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NH-based entrepreneurs to launch Bitcoin ATM this week

42 points| morisy | 13 years ago |bizjournals.com | reply

29 comments

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[+] malgorithms|13 years ago|reply
I wonder if it accepts counterfeit dollars. [edit:] to clarify, I don't mean this as a joke. It seems that they're not paying out cash (only taking in) because they don't trust the depositor and have to wait anywhere from 10 mins to a couple hours for a transaction. But how can they trust the incoming cash? It seems like a perfect venue for a counterfeiter.
[+] fsckin|13 years ago|reply
I would guess that they're using a standard bill acceptor that does optical and magnetic tests.

They'd have to be really good fake bills.

[+] morisy|13 years ago|reply
I was wondering that myself. I assume they have some anti-counterfeiting tech in there? Though that seems tough if the machine is built for so many different currencies.
[+] jstanley|13 years ago|reply
For anyone else confused, I believe NH means "New Hampshire".
[+] astrodust|13 years ago|reply
Title should be adjusted since I'm sure a lot of people don't know what that abbreviation is.

You might even guess it's related to "NiMH" or is some other kind of chemical compound.

[+] jrochkind1|13 years ago|reply
i don't get it, in what form/format does this machine 'dispense' bitcoins?

I'm not a bitcoin expert, but bitcoins are digital currency, right? How does a physical machine dispense digital currency? You attach a USB drive to it or something?

[+] thechut|13 years ago|reply
I can't be sure of this. But my guess other than a USB drive like you mentioned would be, you simply input a Bitcoin address for them to be sent to.

This way you could send the Bitcoins to a personal wallet, online hosted wallet, or even straight to Mt. Gox.

Or perhaps it does something more physical like creating a new wallet for you and physically prints out the private key of the wallet for you to keep with you.

[+] sneak|13 years ago|reply
Presumably you either show the machine a QR code on your phone/tablet (which represents a bitcoin payment address), or it prints out a private key for you to input into your software (which can then be swept of its coins).
[+] bisrael|13 years ago|reply
Please enter your 27-34 hexadecimal pin:
[+] maeon3|13 years ago|reply
If I get paid in Bitcoins and only spend bitcoins, can I still report that I earned zero Monopoly Money-US dollars this year?

Does that mean when this takes off I can earn, exchange and sell units of future human labor without the friction of governments taking 25% to 35% of it?

We can assume the government will spare no expense in destroying bitcoin by fiat by making laws against it, and if that doesn't work, using economic hit-men, supporting jackals, or the old trusty domestic military action with soldiers from Georgia and Virginia to break down the door of anyone caught using it under the table.

The question is, how is this war going to unfold? Will the US dollar be allowed to be exposed as the always-inflating Monopoly Money it is, and slowly fade out over the next 20 years? So many possibilities.

If bitcoin can survive laws that make it illegal, taxes on it that make it less useful than USD, assassinations of key figures, the destruction of companies promoting it, and domestic military action, then bitcoin might have a shot at becoming the next world currency.

Otherwise, a combination of these things will erase it to a footnote in the history books. But you can be darn certain that the government is going to levy their tax on the income of bitcoins. In the interests of the sovreign, to promote "fairness".

[+] wwosik|13 years ago|reply
The government does not levy taxes on US dollar, but on the income, be it in dollars, monopoly money, bitcoins, mussels or pigs. It's just in some cases the low scale of the phenomenon makes collecting the tax more expensive than the collected sum. However, if the alternate currency should rise above a certain level you can be sure, it will be taxed.

And the government really does not levy the tax because "they are evil them", but because the governed society has certain needs that can only be fulfilled by common effort and it would be good to minimize freeridership. Of course one can discuss whether certain governmental activities are needed or not, but to abandon all government wouldn't do any good.

[+] wwweston|13 years ago|reply
> the friction of governments taking 25% to 35% of it?

Friction or error term + commons fee.

> Will the US dollar be allowed to be exposed as the always-inflating Monopoly Money

Probably more accurate to call it monetarist monopoly money vs crypto-anarchist monopoly money, though the monopoly is arguably redundant.