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Foreign Bitcoin Friday Freaks. It's your host Odell here for another Citadel Dispatch. The Interactive. Oh it's not an interactive live show anymore. The show focused on actual bitcoin and freedom tech discussion. It's kind of interactive. I love your comments freaks when you leave comments on Fountain and your favorite Nostr app. I really like Primal so keep the feedback coming. But I've really been enjoying this stretch of audio only non live shows. I'll tell you freaks, once you are used to dealing with massively large video files and you can just focus just on audio and have a much smaller file, it is so much better to work with. And I think the conversations have been very high signal so I hope you have been appreciating them. As always, Dispatch has no ads or sponsors. Our incentives are aligned. We're living the value for value dream. I'm here for you guys. You guys are here for me. I'm not going to give you shows just because my sponsors need shows to happen four times a week. We'll only do shows when it's interesting and when there's actually something valuable to talk about. And I think we have a really great topic this week. But anyway, before we get started, huge shout out to all the freaks who continue to support the show using their hard earned bitcoin. Our largest app last week was mav21 with 50,000 sats. He said banker title. Thank you mav21. I appreciate you appreciating the title because I got a lot of pride calling and stealing Satoshi Satoshis. I think it's one of my best titles. Humbly Freaks. I'm not on YouTube anymore. Fuck YouTube. Trying to live the dream. Obviously the lead of my Twitter noster only. So share with your friends and family. It really does help still dispatch.com all the relevant links. Okay Freaks, I got a great show up. I have to tell you when it is. Right now it is Friday, January 23rd at 1700 UTC. The block height is 933542 sats per dollar is 1112 sats per dollar and the current price is $89,928 per bitcoin. This will be released in the next couple of hours because I do not like sitting on shows. Okay Freaks, we have my new friend Carol here from South Africa that I had the pleasure of meeting a few weeks ago. How's it going Carol?
A
Fantastic. Thanks for letting me on the show.
B
Carol is the founder of Moneybadger and he is focused on bringing bitcoin adoption to South Africa. I think it's fascinating. Your perspective is fascinating. I think what you built out there is incredibly impressive, particularly coming from the American mindset where we're not seeing much day to day usage of bitcoin as money. What is money Badger?
A
Money badger is a mission. The mission is to make bitcoin money. In other words, medium of exchange would be what's important for us. Yeah. So I think something that you mentioned is that coming from the U.S. maybe it's. We get, actually get a lot of critique for what we're doing. But in South Africa there's, there's some real needs that we're trying to address with bitcoin as something that moves, that's something that's not just static and sitting in a wallet.
B
I love it. But specifically, specifically Money badgers focused on the merchant side. Correct.
A
Moneybadger is a merchant services provider. So it's a company, commercial entity, central centralized service provider that serves the merchant. So it offers bitcoin and lightning payments acceptance for merchants as well as some other things like they need help with treasury management and sending funds to suppliers, remittances.
B
D Do you see? Well, so at high level, Money badger lets me, I can basically go as a user, I can go to a grocery store and just pay with bitcoin. Yeah, look, now the grocery store. Yeah, go on you go.
A
No, I level. That's the goal. The idea is that we want you to be able to live your life on a bitcoin standard in South Africa today. That's it. You need to be able to walk into any shop and spend bitcoin. You should be able to cover the basics as well as any other expenses that you want to incur like travel, electronics, whatever. The idea is that essentially we want to make South Africa like a bitcoin mecca. That's what we're trying to do. And we've come a long way.
B
So how many merchants do you have enabled right now?
A
So I know there's. If you, if you distinguish between a merchant and a shop. So one merchant may have many physical shops. There's at least 650,000 665000 physical locations that you can go to. And these range from very small to very large. So like two of the major filling station chains will accept bitcoin, some of them biggest grocery retailers, and then from there everything in between,
B
50,000 shops. And so filling stations is a gas station, right?
A
A gas station, yeah, exactly.
B
Translating for the American. Yeah.
A
One thing to point out is that the majority of these don't even know that they're accepting Bitcoin. So what we've done is we've basically retrofitted their existing payments solutions that they already have with their existing payment providers, and we integrated lightning into these payment providers as a feature.
B
You met them, you met them where they're at. So how does that. Well, first of all, you should be incredibly proud of 650,000 locations. That is, this is like our wildest dreams in America. I, I would, I would kill. I would kill for that type of outcome here. So you should be very proud of that. That is an amazing level of traction. And I do think the key. You met the merchants where they're at, so how does that work is the merchant. So one of your big ones is pick and pay, right? Which is like a general. It's like a general store, right? It's like almost like a. Was it like a supermarket plus other things.
A
Yeah. Look, I think that we do feel proud about what we've achieved so far. Still a long way to go, but we've also just gotten very lucky. So essentially what's. What's played in our favor is that in South Africa, there was already a number of payment providers that's QR enabled, QR code.
B
Right.
A
And they already had massive distribution. So, so we, we basically came into an environment where there was already a way for us to connect to a vast set of merchants without having to sign each one up individually. So the majority of the work, you're
B
not actually going in. You're not going into Pick and Pay. Like, you don't have a. Do you have a relationship with Pick and Pay, or is it almost like they don't even know that you're using their QR code?
A
Pick and pay? No. So Pick and Pay is a special case. They, they're our first lucky break. They approached us initially and said we have a mandate to add Bitcoin to our payments experience, which in and of itself I think is incredible. That the retailer from, from their side came to us. We didn't have to go to them and sell it. They already had executives that understood the potential, so they came to us. And so Pick and Pay, in particular, they are well aware of the Bitcoin integration. Their staff are being trained, their signage in stores. So that's already given us initial distribution as our, as our first customer. They have 1600 stores over across the country. And these range from like, big hyper stores to small convenience stores at gas stations. And yeah, from there, we, we, we realized that. Okay, cool. We've, we, we've Done well with Pick and Pay, but we need to go much, much further than that.
B
Oh, yeah, but so Pick and Pay approached you and that I guess is the exception.
A
Yeah, I mean, that is unprecedented. So, but so how does that look?
B
Yeah, go on, go on.
A
No, I just mean, like, like I've said we are proud of you've done, but we've also gotten a few lucky breaks.
B
Yeah, but so I want to just like walk through. Is, is, is the Pick and Pay integration different than the other shops? Like, how does the Pick and Pay integration work?
A
Right. So I think something to note, and this is also, we get a lot of critique for this. Something to note is that we don't provide the QR code to the retailer or to the shop typically. What happens is that with their existing infrastructure, they have a mechanism to generate a shop specific or a merchant specific QR code. And so with Pick and Pay, what we've done is we've worked with their existing payment provider. They manage the payments flow from generating the code, providing the basket information and then accepting the payment. And we've done the exact same thing with at least four other payment providers and each of them have a merchant base. So essentially it kind of works the same for all merchants. There's a merchant, there's a merchant payment provider, that payment provider generates a merchant specific QR code. And then our challenge would be to bridge that non lightning QR code to a lightning invoice and ultimately to a Lightning Wallet to complete the payment.
B
So the user has to be using what, the Money Badger app or something and they're scanning this QR code. That's not a lightning invoice. Right.
