Lohoris
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February 15, 2014, 09:13:39 AM |
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Sure, but: Update (13th February, 14:40 GMT): Representatives from Standard Bank say that it has finished testing the Switchless bitcoin trading platform, and that it will not be made available to customers.
The bank said the test is part of wider research on “Internet-based financial services”, and that eight internal Standard Bank employees participated in the completed pilot.
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flix
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March 09, 2014, 04:00:06 PM |
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Catmoonglow
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May 10, 2014, 01:21:25 PM |
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What's the risk Borja will run into someone who will want his cash ... but at the same time that person doesn't have plans to exchange bitcoins to get it from him?
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miffman
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May 10, 2014, 06:45:39 PM |
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Check on the coinmap, there are a few places around cape town that accepts BTC as payment There is a some coffee shop in observatory
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Stephen Gornick
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May 13, 2014, 04:23:52 PM |
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What's the risk Borja will run into someone who will want his cash ... but at the same time that person doesn't have plans to exchange bitcoins to get it from him?
Well, there were two of them traveling together. That makes things a little safer. Also, if you read the OP: we are in an urgent need of exchangers, who would like to exchange bitcoins to cash in each country.
So they were only selling bitcoins, in exchange for cash. And since nearly each country had its own fiat, there was no point in holding lots of cash -- and thus risk was muted a little from that as well. If I remember correctly, they had more concerns about their cash going to "checkpoint guards" than to thieves [edit: who don't work for the government] .
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superresistant
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November 07, 2014, 11:37:44 AM |
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Bitcoin is way more useful for Africans than Occidentals. Africa doesn't have access to the banking system and all those services because bankers despise Africans.
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spin
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November 10, 2014, 12:10:57 PM |
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Bitcoin is way more useful for Africans than Occidentals.
Maybe, but for Bitcoin to be succesful in many parts of Africa it will have to be able to operate on USSD/sms level mobile phones. I would imagine this would be centralised wallets operated by a mobile service operator or similar. This is how mpesa operates. I.e. some centralisaiton in providing it to individuals will occur. The limiting factors are feature phones (not smart phones) and limited access to mobile data (cost to the individual and infrastructure). If I were a mobile operator I can convert people to my own currency (e.g. mpesa) or to bitcoin. Of course I would do my own as I can capture people to my network whereas if I launch bitcoin it does not hook people to my network. Africa doesn't have access to the banking system and all those services because bankers despise Africans.
Firstly there are banks accross africa. Owned by Africans even so you are obviously making stuff up. See Standard Bank quoted earlier in this thread or Equity ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_Bank). In fact some of our best banks offer better and more innovative services than in Europe or Asia at least. I am based in Africa but have lived in Asia and Europe and have had bank accounts in all three. Of course the poor (who limited money), or the rural people (who are difficult to reach) are difficult to service using traditional banking. However we've seen the growth of non-traditional banking (micro lending etc.) and other models. We also see mobile tech playing a role. Banks have a role to play too, but they are switching to other technologies to assist. Read up on Equity for example. bankers despise Africans.
That's just a stupid comment.
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Kprawn
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November 11, 2014, 01:06:42 PM |
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He would also be VERY successfull if he used MPESA {It's very widespread and based on the Bitcoin protocol} I think one of the biggest banks down there are backed by Barcley Bank. {Spelling might be wrong} I have Skype friends living there, and they say ABSA is the biggest bank. Just google those, and you will find loads of links. South Africa hosted a FIFA soccer World Cup a few years ago, and I watched that, and they looked like a first world country.
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spin
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November 11, 2014, 02:45:16 PM |
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He would also be VERY successfull if he used MPESA {It's very widespread and based on the Bitcoin protocol}
Mpesa launched in 2007 pre-dating bitcoin. I think one of the biggest banks down there are backed by Barcley Bank. {Spelling might be wrong}
Barclays bought ABSA in 2013. ABSA is the biggest in South Africa (even before Barclays bought it) South Africa hosted a FIFA soccer World Cup a few years ago, and I watched that, and they looked like a first world country. South Africa is a weird mix of 1st and 3rd.
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superresistant
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November 11, 2014, 03:09:42 PM |
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Africa doesn't have access to the banking system and all those services because bankers despise Africans.
Firstly there are banks accross africa. Owned by Africans even so you are obviously making stuff up. See Standard Bank quoted earlier in this thread or Equity ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_Bank). In fact some of our best banks offer better and more innovative services than in Europe or Asia at least. I am based in Africa but have lived in Asia and Europe and have had bank accounts in all three. Of course the poor (who limited money), or the rural people (who are difficult to reach) are difficult to service using traditional banking. However we've seen the growth of non-traditional banking (micro lending etc.) and other models. We also see mobile tech playing a role. Banks have a role to play too, but they are switching to other technologies to assist. Read up on Equity for example. I was talking about bank card payment system : VISA, American Express & MasterCard.
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spin
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November 12, 2014, 07:46:57 AM |
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I was talking about bank card payment system : VISA, American Express & MasterCard.
I have one of each in my pocket right now. They are available here and elsewhere in Africa. When I've travelled through other countries in Africa I've used them as well. In order of usability I'd rank them 1. Visa 2. MC ... 100. Amex You have a bit of point there: Mainly in the less developed countries/ rural areas you are using them in towns to draw cash which you'll spend. Most "shops"/places (other than big hotels or similar) don't directly accept the cards. Travelling through Mozambique I did run out of cash at some point because I was on an island with a broken ATM. I remember speaking to an owner of a lodge there and he mentioned that he applied for a credit card machine from his bank . That was 2 years previously and he was still waiting. Had to pay him by paypal... Bitcoin would have helped there, but that was a 1st world problem, paying for your holiday accomodation. Would it have helped the unbanked locals in the town? Maybe, but probably not without some centralisation of wallets perhaps via an mobile operator. Or if they had really cheap reliable data on their mobiles (which they don't). Also the tech will have to simplified a lot. All the addresses etc would need to be hidden away, and the apps made very simple. Many of the people haven't even started high school so it needs to be simple and straightforward.
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Stephen Gornick
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November 15, 2014, 01:56:06 PM |
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Maybe, but for Bitcoin to be succesful in many parts of Africa it will have to be able to operate on USSD/sms level mobile phones. I would imagine this would be centralised wallets operated by a mobile service operator or similar.
Safaricom is partly owned by the government (Kenya). I would bet hell would freeze over before Safaricom would give a Bitcoin wallet provider access to their local USSD gateways (which are required for secure communication of mobile-originated requests.) Right now most new phones sold are smartphones. This still means only a small segment of the population ... (like less than 20%) has a smartphone today but that's not as huge a hurdle as it may seem. Families and neighbors are used to sharing resources. Those that don't have a feature phone even yet today might have their own SIM card though. With this SIM card one can borrow a phone to use M-Pesa, for example. With an inexpensive hardware 2FA device a person without a smartphone can safely borrow someone else's smartphone to make a Bitcoin transaction. Even paper-based wallet using BIP-38 might be useful with a borrowed phone (one that is provided by the merchant even), presuming the password is single-use (i.e., spend all funds in that wallet and the wallet is not re-used).
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