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I spent last weekend learning all about Bitcoin and am excited to use them to purchase some web-based services. But alas I'm stumbling on the most fundamental part: how do I buy them?
I paid cash for a pre-paid VISA this morning, bound that card to a PayPal account, and was psych'd to start buying coins, but was bummed to discover that:
(1) PayPal wants to charge me a $14 fee to transfer $500 to a seller (rip off!)
(2) No seller wants to use PayPal because the buyer has the ability to nix the payment retroactively using a "charge back" (strange that they'd allow people to do this, but ok)
(3) This forum indicates that #1 and #2 are moot anyway because PayPal's terms of service don't allow for BTC purchases.
Yeah, I blew it. But what are my alternatives? I could use a bank account via an online exchange but that requires a lot of legal documentation and philosophically flies in the face of the whole "anonymity" feature of Bitcoin.
A lot of people are doing face to face transactions via a localized transaction match-making service. Is this really the way to go? Seems like that would make sense if you were transacting $50-$100 but what if you wanted to do $5k-$10k? I'm not Walter White. I don't have fat stacks of cash laying around. :)
What other alternatives do I have to purchase bitcoins?
3So, you want to buy bitcoins, and you know there are sites that offer this service (eg. Coinbase), but you don't want to use those sites based on some philosophical objection. Have I captured your question accurately? – Greg Hewgill – 2014-04-28T23:20:41.707
Doesn't it seem odd to you that buying a digital currency, a currency whose advocates promote based upon it's transaction anonymity, would require one to provide SS#s, routing numbers, etc.? Because that's what many of these sites are asking for. – Chad Decker – 2014-04-28T23:51:00.483
Well the KYC (Know Your Customer) requirements are for dealing with the fiat currency side of the transaction. There are no such requirements for the cryptocurrency side. So, it is possible for example to mine Bitcoin (or other cryptocurrency) with no identification needed. Mining these days is pretty low-efficiency so if you want a lot of bitcoin quickly, you have to buy it with fiat money somehow. – Greg Hewgill – 2014-04-28T23:53:07.890
Edited your comment to leave in the constructive part. – Murch – 2014-04-29T21:44:41.890