A
Initially that was the solution. So we realized that to ask a Lightning Wallet or even multiple Lightning Wallets to add support for proprietary QR codes is a big ask. Nobody wants that. That's very controversial. But what we did in the interim was to publish our own QR code scanner called the Money Badger QR code scanner or the Money Badger app. And that scanner can read a proprietary QR code from the merchant and then it can generate a lightning invoice, can generate a Balt 11 invoice, and then it can launch your preferred Lightning wallet.
B
That's clever. I like that. So you don't actually. The user's not locked into like quote unquote, the Money Badger wallet. It's actually just a app that is basically translating to any compatible, any lightning wallet. They're all compatible as by default.
A
That's a, that's a good way to put it, it's like Google Translate or. Okay, I know Google's not a, you don't like Google. But like, it's like a translation application that translates the project QR code into a bot 11 and it works fine. So what it does is it lets you use any Lighting Wallet, even like if it doesn't support, even if it doesn't support QR code scanning, but it doesn't matter. So you can use any Lighting Wallet. But we did find that people kept asking us to avoid having to install a secondary application. They just want to use the Lighting Wallet. So the question is, is it possible to scan and pay with a, you know, generic lightning wallet at the proprietary merchant QR code?
B
Yeah. So I mean, I mean that makes, Look, I think this is, to me, this is the coolest part about what you've done is because, you know, a lot of people, it's probably not unique to this industry, but I'm neck, I've been neck deep in Bitcoin for a while and a lot of people like just try. There's always like theoretically, oh, this better option or this perfect option or something. And what I love about what you've done is it's just so pragmatic. It's just like, okay, these are the tools we have today. I have to meet the merchant where they're at and I can provide users who actually have the need to spend Bitcoin and want to spend Bitcoin a relatively easy way to do this. So when, when you do the translation, so to speak, presumably the user is then paying you in Bitcoin, paying Money Badger in Bitcoin, then Money Badger is converting that to South African. What is Rand, I think, is your currency, converting it to fiat and then, and then you're transferring the fiat to the merchant, right?
A
Exactly, yeah. Because we slot into their existing settlement flow. They have accounting systems that set up for fiat settlement, they've got reconciliation systems that set up for that. And typically like with these corporates, if you try to sell them Bitcoin payments, the CFO or the financial officer would be the first to object and say, well, we don't want any non fiat related accounting on the books. It's just going to be too complicated, it's going to be too costly. So one of the sals is that, no, actually there's no impact on your accounting. There's no special considerations for non fiat balances on the books. Everything just plugs in seamlessly and we are part of the existing flow of funds. So existing settlement flow. So yes, we receive the bitcoin, fire Lightning, we run our own node and then we convert it into local fiat and settle the merchant. And obviously they want an exact amount, they want an exact fiat amount. So we'll take some volatility risk on the exchange. But luckily this being lightning, everything tends to kind of complete within about 30 seconds. So volatility as a function of time over a short period of time, volatility is always low.
B
Makes sense to me. And then presumably you're taking, are you taking a flat fee in that conversion? Is that the business model?
A
So the commercial model, as a merchant provider, we want to charge the merchant. And so essentially we kind of have a two component model whereby we have a very low transaction fee. So the idea is that for the merchant it should be competitive against car rails. Merchants hate paying all these interchange fees. And then typically there's some fixed fixed fee component as well. So the commercial model is pretty straightforward. And the idea is that we try to avoid charging the consumer because obviously we can load the spread. And that is a question. We get a lot. Do you load a margin on the spread? And for a number of reasons we don't want to do that. So we don't want to charge the consumer because the consumer is actually not a client. If they were our client, then there's all kinds of additional compliance stuff that goes with that. So what we do is we add the exchanges fee essentially into the rate we need to cover the exchange or the liquidation fee because that's a cost to us. But ultimately we try not to charge a consumer. It's a merchant service and the merchant pays for the privilege.
B
But I don't follow. Aren't a bunch of these merchants, they don't even know that you're enabling bitcoin payments?
A
That's a good question. So in the case of pick and pay, that's a direct relationship. We have a direct commercial agreement. We've got our own rates negotiated with them. In all most of the other cases where we work via their existing payment service providers, we have a deal with the payment service provider. And so that is a feature or an option that they on sell to their, to their customer base and they set the pricing on the merchant.
B
So whichever, whichever, like whichever, whatever solution the merchant is using for their fiat QR codes, you have a relationship with that processor and they charge them.
A
So essentially we are like a little plugin that sits on the existing payment processor that can just enable Lightning payments via the network.
B
I love this. That's awesome. So, and by the way, I'm sure there's plenty of people that are saying, like, you should. I don't know, have. Have there been a bunch of people that say you should release a Money Badger Lightning Wallet.
A
We're not going to do that, and it's not necessary. So I think something I wanted to answer was the question from earlier. Is it possible to do this with any Lightning Wallet?
B
Yeah.
A
So we're good friends with the guys from Blink Wallet. Do you know the Blink Wallet people?
B
Yeah, Blink's awesome. El Salvador.
A
Yeah. And Blink's very popular in South Africa. It's one of those community wallets that seem to get decent traction.
B
So, yeah, their big one to the freaks is they're the ones who built and power now. Bitcoin Beach Wallet.
A
Exactly. It was rebranded. Bitcoin beach, became Blink Wallet, I think.
B
Well, now, like, the parent company is Blink Wallet, and Blink Wallet powers all these individual community wallets, one of them being Bitcoin Beach Wallet. And the idea is basically like, community leaders are running a multisig that's holding the majority of funds, so it's still custody, but it's like, at least it's your local community and at least it's multisig, so a single person can't rug you. And then there are custodial funds on a Lightning Wallet. But hopefully, ideally, in the ideal scenario, there's less there because that is, by default, single sig, because Multi Sig Lightning is just not there. But anyway, go on. And by the way, just before you go on, my advice was don't launch a Money Badger Wallet. I just feel like a lot of people, like, I think one of the cool parts is that you don't have a wallet, because running a wallet is. We don't want to get worms.
A
Look, before Money Badger, I built an a bitcoin exchange called Luno L U N O L. And I learned the hard way that custodying people's funds is a massive pain. It's basically hell. Yep, you don't want to do that. So I don't ever, ever, ever want to custody anybody's funds again except my own.
B
But anyway, I interrupted you. Blink. You've been. A lot of people have been using Blink Wallet in South Africa, so.
A
Yeah, so. So we went to Blink as a. Like, one of these very popular wallets in South Africa. And we said, guys, what if we provided an API so that the Blink Wallet can do the same thing as the Money Badger translating app so that we can build the translation feature straight into Blink and then Blynk can scan a pick and pay or other merchant QR code and retrieve the Lightning invoice without this secondary app, without the sort of intermediary application. And we tried to convince them that this is a good idea and they were having none of it because then they had to add a dependency that's like very controversial if you need to add this regional dependency to a global Wallet code base. But then one of the Blink Wallet developers actually came up with a clever solution that avoids third party APIs entirely, where they said, well, if we use Lightning addresses in a clever way, we can talk about how that works. But basically if you use Lightning addresses in a very clever way, then we can use open source specifications, open source protocols, we don't have to add any third party APIs and the blink Wallet can do what the Money Badger application or the translator does without any dependencies. So initially when, when they explained this to me, I thought, wow, that's, I don't know if that's going to work, but we did a proof of concept, we implemented it and then it turned out that it actually works really well. So you can now scan with Blink Wallet and pay directly at a Bitcoin pay, no need for a Money Badger third party application.
