if you like my #moneyandtech live tweeting tonight, send bitcoins to 1BscW134SZhPBboEq1U6D3PRSckL9JDJad
Jered Kenna:welcome to the launch of moneyandtech.com - I get to work in the basement with @jeredkenna and @tylorbohlman
nym:I ran the first US bitcoin exchange, but theres a lot of regulation it got shut down.
there's a big gap between techy forums and mainstream media, so we're in it
I started out with bitcoin in 2009 - I got sent 10,000 bitcoins, which I sent to someone else who deleted them
Paige Freeman:we were the first outlet to accept bitcoins in our cupcake shop, because we had an iPad in the shop
we're launching GogoCoin in the bakery - it's a pre-paid bitcoin card like a startbucks card
Jered Kenna:I'm VP of sales for BitPay, headquartered in Atlanta, but out here to get companies to accept bitcoin
Chris Larsen:Chris Larsen is trying to kill Bitcoin, but we still love him
Jered Kenna:Ripple is using the same technology that made bitcoin possible, but to build an internet for value exchange
we think we're entering the age of the internet for value exchange, not just for file exchange
Paige Freeman:bitcoin has been relatively stable recently. Will this last?
nym:Bitcoin's going to go up and down, but when people ask if they should invest I say yes
Chris Larsen:There aren't enough onramps into the bitcoin currently - it's a highway for money that we need to get on
I encourage you t sell things for bitcoin as that is an easy way to get in compared to buying them
Jered Kenna:there is a ton of pent-up demand in this whole space - Wall Street is gearing up for it
it's still too hard to get funds into these protocols because of the reputational risk for big players
Chris Larsen:now you have got major companies and banks interested, what's going to be the next big shift?
nym:as these get accepted and the reputational risk goes down, it'll bridge into SWIFT and VISA and so on
a lot fo big players are making PR announcements - we need fundamental bridging
Paige Freeman:videogames and videogame credits have been a bridge into this - buying Steam credits at 7/11
Banks are the most conservative investors of all. I expect a bank within a year
nym:once more merchants accept bitcoin, that will drive the banks into it too
I think airlines and travel are a natural fit for Bitcoin because of the currency exchange savings
Paige Freeman:of course I'm going to say pre-paid cards, but it is the last mile. I still invest in litecoin and ripple
suddenly you don't need armoured cars to move money. I think a tipping point is inevitable
Chris Larsen:we need to help people to buy bitcoin. That is the next big thing.
Jered Kenna:more front-end ways of getting money into the system, like coinbase are needed.
Security is going to be a service too - as funds look into the space they want that
nym:when we started there was no regulation - now people are talking about it. What does that imply?
Paige Freeman:ben Bernanke writing a memo in favour of it was a big move. So far it has been encouraging
Chris Larsen:Our CEO testified before Congress, so far it has been positive.
Jered Kenna:we testified to the Senate and banking - explaining that it isn't anonymous helps
there is goign to be more fraud, and then more regulation. If a bank steps in regulation will respond
Chris Larsen:I like all the things that you can do with bitcoin that don't involve money - sending message etc
nym:there is a lot being worked on that is super-exciting - building outside the blockchain may make more sense
we're working on contracts and a scripting language within Ripple to use non-monetary tasks and utilities
Paige Freeman:there is an opportunity for distribution of information in different ways - notarizing documents for example
you can get rid of that third-party trust and do more dynamic things with money and value
I'd like to talk to anyone in the banking industry who is serious
regulators are viewing bitcoin as a hybrid between gold and currency. how ill that change?
as long as you aren;t working towards money laundering, regulators will be happy
Chris Larsen:as we're not holding onto bitcoin, but just passing ti though, we don't have so much regulation
q:regulation is not logical - it depends who grabs it first, whether the fed or the SEC
Jered Kenna:the biggest concern is how people can keep bitcoins safely - maybe coinbase, maybe an offline wallet?
Paige Freeman:everybody says you should start with a new linux laptop that never touches the net. Too hard.
There's a company called paperwallet that is a black box that prints out a key pair that never touched the internet.
if you lose that printout you're screwed, so keep copies. as time goes by it gets scarier
Jered Kenna:I tell everybody to use blockchain.info, even if you use coinbase move it there. [keyloggers?]
q:if you're going to go online use blockchain.info, but you're better off doing it offline
nym:I'm fascinated by the altcoins - these are interesting. Beercoin went up 4000% in the last 2 days
arbitrage is getting noticeable - there are big opportunities between the different altcoins
Chris Larsen:are these bringing something different from bitcoin - do they have merchants or are they a clone?
ripple and litecoin have good shots because they are doing different things from bitcoin
q:I think we're going to see an explosion of these currencies - as long as they get a following they can work
Paige Freeman:multisignature transactions got added in 2013 - Bitgo can hold one key, you have two so you are safer
I looked at the Bitpay website and saw benefits for them and miners and speculators. What do purchasers get?
in addition to the benefits for the person - what is the benefit for holding them?
Chris Larsen:one thing is that companies that accept bitcoins will offer discounts for bitcoin, as there is for cash
q:as bitcoin gets seamlessly integrated, vendors won't know that they are receiving it
Jered Kenna:over time. more bitcoin will go out of circulation - how will you handle that?
nym:there are rooms full of dollar bills that aren't in circulation too. I don't see big dumping
anything that spooks people cna take a lot more of a hit than one guy cashing out
q:you can predict that most won't be cashed out - with a large system you can predict that [hah ask Taleb]
nym:where does bitcoin replace where money fails?
Jered Kenna:minimum purchase 5 dollars is one place; capital controls is another - both happen organically
nym:anything that requires settlement or remittance - why does that take 3 days?
sending money to Honduras should not cost 25%
Paige Freeman:once people realise there is a system that is cheaper it'll do to money what Craiglist did to Newspapers
just because credit cards came out in 1950s, we don't have to use them forever