logo
Bitcoin's physical infrastructure is the industry's most overlooked asset

Bitcoin's physical infrastructure is the industry's most overlooked asset

Crypto Insight2 days ago

Opinion by: Scott Buchanan, chief operating officer of Bitcoin Depot
A new proposal to install Bitcoin ATMs in federal buildings highlights an important question: Can crypto truly go mainstream without a stronger physical presence? For years, the industry has focused on software and decentralization, but its reluctance to invest in real-world infrastructure is starting to show. Without physical access points, crypto risks becoming an exclusive, insiders-only system, rather than the open alternative it sets out to be.
Everyone loves to talk about decentralization. There's a good reason behind this. It defines the movement, shapes the technology, and supports the vision of a better financial system. While the industry focuses on code and algorithms, it lacks something basic. A decentralized system that exists only online is not genuinely decentralized. Physical infrastructure is the missing link
Bitcoin's physical infrastructure is the missing link. Without tools like ATMs, kiosks and access points at traditional retail locations, crypto remains out of reach for millions. Decentralization is not just about removing intermediaries. True decentralization requires expanding access. Without real-world touchpoints, even the most advanced network becomes limited to a closed circle of insiders.
For crypto to become mainstream, it must be easy to reach digitally and physically. That means showing up in places people already go and seamlessly integrating into people's lives. Many groups in the American population still rely on cash or don't have access to traditional banks. According to the latest Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation report, around 5.6 million American households don't have a bank or savings account. Bitcoin ATMs give these users access without needing an app, a bank account or a crash course in blockchain. Most crypto tools today assume a level of financial fluency and infrastructure that millions simply do not have. The result is a digital-only ecosystem that locks out newcomers and widens the divide between early adopters and everyone else. User-friendly screen in the right place
Physical infrastructure helps address this issue. A Bitcoin ATM in a grocery store or gas station is not just a convenience but a bridge to financial inclusion. It is an invitation to someone who has never bought crypto, telling them they can participate. No bank, no broker, just a user-friendly screen in a familiar place.
These machines also generate new economic activity. Local businesses benefit from increased foot traffic as the kiosks create passive revenue. For many communities, they provide access to a parallel financial system that was previously out of reach. This is a tangible example of crypto's real-world utility. It is already happening, and it is measurable. The crypto industry's blind spot
The industry often treats physical infrastructure like an afterthought. The obsession with building new digital solutions has created a blind spot. Innovation without usability builds systems that serve the few but exclude the many. If someone can buy Bitcoin at the same place they buy their morning coffee, that is when crypto stops feeling like an obscure digital asset and starts becoming part of everyday life.
As governments increase regulation, trusted and transparent interfaces will become more important. When operated within regulatory frameworks, Bitcoin ATMs offer a way to provide access between traditional finance and digital assets. They are familiar, easy to monitor and offer a more approachable entry point for the general public.
Like any financial tool, Bitcoin ATMs have drawn scrutiny, particularly in cases where bad actors use them. Rather than dismissing the machines themselves, we should focus on investing in better oversight, stronger consumer education and smarter regulation. The overwhelming majority of people who use Bitcoin ATMs do so for legitimate reasons: to send remittances, to move money securely or to access digital assets without traditional banking barriers. Building trust does not mean avoiding or dismantling physical access, but improving it.
The first time someone uses Bitcoin should not involve reading a white paper or navigating a tutorial. It should be as familiar as using an ATM or tapping a payment terminal. This is not an argument against innovation. Software and protocols will continue to evolve and play an important role. Physical infrastructure provides something those tools cannot: trust through presence. When people can see and use crypto in their neighborhood, at a store they already visit or in a format they already understand, it changes how they think about crypto and who it is for.
According to Coin ATM Radar, there are over 30,000 Bitcoin ATMs in the US. It's a meaningful start, but still only a small step toward widespread access.
Crypto's long-term success will depend not just on innovation but also on inclusion. That means building more than networks; it means building presence. When people can interact with crypto in the physical world, it stops being abstract and becomes usable. That is how digital finance becomes everyday finance.
Opinion by: Scott Buchanan, chief operating officer of Bitcoin Depot.
Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/bitcoin-physical-infrastructure

