Burger King Now Has Its Own Cryptocurrency - the 'Whoppercoin' - in Russia (fortune.com) 63
An anonymous reader quotes Fortune:According to New York Magazine (via local Russian news reports), the Russian subdivision of Burger King has launched its own cryptocurrency, aptly called "Whoppercoin"... For each Whopper burger customers purchase, they'll receive one Whoppercoin in a special cryptocurrency wallet. While the coins' wider use is unclear, some reports suggest that the Whoppercoin will be accepted as payment at Burger Kings across Russia... Burger King has reportedly issued one billion Whoppercoin tokens to date on Waves Platform, though it is possible that there will be more to come.
Burger King Russia is now also reportedly accepting bitcoin as a form of payment.
Burger King Russia is now also reportedly accepting bitcoin as a form of payment.
What is a currency? (Score:1, Insightful)
If this is only good for buying from Burger King, is it really a currency? Isn't it more of an electronic coupon? Unless there's a wider usage for this, it seems to be a publicity stunt (like the OK, Google ads) and an incorrect use of the word 'currency.'
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Article doesn't say. At best it suggests maybe this "currency" will be redeemable at other Russian Burger Czars... Kings.
Suspiciously short article, suspiciously short on facts or even news. Hints maybe that Burger Putins might also accept bitcoin, but again, nothing said for sure. Stupid article.
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A czar is an emperor, not a king.
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A czar is an emperor, not a king.
I stand corrected, thank you. Burger Emperor. I want in, I think there's potential there.
Re: What is a currency? (Score:1)
Re: What is a currency? (Score:1)
Specifically, a czar is a title of a specific emperor - Caesar. The Slavic languages dont use that dipthing though so they simple made it seezar. Czar.
#truthiness
Re: What is a currency? (Score:2)
Otherwise they hold no more or less value than paper dollars outside of most people being willing to accept dollars. The ultimate value of a dollar is that governments require payment of taxes using them so everyone eventually needs some. Otherwise I am no more obligated to accept dollars for something in trade than I am to accept
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If you want to know why most coupons have that small print of being worth some tiny fraction of a
Re: What is a currency? (Score:1)
I think of 2 different currencies: a dollar bill circa 1888, and one Japanese ryo circa 1660.
The dollar bill could be exchanged for a quantity of gold. Does that not make it a coupon? The Japanese Ryo could be traded for 1 years rice for one person. At the time that amounted to about 270 L of rice. Being able to trade a currency for food is therefore not unprecedented.
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these are more like a gold (or other commodity-backed) currency than most government fiat currencies that exist.
Except these seem to be backed by saturated fat and sodium, which makes it odd that they were launched in Russia instead of the USA.
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if this is "currency", then so are loyalty points, frequent-flyer miles, etc, etc, and such.
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Exactly. The companies that run loyalty programs typically have rules against selling or exchanging such points with third parties, unless they allow it explicitly. If these points were a true currency, the issuer would not restrict their use.
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I wonder what the exchange rate for Woppercoin to Chuck E. Cheese tickets is?
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OTOH, if one can live only on Burger King's meals, it's real enough for a big portion of their expenses.
Anyone can live only on Burger King's meals . . . it's just a question of how long you'll live.
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That's irrelevant. Point is not having to starve to death. And avoid the fries, if one wants to avoid the fats.
Congrats, Burger King Russia! (Score:5, Insightful)
You just reinvented the coupon.
But I guess calling it a cryptocurrency is better for PR.
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You just reinvented the coupon. But I guess calling it a cryptocurrency is better for PR.
If it's one non-transferable whoppercoin discount per purchase, then yes. If you can buy/sell/transfer whoppercoins to other wallets and pay entirely in whoppercoins without restrictions, it's a quasi-currency.
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Kind of like Canadian Tire money, I believe?
Re: Congrats, Burger King Russia! (Score:1)
Or maybe Ricky's hash coins.
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How are coupons non-transferable. Here, take my coupon book. Presto, transfer complete!
since BK calls what they serve "food" (Score:4)
How does the proof-of-work aspect work? (Score:1)
So with Bitcoin there's the proof-of-work aspect that's done by wasting a huge amount of energy generating hashes. But what's the equivalent with this proprietary, custom blockchain? Does Burger King have computers spinning their wheels generating hashes?
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Well, if you use solar panels to power your mining rig, then you can earn SolarCoins [solarcoin.org] at the same time.
Commodity fetishism to the next level (Score:2)
Uncle Lenin will be proud
white paper (Score:3)
So, where's the white paper where we can read the technical details of this coin ? Or is just some nonsensical fluff piece with no other purpose than to promote Burger King ?
What about Italy? (Score:1)
In Italy they use woppocoins.
My computer is ready (Score:2)
Hey, pay me five bucks a day and I'll hash whatever the hell you want.
The important question is (Score:2)
Can we mine our whoppers at home?
In Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
economist (Score:2)
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This is why this won't work (Score:2)
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A brand new crypto with its own blockchain, yay. What's the golden rule of cryptocurrencies?
The value will rise and fall at random, albeit with rumors that Russian gangsters / George Soros / 4chan / The illuminati are manipulating it, there will be three or four incidences of someone stealing - reportedly - billions of dollars worth of them, destabilizing the whole system, and ultimately people will forget about them until years later a story surfaces (on slashdot, naturally) where someone has five hundred million Whoppercoins and they try to redeem them all at the same time, and people have a hea
stop inventing new names for practically unchnged (Score:2)
Stop inventing new names for practically unchanged old concepts. I am tired of this shit.
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That is *not* cyrptocurrency, if I am not wrong when I get a Bitcoin I can buy *anything* with it, everywhere.
You are wrong. You can't buy anything with it, everywhere. You can't even buy a Whopper with it.
Central banck (Score:2)