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Crypto is integrated into our daily shopping experience

Crypto is integrated into our daily shopping experience

We all have that relative or acquaintance that will ask: “but what can you actually do with crypto? Where can you even use it?”

Instead of beginning to explain the different ways one can handle their virtual coins, the answer to these questions may become more relatable to the crypto-outsider. You could answer: “I just buy the same things you would with your normal money.” And this in itself makes us reflect upon the change undergoing in our concept of what is normal money is.

Withdraw cash from the local Bitcoin ATM, purchase goods online, whipping out your crypto credit card — all of these options are becoming an increasingly convenient reality. There are more and more businesses processing payments in crypto, and others providing the services to do so.

There are many initiatives that are working to allow for simple, seamless transactions in commerce. There are fast-paced developments which are integrating crypto into our business-as-usual daily lives. Some are successful, others less so; all of which makes up the early days of an experimental process where we discover how cryptocurrencies can be integrated into the existing reality.

Lightning Network

The arrival of the Lightning Network (LN) in March 2018 (in its functional Beta form) allowed bitcoin transaction to take place on the second layer in way cheaper and faster than ever before. Blockstream CSO Samson Mow has notably described the Network’s service as “unfairly cheap”.

There are both physical and online possibilities to spend one’s bitcoin through Lightning Network. The physical stores which have independently chosen to accept LN payments in their business depict a more special sentiment of crypto-adoption. As researcher and journalist Vlad Costea writes: “Real adoption comes from real enthusiasts who take the plunge into the unknown by giving this new and exciting means of payment a try.”

The Accepting Lightning website comprises of a list of 80 businesses located around the world that accept bitcoin lightning network payments, and is slowly but surely expanding. This includes cafés, retail stores, merchandise, web services and so on. The map shows several locations in North America and Europe, one location in Brazil, one in Thailand and two in Australia. While the figures remain small and there is plenty of space for growth, this shows a headstart in the adoption of cryptocurrency in day-to-day life.

Open Node

The development of Lightning Network’s uses in physical stores, although minute, show how LN is in its mushrooming phase. More vigorous developments take place in the online payment framework.

OpenNode is a platform allows for bitcoin payments, offering an “easy to use eCommerce and retail plug-in solution, payment infrastructure API’s for developers, and the fastest payment processor limits to allow for brand new payment models and instantaneous settlements.” This is for the vision of helping to create a “borderless future where everyday transactions are used with Bitcoin.”

Open Node offers shopping cart plugins for common commerce platforms, supporting a variety of currencies in 195 countries. As a business, you can customize your website’s checkout payment to accept bitcoin, and automatically convert the bitcoin to your native currency at the time of the transaction. And this is done with very low fees, from a fraction of a dollar cent.

Furthermore, for in-store crypto-payment experience, OpenNode facilitates a “quick, painless mobile and retail experience that will save you and your customers time and headaches.” Such tools make the acceptance of bitcoin in their business a simple step to take.

BitPay and BTCPay

There are other services which act as bitcoin-payment facilitators online. BitPay allows you to “expand your payment options by accepting instant BTC and BCH payments without risk or price fluctuations,” be that on website, email, or personally at your store. BitPay also offers a Visa card for conversion of one’s cryptocurrency into dollars for any retailer that accepts Visa.

Meanwhile, BTCPay is a self-hosted server with an open-source cryptocurrency payment processor — which is “secure, private, censorship-resistant and free.” The service allows the user to receive Bitcoin and altcoin payments without a third-party involvement nor additional fees, so you can be “your own payment processor”.

In an interview by Bitcoinist, Bitcoin Core developer Nicolas Dorier gives us the background that “BTCPay is multi-tenant open-source payment processor, backward compatible with Bitpay API. It means that it is a payment processor which can be used to provide payment processing to multiple merchants.”

The project serves to keep payment processing in bitcoin decentralized. As Dorier states: “Bitcoin itself is decentralized, but payment processors are not, and they use their comfortable position to abuse its customers. BTCPay is a way out.”

Moon extension

The Moon browser extension, functioning in Beta mode since January 2019, allows you to connect your wallet and then to pay with cryptocurrency for your online purchases. Currently, its use-case is limited. It only supports Coinbase wallet, it only connects with four currencies — Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ether and Bitcoin Cash, and it can only be used for purchases on Amazon. The developing group, Moon Technologies, says that addition e-commerce sites like eBay and Walmart will eventually be added.

Moon browser extension, however, is not an open-source, decentralized entity, and has the according weaknesses and problems. In a Reddit post, co-founder Alexander Ang warns users to “uninstall Moon, Revoke your Coinbase API Keys now and protect your bitcoin”, due to the non-consensual collection of user’s data. This is a breach of General Data Protection Regulation and privacy laws meant to protect individual data.

