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Tag: digital currency

  • New Zealand May Launch Its Own Digital Currency

    New Zealand May Launch Its Own Digital Currency

    New Zealand is exploring the possibility of launching its own digital currency, the latest indication of how much such currencies are transforming the market.

    The rise of cryptocurrencies has sparked a major shift in the finance market. Many governments are still struggling to come to terms with — and adapt to — a currency that is designed to be decentralized and anonymous.

    El Salvador has chosen to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, while other countries are exploring stablecoins, digital currencies that are linked to a country’s legal tender.

    According to Bloomberg, New Zealand is investigating the possibility of releasing its own digital currency, in an effort to keep current with modern trends.

    “Trends in cash use and innovation in money present an opportunity for the Reserve Bank to consider broadening central bank money to include a widely available digital form,” the RBNZ said Thursday. “The declining use, acceptance and availability of cash in New Zealand, and emerging innovations in private money, namely stablecoins, make this an opportune time to consider a central bank digital currency (CBDC).”

    The RBNZ highlighted some of the challenges involved in creating a successful digital currency.

    “As with other forms of digital money, a CBDC must be operationally resilient to outages and cyber security risks, maintain data privacy, and it would need to comply with all relevant regulation. Similarly, while a CBDC has the potential to act as a catalyst for innovation and competition in the wider money and payment ecosystem, we will have to consider the potential for it to crowd out innovation.”

  • Bitcoin Value Continues to Puzzle Economists

    Bitcoin Value Continues to Puzzle Economists

    2013 will be a year remembered for many important reasons, with perhaps the most interesting being the rise of the digital currency, the bitcoin.

    Bitcoins have been in existence for 4 years now, and over those four years the value of a bitcoin has fluctuated drastically. These intense changes in value make many people wonder what gives a bitcoin value and if they’re worth the investment. Several economists shed some light on the issue.

    Nobel Prize winning economist and author of several bestselling books Paul Krugman warns consumers and businesses about the dangers of bitcoins, saying that he is “deeply unconvinced” that the whole bitcoin phenomenon will really work:

    “So far almost all of the Bitcoin discussion has been positive economics — can this actually work? And I have to say that I’m still deeply unconvinced. To be successful, money must be both a medium of exchange and a reasonably stable store of value. And it remains completely unclear why BitCoin should be a stable store of value.”

    In order to explain why the value of bitcoins are disputed, Krugman points us toward Brad DeLong, who ponders the question himself. DeLong points out that the intrinsic value of gold being used to make pretty things gives it its market value, while the value of the dollar comes from its ability to pay taxes and create transactions here in the US.

    Considering bitcoins are a form of digital currency with no intrinsic value, then what gives them a stable, market value?

    The answer to that question comes from Business Insider’s Joe Weisenthal, who sees bitcoins as a hybrid of 3 factors: currency, equity, and social network.

    Bitcoins are obviously a form of currency due to their ability to complete transactions. While bitcoins were used almost entirely to complete online transactions at their inception, the acceptance of bitcoins as a form of currency in the physical marketplace has drastically increased over the past 4 years. Currently, there are 2,252 locations across the world that accept bitcoins as a form of currency, adding legitimacy to the argument that bitcoins are indeed a form of currency.

    Bitcoins are also a form of equity in the fact that the more people who invest in bitcoins and use them as a form of currency, the more the bitcoins are worth. Thus, bitcoins act much like individual stock shares – the more people who invest in a company’s particular stock, the higher stock prices climb due to the increased perception of said company’s value.

    However, bitcoins only act as equity as far as its social network exists and continues to grow. This is perhaps the biggest concern to consumers when pondering whether or not to make an investment in bitcoins.

    As previously stated, bitcoins have no intrinsic value; they are simply 0’s and 1’s transmitted through the internet. The value of a bitcoin is derived from its use; i.e. bitcoins gain more value as more people use them, much like how Facebook gains value as more people use its service.

    But that is where the problem lies. Recent research has shown that Facebook users are declining, especially in the younger generation. If Facebook users continue to decline, it could wind-up facing the same fate that befell MySpace.

    Or, as Joe Weisenthal put it, “Without the network effects, the technology is nothing. It’s just a theoretical amusement.”

    So, in the end, the value of a bitcoin will be ever-fluctuating as its numbers of users and businesses which accept payment continue to fluctuate. While one bitcoin is worth $750.99 today, its value could easily increase or decrease ten-fold overnight.

    If you’re still questioning whether or not you should invest in bitcoins, ask yourself this: Do you have surplus cash that you don’t know what to do with? If that answer is yes, invest in some bitcoins, ride the bubble, and hope the gamble pays off (and if it does, send some of those excess bitcoins this way).

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • You Can Now Gift Amazon Coins To Your Kindle-Owning Friends And Family

    Earlier this year, Amazon got into the digital currency game with Amazon Coins. In essence, Kindle users can use Coins to buy games, apps and in-app purchases on mostly everything in the Amazon Appstore. Now those same Kindle users can gift Amazon Coins to other Kindle users.

    Amazon announced today that it’s now letting users gift Amazon Coins to others just in time for the holidays. It’s being billed as an easy, yet effective, gift for those in among your family and friends that own a Kindle or use the Amazon Appstore on their Android device.

    So, how does this all work? You simply buy Amazon Coins as you normally would, but choose to gift them at the store page. From there, you put in the email address of the person receiving the coins and Amazon takes care of the rest.

    “Customers love using Amazon Coins in the Amazon Appstore and on Kindle Fire to purchase apps and games,” said Mike George, Vice President of Apps and Games at Amazon. “We know that during the holidays finding that perfect gift can be hard. So, we’re making it easy for you to give the game-playing kids or app-savvy friends and family in your life just what they want – great apps and games to use on their phones and tablets. And remember, if you are a Kindle Fire owner, we automatically deposited 500 Coins in your account. So, if you haven’t used them yet, happy shopping.”

    It goes without saying, but the practice of gifting Amazon Coins won’t be restricted to just the holidays. You will get 20 percent off your Coins purchase, however, if you buy them before January 5. You can start giving Amazon Coins here.

    [Image: Amazon]

  • PayPal Aims to Save You From Being Eaten Alive by the Living Dead

    PayPal Aims to Save You From Being Eaten Alive by the Living Dead

    In light of our other recent zombie coverage and Bruce Campbell on Twitter news, it seems appropriate to bring up a new PayPal commercial community-made video that was unveiled today at a company event, which shows how you may be able to survive a zombie apocalypse if you’re a PayPal user.

    Hat tip to All Things D’s Tricia Duryee for sharing:

    Update: This was originally reported to be a PayPal commercial, but a spokesperson for the company tells WebProNews it’s not actually one of their commercials, but was created by the PayPal community. Don’t expect to see it on TV (unfortunately).

    It’s also worth noting how horror scenarios are being used in advertising these days. A couple weeks ago, we first saw a Woolite ad directed by Rob Zombie.

    I still love this classic Freddy Krueger Fonzies commercial though:

    Some stats subtly dropped at the end of the PayPal video:

    • 100 million active users
    • More than $3,500 per second
    • $7.5 billion yearly via mobile by the end of 2013

    By 2015, we’re all going to live our lives digitally, according to PayPal President Scott Thompson. That means without wallets:

    PayPal also updated its iPhone app this week. With this, all app features are displayed on one page, transaction history details are “just a tap away,” and filtering of transaction history has been improved.