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Good bitcoin purchases:

  $22 soandso@gmail.com
  [30 minutes later]
  $50 someone@real-company.com
  [30 minutes later]
  $15 person@real-company.com
  etc.
Bad bitcoin purchases:

  $1.00 asdfklasdklfm1@yahoo.com [1 second later]
  $1.00 asdfklasdklfm2@yahoo.com [1 second later]
  $1.00 asdfklasdklfm3@yahoo.com [1 second later]
  $1.00 asdfklasdklfm4@yahoo.com [1 second later]
  $1.00 asdfklasdklfm5@yahoo.com [1 second later]
  etc.
(queue removal of bitcoin)


Have you considered allowing them if you have a valid credit card on file. For example, I'm currently a Humble Monthly subscriber which already gives me a one click purchase options through the credit card on file.

Vultr, a VPS Host, accepts Bitcoins but started to require a valid credit card or Paypal purchase before accepting Bitcoins to prevent ToS violators who used Bitcoin.


But would that not defeat the purpose of Bitcoin (don't need to interact with the massive financial institutions, anonymity, etc.)?


It's not necessarily the case that someone would want to use Bitcoin for anonymity, it might just be a more convenient payment method or something else. Doesn't hurt to give people more places to spend their Bitcoin even if the circumstances are less than ideal.


In what way can Bitcoin be considered a meaningful alternative (however you define it) if you also have to input a valid credit card number (that, presumably, the merchant will run the traditional $1 verification charge on)?

The reality is that Bitcoin is less convenient than using a regular credit card (because, realistically, you're not going to be mining Bitcoin but rather you'll be buying Bitcoin using your regular credit card/bank account). I would argue that Bitcoin is also worse in every way (no chargebacks, wild fluctuations in the valuation of a unit of Bitcoin, etc.) if you also don't care about anonymity and the product you're buying is fully legal.


CC serves as verification. Bitcoin has less fees.

So it's like "providing an ID", and then paying. Even if bitcoin is not "anonymous" (pseudonymous), there's still the decentralised+cheap nature of it that's worthwhile.


Fees argument doesn't really hold water because authorizations costs money too, even if subsequently voided.


Sad to see it go - I've used it to pay for humble bundles a couple of times.


Yeh they lost a customer there, anyways can buy from Steam now direct with bitcoin most of time there are great offers there too.

edit: oh look downvoted for speaking my mind, go HN groupjerk


Ok, I think I understand - that you mean some more general money laundering of bitcoin? where source of the money need not be known, because behavior shows that it just has to be money laundering. Tx!


How exactly does the laundering happen in this scheme? Isn't the money just being sent to Humble, never to return to the person who sent it?


The keys get sold on sketchy scam websites like G2A


shouldn't/couldn't the publisher who own the key then just deactivate the key if the source of the money is found to be a laundered source?


I imagine they'd rather avoid the whole mess entirely


Sender gets game keys from Humble and resells the keys for profit.


The flow of money doesn't terminate at Humble.


Wouldn't Humble need to be in on the laundering then? Or are the launderers able to be in cahoots with the publisher of games?




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