Scandals aside, and as limited as the scope of the Moon extension is, it shows us an eager ambition to provide a simple and seamless integration of crypto into new spaces. Once the initiative is out there, more will follow.

bitcoin ATMs

Cash can also be crucial to shopping, and withdrawing your bitcoin conveniently in the physical world falls under the category of normalizing cryptocurrency use in daily life. Thus, it is important to note the rise of Bitcoin ATMs.

The updated Coin ATM Radar website shows that there are 4485 crypto ATMs at the time of writing, located in 77 countries, manufactured by 43 different producers. Furthermore, statistics show that despite bearish markets in 2018, Bitcoin ATMs doubled in number globally from 2000 to 4000 over the course of the year. CoinGape reports that only during the first Week of 2019, an additional 34 ATM’s were installed.

What this highlights is the exchangeability of cryptocurrencies to fiat, so people can continue on their daily financial exchanges in a predominantly fiat world while supporting the use of crypto.

Published at Wed, 03 Apr 2019 05:17:45 +0000

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BIP 91 Has Locked In. Here’s What That Means (and What It Does Not)

BIP91.jpg

It looks as if bitcoin is getting Segregated Witness.

Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 91 (BIP 91) just locked in. Up to 90 percent of all hash power signaled support for this soft fork, which implies miners intend, in turn, to trigger Segregated Witness (SegWit) activation. By extension, this should make BIP 148 obsolete and August 1 a non-event.

But SegWit is not certain. In fact, on a technical level, SegWit is not any closer to activation at all.

BIP 91

Segregated Witness, defined by BIP 141, locks in if at least 95 percent of miners (by hash power) signal support for the upgrade within a two-week difficulty period. To do so, miners need to embed a piece of data called “bit 1” in the blocks they mine.

Importantly, this is technically the only way for SegWit to activate right now. And this threshold has not yet been met.

But there are alternative strategies to try and trigger this threshold “indirectly” — like BIP 91.

BIP 91 is a bitcoin Improvement Proposal proposed by Bitmain Warranty engineer James Hilliard. It is compatible with the New York Agreement and backed by a number of bitcoin companies and mining pools. It is also compatible with BIP 148, another strategy to trigger the BIP 141 threshold indirectly.

Miners have been signaling support for BIP 91 over the past couple of days through another piece of data, “bit 4.” Once 269 blocks within a 336-block window included bit 4, this BIP 91 soft fork locks in. This threshold was just met.

This means that after another 336 blocks, a little over two days from now, all BIP 91–compatible nodes will reject any block that doesn’t include bit 1.

As long as a majority of hash power enforces BIP 91, this majority should eventually control the longest valid chain according to all bitcoin nodes. And as this chain consists of bit 1 SegWit-signaling blocks only, it would in turn lock in SegWit on all SegWit-ready nodes by mid-August. SegWit itself should then be live on the bitcoin network after a two-week “grace period” by the end of that month.

If all goes well …

What Could Go Wrong?

Although well over 80 percent of hash power has signaled bit 4 for BIP 91 lock in, this doesn’t actually guarantee anything. Most importantly, it doesn’t in itself mean that these miners will signal bit 1 for SegWit.

Indeed, so far, most miners don’t. Currently, the proportion of miners signaling bit 1 is still far lower than BIP 91 activation would suggest. It is even lower than 50 percent.

Moreover, BIP 91 will probably be enforced by hardly any economically relevant nodes; that is, nodes operated by users that accept bitcoins as payment. Almost no bitcoin users on the network recognize BIP 91 or its bit 4 signaling at all, and will therefore continue to accept blocks with or without bit 1.

BIP 91 will, instead, be enforced by hash power alone. This in turn means that a majority of miners (by hash power) could back out of BIP 91 with little more than reputational damage. They could continue to mine blocks that do not signal bit 1, even after BIP 91 activates in a few days. As long as these miners are in a majority, they will still control the longest valid chain: valid according to most miners, and valid to most users.

Furthermore, any minority of miners and the few nodes that do enforce the BIP 91 soft fork would then be forked off the bitcoin network. In a few days from now, these miners would mine (on top of) blocks that almost only they themselves would care for, while most of the rest of the entire bitcoin network would completely ignore them.

With this week’s bit 4 signaling, a majority of miners have effectively made a statement that they intend to start to activate the SegWit soft fork within a couple of days. But for now, that’s really all it is: a very public, blockchain-based statement of intent.

Actual SegWit activation should start next week, if miners stick to their stated intent.

The post BIP 91 Has Locked In. Here’s What That Means (and What It Does Not) appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

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