420 (OP)
|
|
August 06, 2012, 09:11:54 AM |
|
What is the next big service or potential market for bitcoins or that utilizes bitcoins?
|
Donations: 1JVhKjUKSjBd7fPXQJsBs5P3Yphk38AqPr - TIPS the hacks, the hacks, secure your bits!
|
|
|
Matthew N. Wright
Untrustworthy
Hero Member
Offline
Activity: 588
Merit: 500
Hero VIP ultra official trusted super staff puppet
|
|
August 06, 2012, 09:21:34 AM |
|
If I told you, I would be giving it away to the competition! ^_-
|
|
|
|
btcash
|
|
August 06, 2012, 09:28:52 AM |
|
Porn. I think a lot more people would buy porn passes if they could do it anonymously and safe. The brazzers hack showed why you shouldn't give your name and credit card details to a porn company.
They probably aren't accepting bitcoins by now because they are afraid of bitcoins volatility and they won't be able to offer recurring meberships anymore. In my point of view the volatility isn't a problem. They can sell there bitcoins in most cases within 1 hour and it is unlikely that the rate will drop for more than 3% (fee they pay for cc payments). And recurring meberships is just a way to scam money form members who forgott to cancel. They should stop it anyway.
|
|
|
|
Matthew N. Wright
Untrustworthy
Hero Member
Offline
Activity: 588
Merit: 500
Hero VIP ultra official trusted super staff puppet
|
|
August 06, 2012, 09:43:36 AM |
|
I disagree, at least for most regular porn sites. Porn is only successful due to misdirection and laziness. If subscriptions cannot be charged automatically (which Is currently incompatible with Bitcoin), then it's a non-starter.
|
|
|
|
420 (OP)
|
|
August 06, 2012, 10:08:28 AM |
|
two posts to get the topic onto porn Good point. I was thinking more on a smaller scale. There's probably webcam girls accepting bitcoin already What about tech support for X BTC an hour?
|
Donations: 1JVhKjUKSjBd7fPXQJsBs5P3Yphk38AqPr - TIPS the hacks, the hacks, secure your bits!
|
|
|
556j
|
|
August 06, 2012, 04:47:19 PM |
|
There's a market hole for BTC > USD/GBP/EUR cash in mail. Anonymous, no limit, no regulation, no question asked, reliable, $5,000+ transactions. Under 4% fee. Darknet is okay (perhaps preferred) as it would keep the operator safe.
|
|
|
|
Gyrsur
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2856
Merit: 1520
Bitcoin Legal Tender Countries: 2 of 206
|
|
August 06, 2012, 04:52:45 PM |
|
There's a market hole for BTC > USD/GBP/EUR cash in mail. Anonymous, no limit, no regulation, no question asked, reliable, $5,000+ transactions. Under 4% fee. Darknet is okay (perhaps preferred) as it would keep the operator safe.
wow interesting! a perfect target for money laundering...
|
|
|
|
556j
|
|
August 06, 2012, 05:05:07 PM |
|
That's not money laundering. Not even close.
Say you used that service to get $150,000 over a few months.
Go try to buy a house in cash. Or anything substantial.
Tell me how great your "money laundering" worked.
The entire point of money laundering is so you can spend illegitimate cash you have. Prove how it was earned, pay taxes on it. Then buy nice things. This does nothing of the sort.
|
|
|
|
Gyrsur
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2856
Merit: 1520
Bitcoin Legal Tender Countries: 2 of 206
|
|
August 06, 2012, 05:25:22 PM |
|
changing Bitcoin in an other currency might be always a problem because it's anonymous and there is now way for authorities to track the source of the money down...
|
|
|
|
ElectricMucus
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
|
|
August 06, 2012, 06:12:41 PM |
|
What will be coming - more insured pirate passthroughs
- more mining bonds
- more leveraged "payment processing" (btcpay style)
- more exchange/speculation services
not any of: - e-commerce software
- download services
- porn sites
- production of any kind
I know that's sad
|
|
|
|
CoinCidental
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1000
Si vis pacem, para bellum
|
|
August 06, 2012, 06:51:40 PM |
|
changing Bitcoin in an other currency might be always a problem because it's anonymous and there is now way for authorities to track the source of the money down...
if anyone has amassed 100,000 -500,000 btc and tries to cash out ,i would imagine there would be some serious explaining to be done how could authoritys prove your coins either did or did not come from a business which was illegal by its nature or illegal because it didnt pay tax every year like every other business is supposed to ? could you just say you mined them all when mining was easy ?
|
|
|
|
Gyrsur
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2856
Merit: 1520
Bitcoin Legal Tender Countries: 2 of 206
|
|
August 06, 2012, 07:02:35 PM |
|
changing Bitcoin in an other currency might be always a problem because it's anonymous and there is now way for authorities to track the source of the money down...
if anyone has amassed 100,000 -500,000 btc and tries to cash out ,i would imagine there would be some serious explaining to be done how could authoritys prove your coins either did or did not come from a business which was illegal by its nature or illegal because it didnt pay tax every year like every other business is supposed to ? could you just say you mined them all when mining was easy ? now I'm understand why early adaptors try to keep their hoarded coins clean! maybe they want to avoid trouble if they want to cash out sometimes in the future... When you release an address into public, I don't think anything stops people from sharing that address to people not registered in the forum and performing any search on it. From that to Google indexing the addresses, I don't think that's a big step. If you really need anonymity, just do as it's said: one address per transaction, and if you really need your coins not to be tainted, use a mixing service.
that's the number 1 way to get tainted coins
|
|
|
|
tgmarks
Donator
Hero Member
Offline
Activity: 490
Merit: 500
|
|
August 06, 2012, 07:05:03 PM |
|
Your jumping ahead or yourself, there is not even a simple way to get that much into cash right now. Their are significant limits on every exchange as to how much you can move a week or month.
|
|
|
|
Nefario
|
|
August 06, 2012, 07:07:55 PM |
|
Bitcoin financial services.
