pull down to refresh

In doing so, we are not just shaping the future of payments – we are reaffirming Europe as a place where innovation serves the public good, where resilience meets opportunity and where our shared currency continues to unite us in an increasingly challenging world.
This is the kind of word vomit the ECB comes up with after their intern got a ChatGPT+ subscription. #AIslop
This does not forebode well...
The digital euro is designed with three critical features in mind.
First, its infrastructure will be distributed across at least three regions, each equipped with multiple servers. So in the face of a cyberattack or one of many other hypothetical crisis scenarios, digital euro payments can continue – disruptions should not bring the system to a standstill.
Much decentralised, much wow.
Second, the ECB will provide a dedicated digital euro app, which will let you switch seamlessly between providers. This means you will be able to continue using your digital euro even if some providers are hit by an outage.
Right, coz apps never fail.
Third, the digital euro will also function offline, adding another layer of security and reliability. Even if the internet is down, ATMs are out of order or you have no phone signal, you will still be able to pay with digital euro.
Hmmmm....
102 sats \ 3 replies \ @teemupleb 21h
where our shared currency continues to unite us
Creates division to then ride the uniting kumbayaa narrative.
Third, the digital euro will also function offline, adding another layer of security and reliability. Even if the internet is down, ATMs are out of order or you have no phone signal, you will still be able to pay with digital euro.
Digital euro as a Chaumian e-cash mint?
reply
If they fully embraced Chaumian e-cash, this could be great. I would support CBDCs then (as a stepping stone to Bitcoin). But I see no evidence of the ECB having any respect for privacy in this process.
Chaumian e-cash can work if the sender is offline. If the receiver wants to avoid a double-spend, the reciever should be online. But if they trust each other, it can be fully offline.
reply
0 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby 20h
That offline bit caught my eye as well. I wonder what the plan is for that?
reply
10 sats \ 0 replies \ @fiatbad 16h
They're probably in the planning stage, where managers envision ridiculous requirements without consulting the engineering team, but can't wait to tell the marketing team about their "brilliant" idea. 😂
reply
The devil always comes first, full of good intentions. Once there is widespread adoption, the devil takes off the mask. It's always been this way, and this time won't be any different.
reply
We need more people and businesses using sats, so we can never need to use this shit.
reply
21 sats \ 4 replies \ @fiatbad 15h
This.
But it's kinda hard when the ones who have the Sats say stupid shit like "spend the weak money first", or "... but don't I have to pay taxes on this coffee purchase?", and other such government-simp, conformist comments.
reply
22 sats \ 1 reply \ @d01abcb3eb 12h
Well, you should spend the weak money first. But you should also refuse to accept it. So, in the end it'll work out.
reply
But you should also refuse to accept it
Yes. How many Bitcoin entrepreneurs and business owners are doing this? Not even the Bitcoin conferences are. It's fucking shameful.
(I'm not naive. I know it's a mountain of a task. But for fuck's sake, it's a moral imperative and it's the kind of hard thing that's worth doing.)
reply
The way I see is, buy sats always with your fiat then you can only spend sats and be forced to find ways and places to do so.
reply
If you can't find p2p sellers buy a miner then
reply
The question is whether latency, transaction integrity and coordination across regions will actually hold up under stress.
Offline payments are the real wildcard. In principle it is powerful. In practice ensuring transaction validity without connectivity is messy.
reply
These sound more like features you'd hear about 20 years ago
reply