darkewaffle
Diamond Member
- Oct 7, 2005
- 8,152
- 1
- 81
I get the impression that you are just making stuff up as you post. Have you actually bought anything from a merchant that deals in bitcoins?
Do you have any idea how much merchants pay in credit card fees, paypal fees, charge-backs, and everything else that bitcoin fixes? Accepting bitcoins saves them 3-6% directly, and additional money on top of that from not having to deal with charge-backs.
>Merchants want a currency that's stable, not hyperinflating.
Wrong, they couldn't possibly care less. Every major bitcoin merchant I have seen has automated algorithms that pull the current USD value of bitcoin and adjust prices automatically in real time. Value fluctuation of BTC is meaningless for them, as they don't even have to think about it. As for their customers, they just see the prices get lower and lower every day, which is not exactly a bad problem to have.
As a customer I just love the option to just buy something and pay with bitcoins, instead of trusting every random website with credit card info, or worse still giving a cut of the profit to paypal. No registering needed, no credit card info or verification codes. Just enter my name and address and make a payment using bitcoin, simple as can be.
https://www.bitcoinstore.com/ <- it's the real deal.
Of course I haven't.
I'm not saying their net business will decrease or that they'll lose money because they accept bitcoins. I'm saying that relative to their amount of bitcoin transactions a month ago, their bitcoin transactions now have probably decreased. Fluctuations this wild are bad for business because it discourages spending because people are constantly questioning the true value of what they're getting vs what they're giving. Do you really want to spend a bitcoin on X when tomorrow a bitcoin might be worth 3 Xes? Or should you buy now because a week from now a bitcoin might only be worth .25 X?
Of course a merchant wants a stable currency. Do you really think post WW2 Germany was a good time to be selling stuff? And why do you think USD is accepted almost worldwide? Well for one it's ubiquitous, but just as importantly it's because it's perceived value tends to shift very moderately and very slowly. Further, when Zimbabwe's currency value collapsed a few years ago, why did the USD become the de-facto measure of value? Stability and ubiquity. Lack of wild fluctuations (over the long term at least, everything spikes and plummets occasionally) is practically a tenant of a successful currency.