B
That's awesome. So presumably, I mean the negative of Lightning URL is that you have to have a separate server that's serving up invoices. But presumably in this situation it's actually an advantage where I'm assuming you have some kind of fixed Lightning address integrated into the, into the proprietary QR code and they're pinging the URL, they're pinging the server and then they're pulling what a different, a special invoice or something.
A
So the way it works, the 1, 1 controversial change, so this is less controversial than adding API, but the 1 controversial change that's, that is still needed in the wallet is that it needs to do a pattern match on the QR code. So essentially it needs to look at the QR code data and it needs to, it needs to know that this is a QR code for merchant that MoneyBadger supports. And so in practice what that means is typically with a pick and pay QR code, the string pick and pay is inside of a code data. So it's very easy to identify a pick and pay QR code. And then the, the way that the information is transmitted to MoneyBadger is that the Wallet can now know because it's a pick and pay QR code and it knows the Money Badger domain, it can use the QR code data as the user portion of the Lightning address. And then obviously the server portion would be moneybadger. So with a simple pattern recognition and a match, you can craft a special lightning address that's a dynamic address. It's a single use address, essentially. Single use address for that one QR code and then it can retrieve the bot 11 from the money Badger server.
B
That's awesome. I mean it's basically an API. It's just like an open standards API.
A
Yeah, well, it's non API. It's, that's the cool thing is that it uses open standards, existing open standards to retrieve Part 11 invoices for proprietary QR codes. And yeah, we've, I've seen some comments from developers that, that, that are upset with this. They're like, you know, Money badgers just doing their own thing. They're kind of like, you know, stretching the definitions of what the spec says. And I kind of agree. Look, I know it's a little, it's a little bit of a cowboy thing that we're doing, but at the end of the day what this means is we now have I think something like five lighting wallets that can scan and pay South African stores natively. So you don't have to install the Money Badger application. And there's no third party APIs.
B
No, I love this. It's pragmatic as hell. It's, it's a bit hacky. But I also like the most useful tools in Bitcoin. The most useful tools in Bitcoin are bit hacky. If you're trying to live on Bitcoin like I like in America, for instance, right. We like, we're buying gift cards where there's a service called 2 fiat number 2 f I a f I a tu fiat, where it's like a 6% fee and I can get like a real reloadable prepaid Visa. You know, it's hacks all the way down. And this is a, as far as hacks go, this is like a pretty clean, clever way of doing it. I mean, I chop props to you. I think this is, I think this is awesome. So Link has integrated this and so presumably, I mean, I have a little bit of insider knowledge, but I guess Zeus is also implementing this.
A
Yeah. So I'm very excited about that. I actually did the first or my first test in a live environment with the Zeus Alpha build. So I know it's not live yet, but the Alpha build at least already supports Money Badger QR codes. And Zeus being my favorite wallet for me, it's very cool because that's that definitely my wallet of choice. And now I can use that, you know, natively I can use my favorite wallet and I can go out and buy whatever I want with Bitcoin in South Africa.
B
Yeah, I mean Evan's a huge, I mean Evan's, you know, basically a brother to me. Evan Kaludas, founder and maintainer of Zeus. I mean he's also ride or die. Like there's one dispatch that I didn't host years ago and it was Evan. Evan hosted it.
A
Yeah.
B
So I mean it's pretty good. I mean when we met, we met with our fellow South African friend Craig Raw of Sparrow Wallet. And I mean those are like, besides, besides like bitcoin protocol stuff. Like the two tools I rely on the most, like my family like absolutely depends on is Sparrow and Zeus. It's like Sparrow for savings and Zeus for, you know, day to day purchases and spending and whatnot. Mobile.
A
Yeah, you can get quite far with, with those two things. And I had the privilege of meeting Evan in Mauritius at the last Bitcoin Africa conference we both attended. And that's actually where I sort of pitched this mechanism to him. And the first thing that people say, especially developers says when I, when I tell them about this, they're like, ah, this is crazy. It's too hacky. And then until I show them the sort of the source code change, then they're like, maybe this is not so bad.
B
So it's pretty minimal, I guess. Right? Like it's just if your QR code, you're just, you're detecting the QR code locally.
A
What it's, it's so minimal. It's essentially, it's a pattern match and then just putting together the lightning address cleverly. So that's, I mean that's a, that's a few lines, maybe like three lines of code. That's awesome. Nominally some other wallets that have implemented this Aqua of the well known ones. Aqua would be one other ones would be. There's, there's some experimental layer, two wallets layers blitz. Yeah, there's quite a few now that have implemented this. And look, I'll be my own biggest critic as well. This does introduce sort of this kind of like centralized service provider dependency in the flow of the QR scanner, but it's so light and minimal that if we, you know, if we were to disappear tomorrow, it would have no impact on anyone. And to remove that code would be very, very simple change as well to be very light lift. So I feel like for the convenience, it's definitely worth it.
B
And then presumably, I mean, I guess there's an argument that this is South Africa only, but I mean, presumably this is so open and interoperable that there could be like a Money Badger clone in Ghana or Argentina or something that could. That could use the same integration. No, that's.
A
My expectation is that we'll.
B
This.
A
I think this code path in the wallets, in the scanning. The scanning code will expand to more and more providers like this. So for example, we know in Kenya, our good friends Tando, they bridge into the MPESA network. So everybody there has an MPESA QR code. So a similar thing, it can be a very light change on the code, on the code base of the wallet, and then suddenly you can spend anywhere in Kenya. And like you said, Ghana is an option, possibly Latin America. There's a lot of places like Brazil. I know, El Salvador, obviously there's a lot of places with this QR mechanism where if you have the bridge and you have the mappings, you have a way to identify the code and match it to the. To the bridge provider, like Money Badger, then it's very easy to do native payments with your Lightning wallet of choice.
B
So, I mean, just correct me if I'm wrong real quick. Tondo, I haven't had the pleasure of meeting them, but I've been watching their successes from afar. Meeting them, yet I hope to meet them in the future. They actually, they have like, they. They're running their own custodial Lightning Wallet, and then you're like loading up their app with sats and then paying M? Pesa invoices.
A
Right? I'm not exactly sure about that. I think they also do this. This bridge. I could be completely wrong and now I'm revealing my ignorance. But as far as I understand, with Tundo, you can also use your own lighting wallet of choice. I think. I think you can get the lighting invoice and then pay it with any lighting. I mean, theoretically, why not?
B
Right.
A
But I'm actually not.
B
So presumably, I mean, we're like a couple small steps away from someone being able to just pay M? Pesa with Zeus if Tondo integrates it this way. That's pretty cool.
A
Yeah, I'm sure if it's possible to identify an M? Pesa QR code, then yes, they just
B
basically have to run that. The harder part is probably on the Tondo side. Right. Because they have to run the. Whatever the ln URL server that's dealing with synonymous generated.
A
That's not really a problem. For centralized provider, if you're going to have a server that's going to be up 24 7, it's not a problem. The thing that differentiates what we're doing with Tando is that they have this national standard that. The MPESA standard.
B
Right. It's easier.