Think insurance (CPA on GLBSE) Assurance Loans(Hashking, PatrickHarnet) Background checks, identity verification
Some things that can really only happen because of bitcoin Peer to Peer package delivery (Bitdrop)
Playing the bitcoin stock market (GLBSE.com) Hired thugs (someone is eventually going to need their legs broken) Person to Person bitcoin/fiat exchange.
Lots of ideas.
|
PGP key id at pgp.mit.edu 0xA68F4B7C To get help and support for GLBSE please email support@glbse.com
|
|
|
BoardGameCoin
|
|
August 06, 2012, 07:08:24 PM |
|
A simple way to do amazon purchases would go a long way
(grumble)
-bgc
|
I'm selling great Minion Games like The Manhattan Project, Kingdom of Solomon and Venture Forth at 4% off retail starting June 2012. PM me or go to my thread in the Marketplace if you're interested. For Settlers/Dominion/Carcassone etc., I do email gift cards on Amazon for a 5% fee. PM if you're interested.
|
|
|
CoinCidental
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1000
Si vis pacem, para bellum
|
|
August 06, 2012, 07:29:01 PM |
|
changing Bitcoin in an other currency might be always a problem because it's anonymous and there is now way for authorities to track the source of the money down...
if anyone has amassed 100,000 -500,000 btc and tries to cash out ,i would imagine there would be some serious explaining to be done how could authoritys prove your coins either did or did not come from a business which was illegal by its nature or illegal because it didnt pay tax every year like every other business is supposed to ? could you just say you mined them all when mining was easy ? now I'm understand why early adaptors try to keep their hoarded coins clean! maybe they want to avoid trouble if they want to cash out sometimes in the future... When you release an address into public, I don't think anything stops people from sharing that address to people not registered in the forum and performing any search on it. From that to Google indexing the addresses, I don't think that's a big step. If you really need anonymity, just do as it's said: one address per transaction, and if you really need your coins not to be tainted, use a mixing service.
that's the number 1 way to get tainted coins Imagine standing in front of a tax auditor or a judge in 5-10 years trying to explain that you give you coins to a man you met on the internet called Pirate and he gave you back 3400% interest but the business he did with them was confidential its all fun and laughs until you get your assets and accounts frozen as "suspicious " .........at some stage bitcoiners are going to need to buy big ticket items like homes etc and i have no idea how the law is going to interpret " internet play money " being changed into millions of real dollars but i expect it wont be smooth sailing and a shitload of regulations will probably be introduced in the next few years
|
|
|
|
tgmarks
Donator
Hero Member
Offline
Activity: 490
Merit: 500
|
|
August 06, 2012, 08:17:42 PM |
|
So like a service that you would pay bitcoin to and they would issue you your usps stamp or ups shipping label?
|
|
|
|
CoinCidental
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1000
Si vis pacem, para bellum
|
|
August 06, 2012, 08:19:30 PM |
|
So like a service that you would pay bitcoin to and they would issue you your usps stamp or ups shipping label?
a company like fedex accepting BTC would be nice ......
|
|
|
|
tgmarks
Donator
Hero Member
Offline
Activity: 490
Merit: 500
|
|
August 06, 2012, 09:15:01 PM |
|
So like a service that you would pay bitcoin to and they would issue you your usps stamp or ups shipping label?
What I'm thinking of is a network where anyone with a bike, car, van, truck etc can sign up, get a message when a delivery comes up in their area, accept it and make a few b's. A trustworthy network would take time to build up so a simple 'deliver it now' service using UPS, postal services etc. would probably be the only way to get started. Eventually it could build up to a service as anonymous as bitcoin, no names or addresses necessary, just GPS co-ords and times with verification on delivery. This would be pretty awesome. I think this idea needs a whole lot of development, but could be one of the coolest services bitcoin could offer.
|
|
|
|
Nefario
|
|
August 07, 2012, 07:06:35 AM |
|
So like a service that you would pay bitcoin to and they would issue you your usps stamp or ups shipping label?
What I'm thinking of is a network where anyone with a bike, car, van, truck etc can sign up, get a message when a delivery comes up in their area, accept it and make a few b's. A trustworthy network would take time to build up so a simple 'deliver it now' service using UPS, postal services etc. would probably be the only way to get started. Eventually it could build up to a service as anonymous as bitcoin, no names or addresses necessary, just GPS co-ords and times with verification on delivery. This would be pretty awesome. I think this idea needs a whole lot of development, but could be one of the coolest services bitcoin could offer. It already IS under development, it's called bitdrop
|
PGP key id at pgp.mit.edu 0xA68F4B7C To get help and support for GLBSE please email support@glbse.com
|
|
|
|