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by homogeneous 3654 days ago
I suppose it depends on the product, the merchant, and the cost of the subscription. Certainly, it'd be foolish to give out a credit card to a merchant I do not entirely trust, however, it seems more risky to move cryptocurrency into a contract with a merchant I do not entirely trust (and a contract I probably don't fully understand, even if I take the time to read the code) since a credit card can protect me from fraudulent and erroneous charges that are forfeited if I opt for cryptocurrency.
1 comments

This might sound funny in light of recent events, but the idea is that a smart contract requires no trust in a 3rd party as the rules are specified within the contract and the Ethereum platform guarantees proper execution of the contract.
I understand how it works, I just don't see how it is useful in this instance. How is a smart contract helpful in the case of an online subscription service like netflix? A credit card is less work because I don't have to "refill" the contract every month and it's safer because of the added protection from fraud and erroneous charges that a credit card company guarantees.