| > Apparently, I must be dreaming this entire list. I'll say this again: "In reality there are vanishingly few goods or services that can be exchanged for crypto." > Provided was a rather substantial, yet not exhaustive, list of merchants So. What started with "money in oppressive regimes" became: here's a list of companies in first-world countries many which at one point played with crypto, but now: - don't accept crypto anymore due to its volatility or for other reasons (many links no longer work or don't list crypto as payment: Wikipedia, Microsoft etc.) - actually accept payments in fiat provided by an external exchange because the need actual fiat (AT&T, everyone else who uses BitPay) - don't accept crypto because it was a limited time marketing gimmick (KFC in Canada, and this is written directly in the list) - don't exist as a company anymore if they existed at all (do not search, or open, Lumfile the cloud-based service at work) This leaves us with, again, "vanishingly few goods or services that can be exchanged for crypto" because reality doesn't care for your dreams. > QED. QED indeed |