A
And what that means. It's easier, but what it also means is that they don't really have a relationship with the merchant. It's like everybody has mpesa. So if you can do an MPESA bridge, it's a. It's like a neutral thing. Whereas what we're doing here, we don't have a national standard yet. Government's working on it, but we've got these commercial payment providers that have direct relationships with the merchants. So we kind of have to support multiple QR standards, but we also get access to the merchant base.
B
Yeah, I mean, like everything else in life, there's pros and cons. Right. I mean, it probably makes, in a lot of ways makes integration easier for them, but also they have their own centralized dependency that if M Pesa wakes up one day and it's like we're not going to accept fiat payments from Tondo.
A
Exactly.
B
Then the whole system breaks.
A
Yeah, yeah. So I guess it's ultimately.
B
This is awesome.
A
Of what, what the trade offs are and like what we're willing to. The ax we're willing to live with.
B
Yeah, I will say that. I mean, 1031, we're the largest investor in both Strike and Primal. So I will talk to Jack and Milan. I would love to see those wallets support this. I think that'd be great. That's fucking awesome. I would love a Strike user being able to just walk into 650,000 stores in South Africa, just scan a QR code and pay is. That's wonderful. That's awesome. Do you have any stats on transaction volume volumes? Like, how are you doing out there? Are people actually using it?
A
So some people are using it. That was obviously, I think, our biggest challenge, actually that. I mean, from a technical perspective, there's solutions to the technical problems even on the business front. Creating partnerships with these existing payment service providers, that's business development. We can do that. Ultimately the question is, who's going to use this? And so one of the problems we had initially with pick and pay was how would we prove the concept to the executives? I mean, we can build it, but then the question is, will they come? And so we were kind of lucky because we've got these circular economies in South Africa and one in particular is called bitcoin icasi. I don't know if you know about bitcoin icasi. It's. They're modeled on bitcoin beach in El Salvador,
B
of course.
A
Right. So they have this existing community of people that's earning and spending bitcoin. And luckily we could approach them as alpha testers for the pick and pay solution. And they actually made a massive impression on the executives that pick and pay because. Because they didn't expect anybody to use this immediately. And suddenly there was a whole community of people going to pick and pay, buying, you know, a single banana, a single roll of bread. And suddenly they realized that there was something here that was actually showing potential to solve some of the problems, you know, social problems that we're facing in South Africa. So specifically, people in that Mossel Bay society, mainly, they. They transact in cash. So they don't have access to credit card facilities. And so that. That has a bunch of problems. Like, you know, you can't transact with cash very far. You can pretty much as far as you can extend your hand and people rob you for your cash. And suddenly there were people that could download an app, download the blink wallet, and they can store money in this app that they've just downloaded. They don't need to go to a bank to open an account. They don't need to go stand a queue, and they can immediately start spending this money at some of the biggest stores and biggest retailers in the country. So when we showed this to the pick and pay executives, this is really what convinced them to push the project over the line and deploy it to all of their stores across the nation. And I think also ultimately, what made it possible for us to partner with the other payment service providers, because when we showed them this, they said, wow, there's some real potential here to address real needs. And I didn't answer your question. You said, are people using this? So initially we had some initial uptake from these guys, and it was small, like in. In. In dollar terms, we did about $10,000 a month, let's say 10 to $15,000 a month. And where we're at now is we're at approximately $200,000, $200,000 monthly. That's about 15,000 transactions per quarter, 5,000 per month. So it's not a lot, but it's still a lot more than zero.
B
But are you higher than that now? 5,000 transactions a month?
A
Right now it's about 5,000 transactions a month. Initially, when we started with like a couple of hundred.
B
Oh, gotcha. Gotcha. So what, 5,000 transactions a month? Did I, by the way? Freaks. One of the advantages of not running it live is that you're going to get really great audio quality, even though our Internet connection is poor. But it does mean that Carol is breaking up for me a little bit. So you said 5,000, 5,000 transactions a month, about US$200,000 worth. Is that what you're saying?
A
Would it be better if I switched to a different connection? I think maybe it'll be easier for you.
B
I mean, you're welcome to switch to another connection if you want, but also you can just. It's been decent. But the, the cool part is, is the audio is recorded locally and uploaded. So for the people listening, it sounds perfect.
A
Okay. This is going to be much better, I'm sure. Can you hear me now?
B
Yeah, I can hear you.
A
Right, okay. So just to get back to the stats, the, so the number of transactions that we're seeing right now is about 5,000 monthly. The average, or let's call it the median transaction size is only about $18. $18 or less. Most transactions are $18 or less. And then you get, the average is a bit higher than that. It's about $43. Because you get a small number of people that's doing larger transactions. They're paying municipal bills, they're buying prepaid electricity and prepaid water. So utilities, and they are covering the basic needs, but it's like larger spend.
B
I mean, I think that's awesome. So I, so, I mean, look, I think, I think bitcoin is, I prescribe to the theory that these things take time. It's like, where's the, where are we in the adoption cycle? And I, I don't, I think there's only so much you can do to try and inorganically get people to spend bitcoin. I think they'll spend bitcoin when they're ready to. I think people that are all in on bitcoin, it's very obvious why they would spend bitcoin is because every, everything they spend money on is effectively a sale. I mean, if they only have bitcoin and savings. And I think it's just like how people mentally think about bitcoin. Like if they still have dollars, if they still have other fiat, they're going to spend that first, probably. But also a lot of it is, is, I mean, I, I, it definitely depends on the country by country basis. So I'm kind of curious. In South Africa, do you have obviously like lower income Bitcoin Akazi Demographic is they're, they're earning in bitcoin. All they have is bitcoin. It makes sense that they're spending bitcoin in terms of the higher net worth side of South Africa in the bitcoin community, because bitcoin has a decent level of adoption per capita in the higher net worth sphere of South Africa. Are you seeing real traction there with people spending bitcoin and how much of that has to do with government policy, tax policy, that type of thing?
A
Yeah, that's quite a broad question, I think. Look, ultimately the question is who is spending bitcoin and in South Africa, who is spending bitcoin in South Africa? So one of the things we've learned is that you get people with capital and they use that capital, this is fiat capital, to buy bitcoin, right? When you buy bitcoin, that is the most valuable thing that you own. You hold onto that for dear life. You don't ever sell it, you don't ever spend it. Logically, when people come to you and they say, oh, but you should be trying to spend it, you should be trying to use it, you're like, there's no ways, there's no ways I bought this bitcoin, I'm gonna keep it forever, basically. And that's, that's one mindset. And then for me to try and convince somebody like that to spend their bitcoin or to say, hey, look, I'm building this service for you, it just doesn't make sense. But then you get these guys in Ikazi, bitcoin icazi, they're serve coaches, but they don't have any capital, so they don't have any money or fiat to buy bitcoin to get started. But they do earn bitcoin. So like I said, that's all they have to spend. And if that is all that you have to spend, the equation like completely flips on its head. And instead of not wanting to spend the bitcoin that you bought, that's super valuable, now you're strongly incentivized to go out and seek merchants that will accept your bitcoin because that's all that you have to spend. And so we do see that. We see in our data. We see, for example, the number one store for bitcoin spend in South Africa would be the pick and pay near bitcoin Nikazi, number one, every single month. Most transactions, most value, most volume. But then as for, like you said, sort of the demographic of people that do have capital that have been buying bitcoin, the spend that we see would be from sort of OGs, people that have bought bitcoin long ago. They've seen significant gains in the value of their bitcoin to such a degree that it probably makes up the majority, if not a hundred percent, of the. Of their wealth. And then they kind of end up in a similar situation where, sure, bitcoin is the most valuable thing that you own, but it's also the only valuable thing that you earn. And again, you're in a situation where that's what you have to spend. So it's kind of like these two extremes on the spectrum. And then in between, you'll have, like, people with radical mindsets that just believe in bitcoin as freedom money and believe that when they promote the spending of bitcoin, it's a promotion for freedom. So you get people doing it for ideological reasons as well. But I think, like, where we're at right now is we've got this system where it serves kind of like two extreme ends of the spectrum. And the question is, can we kind of like start growing inwards and meet. Meet somewhere in the middle?
