses in value much more than paper money, and it's not at all pleasant to wake up in the morning and see that you've lost 20% - this may mean that you may not be able to pay for electricity or gas that month.
Exactly! For some reason, Jack posted a tweet that would probably mislead most of the newcomers:

full member
Activity: 1834
Merit: 166
January 13, 2022, 01:41:53 AM
#21
This might even position Argentina as a candidate for becoming the next country that makes Bitcoin legal tender.

When the president of El Salvador, Bukele, said that by 2022 there would be two countries that would follow in his footsteps, I thought of Argentina. Let's hope it is true and that other countries will join them. Let's see if the big guys learn and realize that the best way to fight inflation is the Bitcoin standard, but that's a long way off, I'm afraid.
It seems reasonable with this statement as more countries are on the verge of making some regulations regarding crypto or say some of them will also opt the concept of making it legal tender and maybe Argentina is among them.There are many users and merchants using Strike in El Salvador and now its launch in new countries give another adoption sign.The government is also not against them and maybe some good for the residents come soon.
hero member
Activity: 2184
Merit: 585
You own the pen
January 13, 2022, 01:29:36 AM
#20
This might even position Argentina as a candidate for becoming the next country that makes Bitcoin legal tender.

When the president of El Salvador, Bukele, said that by 2022 there would be two countries that would follow in his footsteps, I thought of Argentina. Let's hope it is true and that other countries will join them. Let's see if the big guys learn and realize that the best way to fight inflation is the Bitcoin standard, but that's a long way off, I'm afraid.

South American countries are looking at bitcoins in a positive view unlike the other countries in Asia where they choose to remain hostile about it. I think, there is no reason for them to back out of their decision since they saw the positive results from El Salvador which is their neighboring country. If the fact has been there all the time, then they need to accept it because if they don't make a move right now, they will only delaying their chance to take advantage and use bitcoin as one of their economic attractions.
legendary
Activity: 2282
Merit: 1344
Buy/Sell crypto at BestChange
January 12, 2022, 08:13:18 PM
#19
Whether they will or wont adopt the Bitcoin standard is anyones guess but they will have
to do something in this current climate of rising inflation.

They have very little choices, their Peso is worthless and the US$ is not an option either so
Bitcoin is a real option especially as El Salvador is pioneering that use case ahead of
every other country.
I am afraid that they will become the next Zimbabwe or Venezuela (I forgot which one) I think that amidst rising inflation, their government intended to ban Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies. When I saw that news before, it is really worst, when the solution is already there, they start to prevent it, but yeah they have also some reasons like the increase in scams/frauds.
legendary
Activity: 2828
Merit: 6108
Blackjack.fun
January 12, 2022, 06:08:11 PM
#18
Latin American nations are very adaptive with crypto market. Politics, economy in those nations are unsustainable so locals have to find more safe havens. They see opportunities in Bitcoin and crypto and maybe they see less risk compare to fiats.

I've been hearing this for 5 years and to date other than surveys claiming millions of owners there is zero proof of poeple there actually making a massive move towards crypto, let's not even star the whole nodes/atms/business debate, there is nothing there other than claims.
Rember how dash was saying people are using dash more than anything in Venezuela? That was 2017, where is dash now? Where are the hundreds of thousands of active users?

It would be a completely different experiment in terms of scale if Argentina actually adopted bitcoin as a legal tender, after all El Salvador has roughly 7 million citizens while Argentina has 44 million citizens, that is more than 6 times the population of El Salvador.

It's not just that is' bigger it also has double the GDP per capita and unlike Salvador, it doesn't get 20% of it from remittance, so in terms of an economy is close to 20 times bigger than Salvador.

But things are way more complicated in Argentina, with Salvador it was easy, they didn't have their own currency, they used the USD, it was simple to add a legal tender next to a somewhat stable currency, what are you going to do in their case? Besides, there is another problem, those bitcoins poeple are purchasing must come from the outside, and poeple will not want pesos but USD, so every exchange they will make will put more pressure on their currency. It's like importing goods when somebody wants USD, not your currency, and we all know what this triggered both in the 90s in Europe or exactly in South America at the end of the 70s.
legendary
Activity: 2520
Merit: 1073
January 12, 2022, 05:31:21 PM
#17
I remember they also offer service to automatically convert portion of your wage to Bitcoin. If such service also available on Argentina, i expect fair amount of people will consider using Strike.
Surprisingly enough I’ve never heard of this one before. This is the first time that I’m getting to know about Strike , and when I checked on Google, I came across their website and from their website I can tell that they are only functioning in just a few countries; and these countries are the United States of America, El Salvador, and Argentina (which is the country that they have now launched as of recent).

The company has limited its services to just these three countries, and that is why they are not popular around the world. Cause if they were open to other countries as well, then I believe that I would have known about them by now.
hero member
Activity: 1974
Merit: 591
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
January 12, 2022, 03:13:56 PM
#16
This might even position Argentina as a candidate for becoming the next country that makes Bitcoin legal tender.

