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NETbilling and Bitcoin / biz thread
Hi All,
We are interested in a possible Bitcoin implementation into our gateway. NETbilling would like to know how you would like to see it implemented (quick payment confirmation vs. standard 6 block chains, receiving Bitcoin or cash out in dollars, etc) as well as any other ideas that you may have. All feedback is welcome. Thanks, Mitch Farber |
I would not want it.
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If a company reputable like yours can cash out in USD you guys will have a winner on your hands right out of the gate. I want to cash out 220 BTC trying to figure out best way to do this right now without getting screwed......
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Can you implement dogecoins instead?
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Hope this helps, Mitch -- this is how I'd want it.
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I'm a netbilling customer.
I want to receive payment in bitcoins. I want pre-generated unique bitcoin addresses (and the corresponding private key) that customers send payment to. I do not want any bitcoin addresses stored on any server anywhere at any time. |
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Good for you Mitch for getting in on this, just beware of the pitfalls :2 cents:
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Great news Mitch. This would be awesome :thumbsup
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NETbilling are employing Franck as Vice President of BTC.
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Fuck bitcoims
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very interesting
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-- Dean |
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I'm surprised not keeping the bitcoins on a server is not a priority for you. That's a deal-breaker for me. |
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I like it. Good move Netbilling.
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I meant to say: I do not want any bitcoin stored on any server anywhere at any time. |
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As far as no bit coins being stored on any remote server, that's probably an unnecessary restriction (as well as one that comes with additional technical hurdles). When dealing with sketchy third parties, sure. This is NETbilling we're talking about -- if you trust them with your regular billing, you'd be trusting them with your crypto-billing. |
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Nevertheless, youare right, I trust Netbilling. I've worked with Ben and Eddie many times over the years. Ben has been there a very long time and worthy of my trust. |
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What you're talking about applies to sites like those, and to "online wallets," which are universally a bad idea. When it comes to a company as trustworthy as Mitch's crew, I see no reason to doubt that our coins would be well watched-after. The most optimal solution in this regard is to do what the mining pools do: charge a small per-transaction fee for auto-withdrawls at certain thresholds. I have automatic withdrawals on all of my mining pools. They send the coins directly to my wallets without me having to do anything other than watch the balance rise. I think it's important to look at the spirit of why people say things as well as what they're saying. A blanket "do not leave your coins online" statement is like "never open an attachment from someone you don't know": good advice for most, but it's situation-specific. |
We appreciate all of the feedback and suggestions. Keep them coming.
Mitch |
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It was my pleasure to help. I had the merchant handle it. I did reply to you as well but you just have not received it. Have a great night, Mitch |
I don't get it. Good luck with the FED audits.
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Please use a real-world source when converting between USD and BTC. An exchange or mix of exchanges (averaged) where it is possible to buy or sell at that price. mtgox, which many use as a benchmark, is not the real world.
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I'm a netbilling customer and I'd love to accept bitcoin through netbilling and I don't really have a preference on the details since I think it would be a very small percentage of transactions, so I would consider it experimental anyway.
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eh, not something I'll use. It's only a matter of time before the feds screw the whole system and make examples out of a few Americans.
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Mitch...Nice Play man and I agree with edgeprod here this could be a winner for ya....Id use it.
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I think it could be a great opportunity to increase sales and at the same time serve as a risk since no real presedence have been established as of yet. If I was utilizing such a service I would want to ensure that my cc gateway and bitcoin gateway is 2 different entities and there is absolutely no comingling of funds, at least if it's a US entity. if it's EU or offshore I would be a bit more relaxed about it. with most other payment methods, there is always a trail leading back to a point where someone have performed a know your customer check if it's required by law. not sure if that is the same for bitcoin which could put the processor at risk.. that's just ny 2 cents, I don't know a lot about bitcoin so I'm not really the most qualified person to speak about the subject |
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Good luck with that and please let me know how it's coming along... |
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Mitch I'm curious what kind of rates you would be offering for Bitcoins? Personally I don't think I'd want to pay any more than 1% as that is what I can process with the mainstream wallets and have the added benefit of them converting my Bitcoin to USD everyday if I choose. I know the other adult industry processors are from 10-15% of each transaction in USD so would you be able to compete with the 1% fee of the other options?
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Most or all the adult sites use bitpay.com , not because they are unable to develop a bitcoin payment page (it is not complicated, needs to host bitcoind etc.), but because keeping separate entity and bank for bitcoin and fiat money. As someone noted, I would be afraid to keep same bank and name for bitcoin and visa/mc, since banks are so easy to freeze funds, kick out whoever is known to have transacted bitcoins for whatever legal reason. |
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Hi,
We are in the early stages of looking at all possibilities. Obviously we will not get in to anything risky. Mitch |
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I'd be interested in seeing you implement it.
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http://www.forbes.com/sites/kashmirh...bank-accounts/ Regarding non-exchangers, personal accounts, I know from some banking people that bitcoin transactions had to be "flagged" or reported, not remember the term it was used, this was for USA sometime in 2013. These practices, different for each bank, may change and standardise with the time. Also note the fact you can't chargeback on bitcoin it can give also issues in ecommerce for refund i.e. user buy your service with bitcoin then asks refund in fiat cash, uses you as a money exchanger letting you money launder for him: http://pando.com/2014/01/10/the-chal...ccept-bitcoin/ |
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If you choose to provide a refund, why would you give it in fiat currency? PayPal refunds get credited back to PayPal. This point doesn't make a ton of sense. Current U.S. law is that Bitcoin IS money. The courts and the recent memorandum say that if you mine it (income) or invest in it (capital gains), just pay your taxes. It was pretty clear, at least for the foreseeable future. Not attacking you specifically, but there are a bunch of people in this thread who apparently don't keep up with court decisions and regulatory advisories. They're shitting on a forward-thinking tool for adult that'd help a lot of people. Honestly, this is why people don't get excited about innovating for the half-wits in adult. |
Incidentally, here's FinCEN's new advisory:
http://www.coindesk.com/fincen-bitco...-transmitters/ Awesome news for those of us with large mining investments and crypto holdings. |
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