B
That makes sense to me. So how are you thinking about that? Growing inwards?
A
That is very tricky. So ultimately, to change behavior, you need incentives. You need to provide incentives. So we've been experimenting with unique incentives with, you know, centralized wallet providers offering significant discounts in the form of cashbacks. We're working with the merchants to offer unique rewards to bitcoin spenders because they're saving on. On fees, on card fees. But to be totally honest, I don't have an answer for you, like trying to convince somebody that just got into bitcoin that just purchased some bitcoin or maybe in the last couple of years bought some bitcoin to spend it. It's very difficult, maybe impossible.
B
Yeah, I don't know. Yeah. And I don't know if, like, offering them 3% sats back is actually going to move the needle.
A
I'm talking about 20 to 50% that we've done.
B
Oh, wow. Okay. Yeah, that might do it.
A
Yeah, that does it. But it only lasts as long as the promotion.
B
What is the tax policy like? Do you have, do you have cap gains in South Africa?
A
We do have cap gains. It's one of those things where I feel like a politician would speak of a social compact. But then, in fact, if you go look at the way that our rules are set up, there's no social compact. So specifically how it works is we have an initial exclusion. So on the first 40,000 rands. So that would be $2,500 of capital gains. You pay no tax. And so if you're in this mode where you convert all of your earnings into Bitcoin every single month and you spend the portion that you need to sustain yourself and you save the rest, the fluctuation in price. And so therefore the gain in capital value is actually fairly low. So actually for most people, your bitcoin spending falls below this threshold of 2 1/2 thousand dollars of capital gains if you're not also liquidating, you know, long term savings for bigger purchases. But this threshold has been the same for 12 years. And so it's that same old story that not only is inflation eroding the value of your savings, but it's also eroding these thresholds. We should, I mean, over 13 years, that needs to be like $10,000 threshold. So every single day that you stay in the fiat system, you're just worse off, not only because your money's getting worth less, but also the thresholds that should apply, they just erode. So, yeah, look, that's a very long story. But the short answer is we've got capital gains. There's some thresholds. If you stay under it, you can essentially spend Bitcoin without any tax implication. But it's complicated.
B
Yeah, I mean, I actually, I think I disagree with the majority of Americans that the current cap gains policy is the reason people don't spend Bitcoin. I don't think that's the reason. I mean, I think it's an illogical reason.
A
I think a lot of people use it as an excuse, but it's not logical. Because if you're paying cap gains, then you're already winning.
B
Yeah. You're only paying it on profit. It means that you were better off holding Bitcoin than dollars in the first place.
A
You're winning.
B
I do think I, yeah, I philosophically think that capital gains tax is really savings tax. And particularly when you couple that with manufactured inflation on the dollar side or the fiat side is taxes are already predatory, but it makes it even more of a predatory tax and we should just remove cap gains on all assets, not just bitcoin. Like, it's not a bitcoin specific thought I have, but I do not think that's the reason that Americans aren't really spending Bitcoin at scale. I think it's more of an adoption thing and where Bitcoin sits in your quote unquote portfolio or life. Right. If Bitcoin is your savings, then you're Going to spend Bitcoin. You're going to want to spend bitcoin and also credit cards suck. I'd rather spend bitcoin. It's great. It's just much better. Ux
A
the ux. One thing on that we get a lot of people asking for Tap to pay. They're saying, you know, the QR code scanning is awkward. If the lighting isn't great in the store, then there's a reflection. It takes a bit of time. I've. There's a lot of videos of people scanning QR codes and then completing the bitcoin lighting transaction faster than if you were to use Tap to pay. So even with Tap to pay there's some authorization. With Lightning there's no authorization because there's no communication that's necessary with like the bank and anything like that. It's lighting native protocol and the settlement completes like the entire settlement chain complete in less than a second. But I do get, I get the point.
B
I like Tap to Pay. The unfortunate reality is at least on the iPhone side, I mean without Apple's permission, it's just a non starter, not going to happen. But on the Android side it's doable.
A
If there's demand for it, then it will come. Tap to Pay is just simply another communications mechanism. It's not a fundamental infrastructure limitation. So if there's enough people that demand it, eventually it will come. And so we are seeing organic growth. We are seeing about a doubling or exponential growth year on year and that's great. But coming from a small base, it's going to take a bit of time until we reach sort of critical mass where we can demand that point of sale. Distribution for a nationwide retailer adds support for what's needed to do Tap to pay for Bitcoin.
B
Right? Yeah, that's actually like requires like hardware infrastructure.
A
Exactly. That's expensive and slow. But it's going to.
B
Which is why they're using, I mean that's why they're using QR codes for their fiat payments in the first place.
A
QR is easy. Yeah. But even Tap to Pay Bitcoin will come. We just need to be patient. Everybody's just a little bit too impatient.
B
Yeah. Lower your time preference.
A
Lower your time preference.
B
No, we're doing great. The bitcoin movement is doing fantastic. Has beaten all expectations, at least all my expectations over the many years that I've been obsessed with bitcoin. You also mentioned that you do like treasury management and what like cross border payments? How much of like are you finding real traction on that side or
A
so I think that that's something new for us. What we found is that these merchants that we now already serving so that we're already processing incoming bitcoin payments for them, in some cases they have international suppliers that they need to pay and so they, they're definitely more interested in kind of stablecoin kind of stuff. So they would have, maybe the cost of their sale is largely denominated in USD because they're importing stuff, paying in USD so that they want to split revenue coming in into sort of the USD portion for the costs and then obviously use that USD to pay the supplier. But that's kind of, that's kind of, I don't know, for me it's kind of boring. Consumer payments to me is more interesting and I think we only have sort of a limited window of opportunity to actually push this narrative of bitcoin as money. I don't think we have a lot of time. I think there's the powers that be are conspiring to make it more and more difficult over time.
B
Right. I mean in their ideal scenario, Bitcoin would be relegated to like a store of value only type of controlled asset. And then you'd use USD tokens or you know, basically CBDCs, just privately run CBDCs for, for payments. How do you think, I mean I presume Tether is the majority of stablecoin usage, USD token usage in South Africa. What is that situation like and how do you think about it? Is there a lot of, is there significantly more usage of tether than Bitcoin in South Africa?