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Banks ‘very interested' in stablecoin use — Stripe exec
Banks ‘very interested' in stablecoin use — Stripe exec

Crypto Insight

time3 hours ago

  • Crypto Insight

Banks ‘very interested' in stablecoin use — Stripe exec

Payment giant Stripe has reportedly held early discussions with banks about potentially integrating stablecoins, signaling growing acceptance in global banking. After debuting stablecoin-based accounts in 100 countries in early May, Stripe has noticed significant interest in stablecoins — cryptocurrencies tied to fiat currencies like the US dollar — from global banks. 'In the conversations we have with them, they're very interested,' Stripe co-founder and president John Collison said in an interview with Bloomberg News on May 30. 'This is not something that banks are just kind of brushing away or treating as a fad. Banks are very interested in how they should be integrated with stablecoins into their product offerings as well,' he stated. Stablecoins will be a big part of future payments The growing interest by banks to integrate stablecoins comes from understanding that such cryptocurrencies offer significantly lower transaction costs for payments, including foreign exchange fees by banks. 'It's extremely expensive to do. It's very slow. It takes a matter of days,' Collison said. 'No one is happy with that equilibrium today. And so I think you will see those kind of profit pools come under attack.' On the other hand, stablecoins offer instant transactions with fees being significantly less than those of FX, Collison said, making a perfect case for payment use globally. 'A lot of our future payment volume is going to be in stablecoins,' Collison said. 'This is, for sure, a big part of our business on a go-forward basis,' he added. Stablecoins have already made an impact on traditional finance, beating volumes of Visa and Mastercard combined in 2024. Stablecoin growth requires green lights from regulators While showing interest in stablecoins, some jurisdictions like the United Kingdom might be falling behind in the race to attract stablecoin operators if they don't move faster with regulations, Collison said. 'You have companies that are being set up to serve this industry — if maybe there was a really good regulatory framework, they would choose to base here,' the Stripe exec said, adding: 'Without that certainty they go somewhere else. I think that's the risk that we need to be aware of.' Collison referred to the European Union's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation taking force in late 2024, while the UK Financial Conduct Authority is still seeking public feedback on new stablecoin rules as recently as May 28. The latest insights by Collison align with reports suggesting that banks in the United States have been seeking even clearer guidelines from the government clarifying what they can do in crypto. On the other hand, despite falling behind in terms of stablecoin regulation, the UK has seen the largest increase in new crypto owners in the past year, outpacing Europe, according to Gemini. Source:

SEC crypto staking guidance ‘major step forward' for US: Crypto Council
SEC crypto staking guidance ‘major step forward' for US: Crypto Council

