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by rvz 1066 days ago
> Moneygram originated with cash or money order in, cash or money order out. No bank account needed.

Even better, meaning that the smart decision was to add another rails (crypto) which after choosing something like Stellar and trailing it, they found it was useful for them and their customers, to continue using it. Otherwise it would have been scrapped years ago.

> That’s what’s happening here. They are looking for a use. That should be encouraged. Looking for something doesn’t mean it is found.

Indeed, it is a pilot which means more interest in the use-case which was found AFTER Moneygram trialled it and are using it right now today.

The same is said about the other companies I mentioned. Far from the first broad claim of it all being 'useless' which we all know that is blatantly false.

1 comments

> they found it was useful for them and their customers, to continue using it. Otherwise it would have been scrapped years ago

You’re not seeing how something performative can be both profitable and useless?

Maybe it's semantic. I'm not saying crypto is useless as a moral judgement. The bumblebee keychain on my backpack is functionally useless. But I like it, so it's worth something to me. But it has never carried a key, it never well, and its artistic value is objectively passable as best. It's useless but with worth.

If we say MoneyGram's crypto integrations are useful as marketing, I'll agree. But again, as someone familiar with that particular example more than most, if those customers would have given business for money stained with mayo, MoneyGram would be slathering it on.

> You’re not seeing how something performative can be both profitable and useless?

Moneygram and their customers with other organizations using the Stellar network is not performative. It exists and works today, right now and it was that 'something' that was used, tried and tested first before making a decision and it turns out that the use-case was valid for them (and many others).

Henceforth, it is not 'useless' going by the OP's original broad claim.

> Maybe it's semantic. I'm not saying crypto is useless as a moral judgement. The bumblebee keychain on my backpack is functionally useless...

Again, the main use of the Stellar network was serious enough for MoneyGram which out of the thousands of other alternatives used to get on another rails (crypto) for their worldwide customers after assessing that use-case.

But you've only made it clear that to you it is "useless" and no user or business would even bother to use it, if it was found to be as such in the first place.