A
So for me, one interesting stat. So we have about four types of wallet integrations. One would be lightning and then we've got three. That's the major local wallet providers. We only do off chain transactions. So that either has to be layer two or it needs to be like proprietary wallet API. So what that means is that we not only process incoming bitcoin, we only process incoming bitcoin on lightning, but for these other wallets we can do whatever they support. And so what we see in the data is that about 2/3 of the transactions that we process is actually bitcoin, which is an anomaly I think anywhere else in the world. It would be probably like a US stable. In South Africa in particular, it seems like we've got a fairly strong bitcoiner community that are also spending bitcoin. And so 2/3 of our transactions or bitcoin and then about, let's say 15%, 10 to 15% is the next biggest one, which is a USD tether. So tether's been.
B
That's on Tron. It's usually on Tron. Right.
A
So for us tether would be. It would be agnostic of the chain. We don't accept tether transaction directly. It has to go in via wallet provider. So probably Tether on Tron. I think tether on Solana is also getting more popular, but I don't know actually to be totally honest.
B
Wait, so how does that work? You have a stablecoin partner that is converting it to then sats and then sending it to you, and then you're converting it to Rand.
A
So let's use Luna as an example. LUNO lets us. Uh, so we've embedded, similarly we've embedded our technology into the Luno mobile application. You can go and scan a proprietary retailer QR code with Luna application, we'll return the payment instruction that Luna displays to you and then you can pick your token of choice. Because Luno is a multi token exchange. So you'll pick Tether if that's your. If that's what you want to pay with. And then Luna ultimately will have a separate settlement process and that will either be Rand Fiat or Tether.
B
And so what, they're settling with you separately and then you're just paying the merchant?
A
Yeah.
B
Interesting. So technically all these 650,000, I mean it makes sense, right? But these 650,000 locations, people can spend any token that Luna supports.
A
Yeah, you can spend any token.
B
And what do they support? Besides, this is your old business, right?
A
Yeah, it's my old exchange.
B
But you're not involved with it anymore. Did you sell it?
A
So I'm involved only insofar as we are partnering with them now as a partner. My stake in that company was sold to an early investor you might name. It's called Barry Solbert.
B
Wow, Barry.
A
Yeah.
B
The new freaks might not know of him, but his name precedes himself. Okay, fair enough. Okay, that's interesting. What other tokens does LUNO support? I don't know if this is relevant. I'm just kind of curious.
A
I mean for me, not the earliest relevant. Except for Bitcoin, I mean. Yeah, look. So one of the. One of the wallets we integrated with Binance. Okay. Binance supports all of the things. So essentially. Essentially everything.
B
So I can pay with BNB at Pick and Pay.
A
You can absolutely pay with BNB at Pick and Pay. Get rid of it.
B
I mean, if you support, if you support Binance, it means I could probably pay with Trump's Meme Coin and get my cash.
A
You can probably pay with Trump's. Yeah, absolutely.
B
Wow. Wild times we live in. What a world.
A
Yep.
B
Okay. Carol, this is. This is awesome. I enjoyed it. I think you're crushing it. I will reiterate that I think you should be quite proud of what you've accomplished so far. And I do think it's early days. I think, you know, you'll accomplish much more. You just got to keep grinding it out.
A
You.
B
Do you have anything else you want to discuss before we wrap here?
A
Yeah, I think just for me, this is kind of like something that's urgent. There's a sense of urgency that I have about this. So. Yeah. So thank you for saying that. We should be proud. But, like, for me, this isn't about, you know, doing it for vanity's sake. This is something that we need to do today because we need to kind of shift the narrative. We need to create a narrative in the first place that bitcoin is money, because most people don't believe that. It's a. It's a small portion of people that believe bitcoin is money. And the result of that is you can say, you know, it's fine for now, it can be a store of value only, and in the future, we can spend it. But that's not what's going to happen. What will end up happening is that the system, the broader system, configures itself according to how people engage with a technology. And so if people engage with Bitcoin as only a store of value, the system will silo it. It will place it inside of a walled garden where you can buy and sell Bitcoin on an exchange using your bank, using BlackRock. And then the moment that you actually want to use it for these use cases where it actually improves people's lives, you find that that's like. It becomes impossible due to regulations, due to the way the industry configures itself and just the way that people perceive it. So I think that we actually have a very limited window of opportunity today to build out these use cases of Bitcoin as a payment mechanism, to show that not only is it possible, but that people will use Bitcoin to support themselves, support their lives, and then to show that it's also possible for you to. If you can live on Bitcoin, to earn Bitcoin, and then everything that goes with that. Ultimately, the goal is to have everybody saving Bitcoin. Yes. Like, I'm not going to argue that the ultimate goal is that everybody saves in Bitcoin, but I do think that if that's all that we do, we'll end up with something that isn't even half as useful as it can be and. And we end up with the world that's less free than it should be.
B
Yeah, I mean, I echo that sentiment. That makes. I'm right there with you. Actually, while I have you, I'm kind of curious on if you're willing to walk through a theoretical with me. Let's say instead of your current situation, you happen to be a PM at Block, formerly Square, and you're involved with their Bitcoin merchant processing they currently have. They've enabled Bitcoin for square sellers. I think it's America only right now. That's where their largest footprint is anyway. But the square seller has to like, go behind the scenes. The whoever is running their Square account. So, like the big boss man, not the cashier, has to go and enable it. And then when you go and you want to pay the merchant, you have to like, talk to the coffee shop barista and tell the barista you want to pay with Bitcoin. Then they have to check and make sure that Bitcoin's actually enabled. Then they have to press the Bitcoin button and then it shows an actual native Lightning invoice on the screen. Now, separately, they have their own QR code, proprietary fiat payment standard called Cash App Pay, that just shows a Cash App Pay QR code by default when it's enabled on a screen, on the merchant screen. What is your opinion on how they implemented it versus just doing exactly what you did. And I just scanned the Cash App QR code with Zeus and it just works. And I don't have to talk to them about Bitcoin. They don't have to enable it separately. Do you have an opinion on that?
A
I think it boils down to something you said earlier, and it's about meeting people where they're at. I mean, this is kind of the tricky thing here would be if you're the blog pm, identifying who are the people that you actually want to meet. So are you trying to solve something for the merchant or try and solve something for the consumer? If you're trying to solve something for the consumer, where are they at? They're using Zeus, using Aqua, they're using their lighting wallets, but there's very few of them. So if you're trying to solve a problem for them, that's great. And then maybe you should consider having some option to receive a scan of a Cash App QR code and then emit a lightning invoice, then it's very easy, then you're a bridge for yourself. Right. But I think if I suspect that maybe the, the place for them to focus would be the merchant, which is their customer. And I think something to consider is that we can't, I don't think we can win this game by taking an approach from only one side. So what I mean by that is we can't win this game if we only take a commercial approach. Like a commercial only approach on its own is not going to make enough sense unless we attach a community initiative to it. So if the broader bitcoin community and local bitcoin societies don't also step in and step up, essentially what that means is there's no consumer demand for the solution. So you're just building something and then hoping they'll come, but they never come. And so what I would probably rather do as a block pm, I mean, obviously it's nice to solve the consumer problem, but I would probably focus on the merchant problem first. And I would go to the barista, I would, I would probably focus more on the barista and ask myself, what do I need to do to train that person to make it very easy and simple for somebody to pay with Bitcoin? If somebody walks into the shop and say, can I pay with bitcoin? They need to say, yes, of course you can. And then secondly, they need to understand exactly how that works so they can advise the person that wants to pay. And, you know, maybe then the way to solve this is by community members going to that barista, installing a lightning wallet for them and saying, I'm going to give you some excellent tips, but you need to install a lightning wallet to know how it works.
