2 things are required for the store operator to accept Bitcoin...
1. An internet connection. No need to explain why...
2. His vendor's acceptance of Bitcoin. If the vendor does not accept Bitcoin, he has to hit exchanges for encashing those BTC and that would be a business risk for him.
Actually it works like a chain and if u look at the top, there is OPEC.
I'm not so sure their vendor would have to accept. With Bitpay, they could take payment directly in fiat. It would be just like with credit cards, maybe even faster to hit their account, and it would definitely cost them less.
Don't forget any added hassle of having to keep track of all BTC prices, what price you sold it for, etc.... Better off using bitpay or something so they do it all for you.
The law as it is right now, says whenever you convert any cryptocoin into USD you have to treat it as selling a stock and you get a capital gains tax on it. Which means you need to keep track of everything. If the gas station had to sell a few dozen bitcoins per day and at different times they have to keep track of prices and everything and file on it. Now if they just accept the btc itself they don't have to do that.
THAT is a hassle. You're right. Damn. Gubmint screwed the pooch, there. That's going to affect pretty much ALL use cases for BTC.
This is actually a very good use for bitcoin. You are right that margins are very thin for gas stations when they sell gas, sometimes around a penny per gallon (this is even smaller when you compare the average cost of accepting a credit card (2-3 percent).
I saw a youtube video several months ago how some guy designed a gas pump that accepts bitcoin, it would show a QR code to send BTC to, you would pump gas, then when you are done pumping it would send a TX back to you with your "change"
I was thinking along those lines, as well. It could be a turnkey solution offered to c-store operators...a gas pump with BTC capability built in. Of course, that's a huge project. Not one I'm likely to tangle with, even if it is a good opportunity for somebody.
2 things are required for the store operator to accept Bitcoin...
1. An internet connection. No need to explain why...
2. His vendor's acceptance of Bitcoin. If the vendor does not accept Bitcoin, he has to hit exchanges for encashing those BTC and that would be a business risk for him.
Actually it works like a chain and if u look at the top, there is OPEC.
You could even do it without the internet connection, sorta.
The vendor could have a QR code pasted to the pump. The buyer scans it with his phone and pays. The seller then checks the balance of the address to verify payment. In this scenario the seller does not have access to the coins for spending, just verification. It does require a phone connection to the internet though.
You could also make a phone friendly website that allows payment in route. By the time you get there, payment is confirmed. Just show the seller a code from the website to verify your identity as the payer.
Man...payment in route would be amazing. I'd be all over that.
Thanks for the comments, folks!