Both of these are the price of the Merchant taking control of the subscription in cryptoville.No, there's absolutely no need whatsoever for a buyer to need a Coinbase account. There's also no need to pay whatever fees Coinbase is charging.
I suspect someone will offer a way to automate this without a 3rd party software soon enough; but even when they do, it is too passive for the rebillers around here.you can send reminders saying "to keep your subscription active, please send X bitcoin to ABC address". And if they don't, when they login next, they just get a screen saying their account is inactive, send funds to ABC address, and their account will be activated again immediately.
Hey, maybe you should create and launch that passive-rebill software as your own product; you'd be perfect for it.Instant payments, no fees, excess funds can be automatically flushed to your Coinbase account, offline wallet, or wherever, heavily secure, etc. Would be happy to help get you setup (for a fee, of course).
No, that isn't the question at all. Take a look at the blockchain sometime; many millions of dollars in btc are spent each day at places other than exchanges.But the real question is why would the average btc user spend it on your site in the first place ?
Yes in the sense that we're betting on the network to become mainstream, no in the sense that we spend all our time on the exchanges buying and selling coins to make a profit... That's actually a very small part of the community, not in the heart of it at all.The average btc user is a speculator. I would go so far as to say every btc user is a speculator.
Of course. The two big/famous ones right now are at bitpay and coinbase. Both have fees, but are 1/10th or less what a credit card company would charge.I'm hoping to add cryptocoin payments on one of my websites as an option.
Is there a widget I can embed on a sales page that features something like:
"One year service: $750 or [0.75 BTC] <<click here to pay with BTC>>"
Where the widget displays the current equivalent value for the coin and clicking to pay will allow them to send payment to my wallet.
"One year service: $750 or [0.75 BTC] <<click here to pay with BTC>>"
No, there's absolutely no need whatsoever for a buyer to need a Coinbase account. There's also no need to pay whatever fees Coinbase is charging. Subscriptions are also no problem as well. Obviously, there's no way to automate subscriptions
&&No, and it will lower your conversions.
If you let accounts expire and don't rebill them automatically, you will lose sales. Doesn't make sense.
But the real question is why would the average btc user spend it on your site in the first place ?
The average btc user is a speculator. I would go so far as to say every btc user is a speculator.
Awesome erect, I had already chosen coinbase for my upcoming project too.
As for the buyer-needs-a-coinbase-wallet requirement; I don't really know. We're in uncharted territory and since this is likely the first bitcoin subscription service, ever, people will probably embrace it publicly but be more weary with their actual coins in private.
By the way, if you see some fo the protocol extensions that are being added, contract support is coming, and a bunch of other amazing features. It's amazing what it one will be able to do within the currency itself.
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Contracts
You can trust them bro; unlike your sad host.![]()
Hey, maybe you should create and launch that passive-rebill software as your own product; you'd be perfect for it.
1: the rebill was static in BTC, not USD. This is bad because it gives the buyer the option of keeping the subscription at a cheaper price (btc fluctuation) or cancelling and resubscribing if it's more expensive. The seller is not afforded the same option since doing that will cancel the subscription, booting the customer until (if) they resubscribe.