B
Yeah, I mean, it's an interesting thought process because they're definitely on the merchant focused side and they definitely structured strongly believe in open standards, which is why I think they went the route of, you know, like a natural bitcoin invoice. And they, they, they are providing a very strong merchant incentive, which is, economy's not that great right now. And if they accept Bitcoin, they pay no fees until through the end of the year and presumably even after that, if they do add fees, my guess is they're going to be significantly lower than traditional fiat rails. So there'll always be a, you know, if a merchant can get like an extra 3% on their bottom line, like, that is a big deal. And so I think merchants are very excited about it and I think it makes a lot of sense from that point of view. I will say from the consumer point of view, as someone who loves to spend bitcoin and wants to spend bitcoin. And the alternative is I'm selling bitcoin for dollars to pay off my credit card, which is strictly worse than spending bitcoin directly. It is a bit of a mental burden. And I'm already the exception to the rule. Like, I'm a small percentage of potential consumers that is, like, ready and willing to spend large amounts of bitcoin at small businesses that I enjoy. The sheer fact that if I walk into a store and see a square terminal and I don't know if they accept bitcoin or not dissuades me from spending bitcoin because I don't. I'm busy person. I'm a busy person. I don't want to have a conversation with the barista about accepting bitcoin. I would rather, if I can skip that bitcoin conversation, which is hilarious, Right? Because I have a multiple bitcoin podcast. I talk about bitcoin all the time. This place I do not want to talk about bitcoin is when I'm in a long line at some small business trying to pay. And I just want to. If I don't know for sure that I can spend bitcoin, I would. And maybe this is an unpopular opinion, but I think most people feel this way that are in my situation. They just don't say it out loud. Like, I'd rather tap to pay without Apple pay or Google pay or whatever. Like, I would just not have that conversation, not make myself an outlier, just tap to pay. And so the way you have implemented it is so much cleaner in a lot of ways. Even though it's more, quote, unquote, hacky. Right. It's like if I walk into a pick and pay, I know without talking to the person at the cash register that I can just pay with bitcoin and we're done with it. And it's done.
A
Yeah.
B
So it's interesting. I don't know. It's an interesting thing to think about.
A
Just ask them for the QR code. They already know how that works.
B
Yeah.
A
But let me ask you this.
B
Yeah, there's no nuances there.
A
How would your hypothetical situation change you walking to the coffee shop if the tip jar had a lightning QR code on it?
B
Yeah, I would tip them a bunch of.
A
And then would you feel more comfortable saying, okay, I want to play with bitcoin?
B
Yeah. That would be a signaling mechanism that they Signal bitcoin already so I wouldn't have to worry. Yeah, and they're kind of doing that. They have like their cute little bitcoin stuffed animal that they're giving to merchants to put out and bitcoin accepted here stickers like, you can solve it through that. But right now, like, and also, like, if I'm pretty sure the, like their cash app, like, I need to have the cash app to like check the map to see if retail if I don't want to talk to someone. I did, like, yeah, they have a map that's integrated. I think I could technically use BTC map. I think they've cross integrated. They've definitely pulled in BTC map into cash app. I don't know if they've done the reverse yet. But also, once again, like, I don't want to think about it. Like, I can, I don't want to have a conversation with the cashier about bitcoin. I will have, I love, I love, you know, if I'm talking to an owner, you know, may, like, I'll. Especially over a beer, like, I'd love to have a long conversation about how they should move to a Bitcoin standard 100%. But like, if there's a long line at the hardware store or the burger shop or something, like, I'm not trying to have a conversation with the guy who's making minimum wage behind the counter about bitcoin. Especially since like 90% of the time they're going to be like, what the fuck are you talking about? And then I just have to pay anyway. So, like, I've been there, I've done it. And so in my perfect situation, what I would do or what I was hoping they were going to do is that bitcoin was enabled by default. The cashier just presses a single button on the back end, presses bitcoin and shows a lightning invoice. And then if the admin or the owner of the business didn't enable it, they received dollars and not bitcoin. And that's fine, whatever, I got to spend bitcoin. But supposedly per their merchant agreements, they can't do that. Like, that's illegal. So, okay, that's reasonable to me. But then all of a sudden it gets interesting where, okay, you could do the cash app pay. You could do like, they already show a cash app pay QR code on a lot of these merchants. Like, you walk up and like, literally the screen is already showing the QR code to pay with quote, unquote, cash app pay, which is Their proprietary QR code fiat payment method. And so if I can pay with Bitcoin that way, maybe you just need
A
that bridge and they can provide the bridge. Why not?
B
Yeah. I don't know. I'm thinking out loud here, but maybe I'll have a conversation with Miles and them about it.
A
Do you think that's why they call Bitcoin hard money?
B
Because you have to have hard conversations with your barista every time you want to spend it?
A
It's just hard. It's just hard to use it.
B
I. I will say the tip side is an interesting aspect because, I mean, coming from Nashville, right, All the. All the musicians all have QR codes for tips. Like, it's usually Venmo or Cash app in America, but they're sitting up there playing music. They're all starving artists and they have their QR codes printed out for people to pay them. And 95, I'm a big cash guy still. I love cash, but like, 95% of the money they get is through the digital fiat payments. So that's another example, right? Like, if I could just scan a Venmo QR code and pay with bitcoin, that'd be fucking awesome. That'd be so awesome. And then I wouldn't have to have the conversation. They'll just get dollars.
A
I'm sure all of that will come over time. And I also love cash.
B
You're leading the way, sir.
A
It's fantastic for privacy, but it sucks if that's all that you have.
B
What do you mean?
A
If your only option is paying with cash, then it kind of sucks if that's like, the only way that you have to pay.
B
No, I'd rather pay with bitcoin than cash.
A
Yeah. If you have a choice, cash is great. But a lot of people, like in South Africa, all that they have is cash. It's literally how they save is cash in an envelope.
B
Yeah, that's completely different than America. In America, people are choosing not to use cash, so we all use, like, track digital payments. That's what it is. Okay, cool. Do you have any final thoughts for the freaks? Call to action before we. Anyway, can. Can. Can the listeners be helpful in any way before we wrap or.
A
Well, okay, maybe one controversial statement. If you are not spending bitcoin, then you're actually short bitcoin because it means that you.
B
I agree.
A
You have Fiat to spend. So. But. But whatever. But I think the. The thing just to think about is that, like, how deeply do you actually believe in Bitcoin as money for freedom? If it's something that you actually care about. Most people don't care about. That's fine, you don't have to care about it. But if you care about it, then you really should consider the effort of spending bitcoin. Because what you're doing then is you're creating demand for acceptance. If nobody's spending it, there's no demand for acceptance and the circle doesn't grow. So the number one way to grow it is to create demand for acceptance. Because if one merchant realizes, you know, I'm tapping into a unique market here, then the others will follow and that's the only way to grow it. So yes, it's hard money because it's hard to use. For now, low your time preference and in the future the convenience will come. But if we don't spend it today, if we don't create that market of bitcoin spenders today and that demand, it might not be possible to create it in the future.
