HinnomTX
Active member
Voted yes.
We are in a new league of budgeting now. In January 2016, with a 35k monthly budget, this proposal would not have been possible. Today, we actually have a little bit of a chance to catch up to, and maybe even surpass Bitcoin. Bitcoin has a five year head start, but recently development has stumbled. I'm OK with being aggressive with our newfound budget of $100k / month. Part I of this proposal is a single payment and won't clog up months of budgeting, unlike e.g. the Dash.org purchase. I agree with the sentiment that there are other project _ideas_ that would come at a higher priority than this, but these ideas are not materializing into hard proposals yet. If this proposal were competing in the budget system for a solid retail adoption plan or partnership, I would select the latter first. But that's not what we have before us this month.
I don't like ATMs. They are a 20th century invention, and they should be an anachronism in the 21st. The 6-10% fees could be characterized as usurious. Having said that, they have their uses in the right place. Example: the car wash. I generally don't carry much cash. Recently I needed tipping money for the workers there. There was an ATM. It charged only 2%. I was happy to pay it so I could put a smile on the car cleaners' faces, and then pay my housekeeper later that week.
I'm sure that these virtual currency ATMs will find similar niches. Countries with shitty currencies, and/or heavy capital controls. Think Central and South America. Maybe you don't need AML/KYC for some of the places I'm talking about. But I do think it's important to have a game plan to interact with the legacy banking system and their subservient governments in which we find ourselves entrenched, sort of like 'The Matrix'. Once people have their Dash, they can do as they please. If they need to convert Dash to physical currency, they probably have a really good reason to do it, and chances are, an ATM operator will find it.
We are in a new league of budgeting now. In January 2016, with a 35k monthly budget, this proposal would not have been possible. Today, we actually have a little bit of a chance to catch up to, and maybe even surpass Bitcoin. Bitcoin has a five year head start, but recently development has stumbled. I'm OK with being aggressive with our newfound budget of $100k / month. Part I of this proposal is a single payment and won't clog up months of budgeting, unlike e.g. the Dash.org purchase. I agree with the sentiment that there are other project _ideas_ that would come at a higher priority than this, but these ideas are not materializing into hard proposals yet. If this proposal were competing in the budget system for a solid retail adoption plan or partnership, I would select the latter first. But that's not what we have before us this month.
I don't like ATMs. They are a 20th century invention, and they should be an anachronism in the 21st. The 6-10% fees could be characterized as usurious. Having said that, they have their uses in the right place. Example: the car wash. I generally don't carry much cash. Recently I needed tipping money for the workers there. There was an ATM. It charged only 2%. I was happy to pay it so I could put a smile on the car cleaners' faces, and then pay my housekeeper later that week.
I'm sure that these virtual currency ATMs will find similar niches. Countries with shitty currencies, and/or heavy capital controls. Think Central and South America. Maybe you don't need AML/KYC for some of the places I'm talking about. But I do think it's important to have a game plan to interact with the legacy banking system and their subservient governments in which we find ourselves entrenched, sort of like 'The Matrix'. Once people have their Dash, they can do as they please. If they need to convert Dash to physical currency, they probably have a really good reason to do it, and chances are, an ATM operator will find it.
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