When the president of El Salvador, Bukele, said that by 2022 there would be two countries that would follow in his footsteps, I thought of Argentina. Let's hope it is true and that other countries will join them. Let's see if the big guys learn and realize that the best way to fight inflation is the Bitcoin standard, but that's a long way off, I'm afraid.

Of course, that will be encouraging news not only for Argentineans, but we will also be very supportive here if the policy on legal tender in Argentina is actually realized. The year 2022 is what Bukele says is referring to Argentina. But which country is 1 more left? we will continue to wait for the development of a country that is suitable and can actually realize what you want to make Bitcoin a legal tender. "I don't want to go too far out on a limb [...] but there is no reason to say no." There has been a green light from the Argentine president, maybe just waiting for the right time. It is certain that the price of Bitcoin will increase if that happens.
hero member
Activity: 2702
Merit: 704
January 12, 2022, 02:43:50 PM
#15
This might even position Argentina as a candidate for becoming the next country that makes Bitcoin legal tender.

When the president of El Salvador, Bukele, said that by 2022 there would be two countries that would follow in his footsteps, I thought of Argentina. Let's hope it is true and that other countries will join them. Let's see if the big guys learn and realize that the best way to fight inflation is the Bitcoin standard, but that's a long way off, I'm afraid.
It would be a completely different experiment in terms of scale if Argentina actually adopted bitcoin as a legal tender, after all El Salvador has roughly 7 million citizens while Argentina has 44 million citizens, that is more than 6 times the population of El Salvador.

Obviously not all of them use bitcoin but there is a strong community in Argentina due to the constant state of economic crisis in which they live, so it would be interesting to see how bitcoin behaves in a country of such scale.
hero member
Activity: 2632
Merit: 613
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
January 12, 2022, 01:24:23 PM
#14
This might even position Argentina as a candidate for becoming the next country that makes Bitcoin legal tender.

When the president of El Salvador, Bukele, said that by 2022 there would be two countries that would follow in his footsteps, I thought of Argentina. Let's hope it is true and that other countries will join them. Let's see if the big guys learn and realize that the best way to fight inflation is the Bitcoin standard, but that's a long way off, I'm afraid.

El Salvador present took a bold step in accepting bitcoin and making it a legal tender in his country. It is not very easy to implement this by other presidents in their country because many countries have to abide by the international monetary policies and they are not independent to take such decisions. Also, there is always a risk of other countries banning them or imposing legal constraint if any small country tries to adopt bitcoin.
legendary
Activity: 2758
Merit: 3408
Join the world-leading crypto sportsbook NOW!
January 12, 2022, 12:02:01 PM
#13
There was already an easy way (and better rates, so let's say cheaper) in p2p trading. The Lightning is cheap argument also hardly makes sense now with already lowest possible fees on mainnet.

But of course, good news, was the most downloaded app (just parroting the news from El Salvador) and can't possibly be worse than the Chivo scandal...
legendary
Activity: 1736
Merit: 2745
LE ☮︎ Halving es la purga
January 12, 2022, 11:59:53 AM
#12
No no no...

Let's not confuse things or put them in non-real contexts, this is news that for now only has the relevance as mentioned "Strike opens operations in Argentina".

Argentina has quite a bit of history with bitcoin and has been managing exchange for quite some time, in fact, as a competition (Strike), they are late although that does not indicate that they come to compete, they know that there is a market of users who have already breathed bitcoin for a long time .

The above has nothing to do with currency legalizations or positioning Argentina as a candidate, nor is it the beginning of a new era of  bitcoiners.
hero member
Activity: 2870
Merit: 612
January 12, 2022, 11:57:17 AM
#11
Strike wallet was also introduced to the users in El Salvador before the president passed the bill for BTC and then introduced another wallet.

Sad story for the economy in Argentina. Just today I saw a video on youtube of the Argentina currency bills are just scattered on the streets literally just thrown, it just has no value anymore. Just like El Salvador that has no own currency from the beginning, Argentina should follow turning to BTC as well.

legendary
Activity: 2044
Merit: 1018
January 12, 2022, 11:57:02 AM
#10
On the one hand, it is positive that people in Argentina will get an additional option to invest in Bitcoin, but does that mean that the average resident of that country will now start investing more in Bitcoin than before?
Latin American nations are very adaptive with crypto market. Politics, economy in those nations are unsustainable so locals have to find more safe havens. They see opportunities in Bitcoin and crypto and maybe they see less risk compare to fiats.

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It seems to me that it will not, because the availability of such an application will not increase investment in Bitcoin because the poor man does not invest in anything other than in the basic things he needs for life.
Above them and have better finance, they will find alternatives for corrupted, inflated fiats. It's time they find Bitcoin and invest in Bitcoin. It happened in Venezuela and Latin America nations have similar conditions from politics to economy.

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In addition, Bitcoin sometimes loses in value much more than paper money, and it's not at all pleasant to wake up in the morning and see that you've lost 20% - this may mean that you may not be able to pay for electricity or gas that month.
People who don't invest in Bitcoin will only see it like this. They observe, read news, etc. and always see Bitcoin is a very volatile and risky asset. But they don't know that in long run, Bitcoin grows a lot and fiats lose a lot in value because of inflation.
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