B
Love it. Carol. This was a great conversation. I really enjoyed it. I'd love to have you on like a year again or something like in like a year or so. We can do a catch up and see where you're at. You have me on signal now, so yeah, that hard money, that's the real reason they call it hard money is because it turns all of our hair gray. You have me on signal now, so if I can be helpful in any way, just don't hesitate to reach out.
A
Thank you.
B
I enjoyed it and I will visit you guys in South Africa at some point. I know I brought great shame to my family that I haven't been out there yet. I was talking to Herman about this too. Bitcoin Akazi. But I'll make it out there. You guys have been crushing it on the bitcoin adoption front.
A
And if you come, we'll make sure that you've got excellent steak.
B
That's all I ask. Freaks. Thank you for supporting the show. Share with your friends and family. Hope you enjoyed this conversation. All relevant links are@ciladespatch.com Download Primal App if you're not on Nostr, use any other Nostr app. Reply to the show When I post the show on Nostr, reply to it, give your feedback, engage with other freaks. It's helpful. It's. It's why I do it. It makes it. It makes it more enjoyable being along for the ride with you all. So anyway, huge shout out to Carol. I'll put all his relevant links in the show notes and stay humble. Stack sets. Love you all. Peace.
Date: January 23, 2026
Host: ODELL
Guest: Carol (Founder of Moneybadger)
Running Theme: Actionable bitcoin and freedom tech—with a deep dive into the realities, challenges, and innovation driving real-world bitcoin payments in South Africa.
In this episode, Odell interviews Carol, the founder of Moneybadger, a pioneering South African merchant bitcoin payments processor. The discussion focuses on how Moneybadger has enabled a staggering ~650,000 brick-and-mortar shops across South Africa to accept bitcoin (and stablecoin) payments, the practical challenges of adoption, and the innovative, sometimes “hacky” solutions bridging legacy retail payment rails with lightning-native transactions. The conversation blends technical, economic, social, and philosophical insights on bitcoin as both store of value and medium of exchange.
Moneybadger meets merchants where they are: rather than asking them to radically change their system, Moneybadger retrofits existing QR payment solutions so bitcoin payments flow through as easily as fiat payments ([06:29], [09:34]).
Notable Mechanism: Users scan a proprietary (“non-lightning”) QR code with the Moneybadger app, which “translates” it into a lightning invoice so any lightning wallet can pay ([10:51]).
"It’s like a translation application that translates the project QR code into a [BOLT] 11 [invoice] and it works fine...you can use any Lighting Wallet." (Carol, [11:49])
Further innovation: Working with wallet partners to natively scan merchant QR codes without separate apps, making wide adoption feasible ([19:19]).
Collaboration with Blink and Zeus wallets: Instead of requiring API dependencies, wallet devs devised a clever Lightning Address-based mechanism; a wallet pattern-matches for a supported merchant’s QR code and dynamically creates a one-time Lightning Address for payment ([21:33]-[22:49]).
This solution allows seamless lightning-native payment without a consumer or merchant even knowing much about the plumbing—it's "hacky," but effective and open ([23:39]).
“The most useful tools in bitcoin are a bit hacky...as far as hacks go, this is a pretty clean clever way of doing it.” (Odell, [23:39])
This approach can be cloned or adapted worldwide: Similar systems could arise in Kenya (with M-Pesa), Ghana, Argentina, or anywhere QR-based retail payment is standard ([28:07]).
Volume has grown from $10–15K/month (hundreds of tx) to ~$200,000/month and 5,000 transactions/month ([36:00], [37:07]).
Typical/median transaction size: $18 (mostly smaller daily purchases, some larger for utilities) ([37:07]).
Key drivers: Bitcoin “circular economies” in disadvantaged communities (e.g., Bitcoin Ekasi in Mossel Bay), where earners have bitcoin as their primary spendable asset ([33:20]-[36:00], [39:39]).
Uptake is strongest at both the bottom (people who earn/spend only bitcoin) and top (early OGs, net worth mostly in BTC, or ideologically motivated spenders) ends of the spectrum ([39:39]-[42:29]).
“If all you have is bitcoin, you’re strongly incentivized to go out and seek merchants that will accept your bitcoin because that’s all that you have to spend.” (Carol, [40:54])
South Africa has capital gains tax, but annual exclusion (first $2,500 in gains is tax-free). For lower earners and everyday spend, this often covers typical usage ([43:43]).
Carol asserts cap gains tax is not the main bottleneck—spending BTC is more a matter of mindset and adoption.
“If you’re paying cap gains, then you’re already winning.” (Carol, [45:54])
Odell: Believes cap gains is a “savings tax” but not why Americans aren’t spending bitcoin at scale ([46:02]).
Carol warns: The world will “silo bitcoin” if most people only treat it as a store of value. Usage as actual money is essential while the window remains open ([55:31], [57:46]).
“If people engage with Bitcoin as only a store of value, the system will silo it... if that’s all we do, we’ll end up with something that isn’t even half as useful as it can be, and end up with a world that’s less free than it should be.” (Carol, [57:31])
On Pragmatism over Perfection:
“A lot of people...there’s always theoretically, oh, this better option or perfect option or something. And what I love about what you’ve done is it’s pragmatic. It’s just like, okay, these are the tools we have today. Meet the merchant where they’re at.” (Odell, [12:39])
On “Hacking” Lightning Addresses:
“It’s a bit hacky, but the most useful tools in Bitcoin are a bit hacky.” (Odell, [23:39])
"I know it’s a cowboy thing, but at the end of the day...we now have, I think, something like five lighting wallets that can scan and pay South African stores natively. You don’t have to install the Money Badger application." (Carol, [22:54])
On Who Spends Bitcoin:
“You hold onto that for dear life...then you get these guys in [Bitcoin] Ikasi, they’re surf coaches but they don’t have any capital, so they...earn bitcoin. So...that’s all they have to spend—the equation flips on its head.” (Carol, [39:54])
On Creating Real Change:
“If nobody’s spending it, there’s no demand for acceptance and the circle doesn’t grow.” (Carol, [69:37])
On Innovation for Global Expansion:
“My expectation is...this code path in the wallets...will expand to more and more providers...If you have the bridge and mappings...suddenly you can spend anywhere in Kenya.” (Carol, [28:07])
Carol on the need for urgency and ambition:
“For me, this isn’t about...vanity’s sake. We need...to create a narrative...that bitcoin is money, because most people don’t believe that. If we don’t spend it today...it might not be possible to create it in the future.” ([57:31])
Odell’s closing praise:
“You should be quite proud of what you’ve accomplished so far. And I do think it’s early days...just got to keep grinding it out.” ([55:11])
Carol’s Challenge:
"If you are not spending bitcoin, then you're actually short bitcoin because it means that you have fiat to spend...if you care about [bitcoin money for freedom], you really should consider the effort of spending bitcoin. Because what you’re doing is you’re creating demand for acceptance." ([69:28])
Odell’s Reflection:
“Lower your time preference...all of our hair [is] gray, [that’s] the real reason they call it hard money.” ([70:44])
This summary covers the most vital and nuanced points, mixing practical details with the episode’s “high signal” philosophy and maintaining the conversational, collegial energy of Odell and Carol’s discussion.