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666 points jcartw | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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SwiftyBug ◴[] No.43620583[source]
I've been living in Brazil for the last 20 years.

Pix revolutionised the way we transact in Brazil. I've used Pix to pay for things that cost only cents, and I have a friend who bought her house using Pix. The system just works for any transfer amount. And it's so easy to use.

Its speed is truly baffling, and so is its reliability. Never have I failed to make a Pix payment because of downtime. I never cease to be amazed by how fast money arrives in my Brazilian account when I make a withdrawal directly from my EUR wallet on Wise. I receive a push notification from my Brazilian bank before Wise finishes running the animation of confirmation of withdrawal. It's like magic.

And it's so widespread that nowadays I don't even question whether someone accepts Pix. When I get in a taxi, no matter how old the driver is, it's certain that they take (and prefer) Pix.

I've even had homeless people ask me for Pix instead of change on multiple occasions.

Cryptocurrencies don't stand a chance.

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DeathArrow ◴[] No.43620824[source]
>Cryptocurrencies don't stand a chance.

They protect against tracking and provide anonimity. That might be valuable.

replies(4): >>43620842 #>>43620875 #>>43620965 #>>43621272 #
werdnapk ◴[] No.43621272[source]
A major point of crypto is based on tracking as the ledger (blockchain) is completely public.
replies(1): >>43622052 #
1. DeathArrow ◴[] No.43622052{3}[source]
The identity of the user is secret. Others will just see a public key.
replies(1): >>43623141 #
2. kgen ◴[] No.43623141[source]
Only in theory right? The moment you use it with a service that requires credentials or an email or a physical address to mail to, it's not, unless you somehow wash it through an anonymous pool somehow