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Author Topic: Accepting Bitcoin as Payment at Your Business — Good Idea or Bad?  (Read 649 times)
Redtea (OP)
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February 26, 2014, 11:18:42 PM
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Accepting Bitcoin as payment for your business can be as easy as accepting any other type of electronic payment. You don’t need any kind of payment processing system to accept Bitcoin, but there are some advantages to using a payment service for small business.

Easy and anonymous exchange was one of the features built into the digital tokens from the very beginning, and it’s one of the qualities of Bitcoin that gives government regulators a twitch. When you write a check or use a debit card, it kicks off a whole series of transactions, starting at your bank, which takes the money out of your account. But your bank can’t just send the money straight to the bank of the person cashing your check, which would be far more efficient. Instead the transaction goes in an electronic queue and, at intervals during the day, those transactions ping-pong their way through the Federal Reserve System (you knew they did something, right?) and eventually ends up in the depositor’s account. That’s why your bank doesn’t give you the money right away for a check you deposit. They have to wait for that process, which is much faster these days, but still slow by modern standards.

Bitcoin cuts through all that overhead. You don’t need banks, the Federal Reserve System, or anything but a piece of software, called a “wallet,” that you can download for free. Your digital Bitcoin wallet is encrypted with a secret piece of data called your “private key.” That private key identifies you uniquely in the Bitcoin system, called a “block chain,” and is used to validate that your Bitcoins actually belong to you.

Bitcoin merchant exchanges are relatively painless, and add an extra layer of security…
As a business, you can set up your Bitcoin wallet and use it to accept payment if you wish, exchanging your Bitcoins for real-world cash at one of the many exchanges. If you manage Bitcoin payments that way, expect scrutiny from government regulators — who all seem to think that Bitcoin is a giant tax avoidance scheme.

Another option is setting up a merchant account with a vendor like Bitpay, which works just like any other payment processing system. Your customers can pay for orders with Bitcoin, and the exchange vendor handles the conversion to cash for you, for a small fee. This way Bitcoin becomes just another payment option, and your business processes remain exactly the same as with any other type of payment system. You don’t have any control over where your customers get Bitcoins anymore than you do on where they get cash or any other form of payment.

Bitcoin merchant exchanges already work closely with government regulators and, while the extra player increases the overhead of transactions, it’s relatively painless, and adds an extra layer of security for you as a business owner.

What makes the government nervous is the ability of Bitcoin to skirt the Federal Reserve System, and the attendant oversight and monitoring. I’m going to guess that will never change — so, if you’re going to accept Bitcoin as a merchant, think about using a payment processing service.

Sources:
http://redteanews.com/2014/01/08/accepting-bitcoin-as-payment-at-your-business-good-idea-or-bad/#.Uw514fldXfI

-Redtea
Conservative News for the Right-Minded American

redteanews.com
grifferz
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February 27, 2014, 08:30:52 PM
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redtea, are you interested in debate on bitcointalk, or just advertising your own web site?

I'm happy to talk with you here but I'm never going to visit your web site, so if you could let me know if that's your intention I can just put you on ignore.
farlack
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February 27, 2014, 08:34:11 PM
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I sell ecigs on the weekend at a flea market, my sign has the visa/mc/amex logo and a big we accept bitcoin logo, I had a woman say kind of rudely you should not accept that its not real currency, I chuckled and said I used to get 3 bitcoin per starter kit normally $45 (quite a few bitcoins made btw), I sold them for $1000 each. Shut her right the fuck up and she kept walking.
Armis
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February 27, 2014, 09:05:57 PM
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redtea, are you interested in debate on bitcointalk, or just advertising your own web site?

I'm happy to talk with you here but I'm never going to visit your web site, so if you could let me know if that's your intention I can just put you on ignore.


that, my friends is Newbie on Newbie hate



I sell ecigs on the weekend at a flea market, my sign has the visa/mc/amex logo and a big we accept bitcoin logo, I had a woman say kind of rudely you should not accept that its not real currency, I chuckled and said I used to get 3 bitcoin per starter kit normally $45 (quite a few bitcoins made btw), I sold them for $1000 each. Shut her right the fuck up and she kept walking.

 Grin
rmines
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February 27, 2014, 09:06:03 PM
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What I didn't like about the article is that the writer does not mention potential drawbacks of accepting bitcoin as a payment system for your business:

-Potential security issues
-Potential loss of coins
-Negative PR as some people associate bitcoin with launderers and criminals.

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Gabi
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February 27, 2014, 09:07:32 PM
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Quote
-Potential security issues
-Potential loss of coins
If you use services like bitpay you remove these problems


rmines
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February 27, 2014, 09:09:54 PM
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Quote
-Potential security issues
-Potential loss of coins
If you use services like bitpay you remove these problems

Not entirely.
A merchant that withdraws their coins to a wallet located on their PC that is poorly secured can get his/her coins stolen, or lose them if they do not make a backup and experience a disk failure.

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Gabi
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February 27, 2014, 09:12:57 PM
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Yeah if you decide to keep the bitcoins you have to properly make offline wallets/paper wallets/backup and avoid having wallets on an online pc. An hardware wallet like Trezor would be very useful. And well you can always have bitpay directly convert the bitcoins in $ or € and have them deposited in your bank. After all this thread is only about accepting bitcoin as payment.

farlack
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February 27, 2014, 09:15:15 PM
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Quote
-Potential security issues
-Potential loss of coins
If you use services like bitpay you remove these problems

Not entirely.
A merchant that withdraws their coins to a wallet located on their PC that is poorly secured can get his/her coins stolen, or lose them if they do not make a backup and experience a disk failure.

But if you're smart enough to be a business owner, I'm sure you're smart enough to know how to secure your coins. Besides you can get a QR code for bitpay, and they can store your coins on site wallet. I don't think bitpay is going anywhere soon, seeing as they're thriving as is.
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