Crypto Insight

time13 hours ago

  • Crypto Insight

SEC crypto staking guidance ‘major step forward' for US: Crypto Council

The US Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) new guidance on cryptocurrency staking is widely seen as a major win for the crypto industry and the push toward globally consistent digital asset regulation. In a May 29 statement, the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance said 'Protocol Staking Activities' such as cryptocurrencies staked in a proof-of-stake blockchain 'don't need to register with the Commission transactions under the Securities Act.' The agency's new guidance marks a 'major step forward' for the US cryptocurrency industry, said Alison Mangiero, head of staking policy at the Crypto Council for Innovation. 'The SEC has now recognized what we've long argued: Staking is a core part of how modern blockchains operate, not an investment contract,' she told Cointelegraph. 'That clarity is critical.' Crypto industry watchers have long advocated for clearer guidelines on staking. In April, the CCI's Proof of Stake Alliance project led a coalition of almost 30 organizations to submit a detailed letter to the SEC's Crypto Task Force, outlining that a non-custodial or custodial staking service provider is 'distinct from investment contracts.' 'The SEC has opened the door to more sensible regulation,' said Mangiero, adding that this is a 'win for stakers and the broader crypto community.' However, industry participants are still waiting for the approval of the first Ether staking ETFs. On May 21, the SEC delayed its decision on Bitwise's application to add staking to its Ether ETF, along with its decision on Grayscale's XRP ETF. SEC guidance marks 'notable shift' The SEC's new guidance marks a 'notable shift from previous enforcement-heavy approaches,' said Marcin Kazmierczak, co-founder and chief operations officer at blockchain oracle firm RedStone. 'This represents genuine progress toward regulatory clarity, but it's evolutionary rather than revolutionary,' he told Cointelegraph. 'The foundation is being laid for more comprehensive crypto regulation, with staking ETF approval becoming increasingly plausible by late 2025,' Kazmierczak added. The establishment of the SEC's dedicated Crypto Task Force on Jan. 21 marked another step away from the previous enforcement-heavy regime. The task force, headed by Commissioner Hester Peirce, is preparing to release its first report on regulations during the 'next few months,' SEC Chair Paul Atkins said in a May 20 hearing. The new guidance comes after years of efforts by CCI's Proof of Stake Alliance, which has been educating policymakers about the importance of cryptocurrency staking. 'We've consistently argued that protocol staking is not an investment activity — it's a core function of how modern blockchains operate,' said Mangiero, adding that the new SEC guidance is a meaningful progress toward 'recognizing that distinction.' Source:

US lawmakers introduce bipartisan regulatory framework for digital assets
US lawmakers introduce bipartisan regulatory framework for digital assets

Crypto Insight

timea day ago

  • Crypto Insight

US lawmakers introduce bipartisan regulatory framework for digital assets

US Representative French Hill has announced the introduction of the much-awaited market structure bill for digital assets. The 'Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025' or 'CLARITY Act of 2025' comes with support from lawmakers across both sides of the aisle, including three Democratic co-sponsors. The bill covers the roles of both the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) on digital assets oversight, seeking to resolve longstanding questions about which agency oversees which types of digital assets. 'I am proud to introduce the bipartisan CLARITY Act with my colleagues,' Hill said in a May 29 statement. 'Our bill brings long-overdue clarity to the digital asset ecosystem, prioritizes consumer protection and American innovation, and builds off our work in the 118th Congress.' Under the CLARITY Act, developers would be required to provide accurate and relevant disclosures detailing a project's operation, ownership, and structure. The bill also introduces new compliance requirements for customer-facing firms such as brokers and dealers, including clear disclosures to customers, segregation of customer assets from company funds, and mitigation of conflicts of interest through strict registration, transparency, and operational standards. In addition, the Act establishes 'comprehensive registration regimes' that would allow digital asset firms to legally serve customers in the US market. 'The CLARITY Act will deliver clear rules of the road that entrepreneurs, investors, and consumers deserve,' Representative Ritchie Torres said in a statement. The bill emerged from the House Committee on Financial Services. The committee had previously worked on the FIT21 Act, which passed out of the House of Representatives but stalled in the Senate. Hearings for a market structure bill started initially in April within the Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology, and Artificial Intelligence. Market structure, stablecoin bills points of emphasis for Congress Market structure and stablecoin bills have long been points of emphasis for Congress, which has sought to regulate the burgeoning crypto industry in the United States. Representative Ro Khanna said in March that Congress 'should be able to get' both a stablecoin bill and a market structure bill done this year. The stablecoin bill, known as the GENIUS Act, faces a full Senate vote after it passed a procedural vote earlier in May. The Trump administration has pushed for the passing of the GENIUS Act, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Crypto Czar David Sacks both advocating for it publicly. The bill initially lost key support in May from Democrats protesting against US President Donald Trump's crypto ties. Source:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store