Swiss Town Accepts Bitcoin for Public Services
A town in Switzerland has begun to accept Bitcoin payments for certain city services. The northern town of Zug decided to allow Bitcoin payments earlier this month for public services as a part of a trial run. The municipality services will be capped at 200 francs worth of Bitcoin, and include services like public utilities. The trial run will extend through the end of 2016, and is intended to assess the long-term economic viability of accepting cryptocurrency for public services. Zug part of “crypto valley”. The canton of Zug, where the town of Zug is located, is home to what is known as....
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The Swiss town council of the small municipality of Zug, Switzerland made the decision on May 3rd, 2016 to accept Bitcoin payments for dues and public utilities as part of a trial run on cryptocurrency acceptance. The small town is already known for its fast growing fintech operations, even being called “Crypto Valley” by some, with 15 fintech-oriented....
In the idyllic, sleepy town of Zug in Switzerland, a city council meeting today saw the authority decide to accept bitcoin as a valid payment for municipality services as a part of a pilot program. Already a burgeoning Fintech destination, the town of Zug in Switzerland (some call it Crypto Valley, with over 15 industry-relevant companies) is further endearing itself as the go-to destination for startups and companies in the bitcoin and blockchain industry by having its public set a welcoming example by adopting the cryptocurrency. In a report by local publication StadZug today, town mayor....
The Swiss town of Zug has decided to continue accepting bitcoin payments for municipality services following a pilot that launched in July 2016. First announced in May, the picturesque lakeside town of Zug, also known as “Crypto Valley” for its embracive approach to Fintech, revealed a pilot program wherein it allowed bitcoin payments from its public for city services. A payment of up to 200 Swiss francs ($195 USD) in bitcoin was to be allowed. The pilot launched on July 1 and was scheduled to last until the end of 2016. At its conclusion, the City Council was to decide if Bitcoin or other....
In an international first, the Swiss town of Zug in central Switzerland will begin accepting Bitcoin payments for government services on a trial basis, the international service of the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SwissInfo reports. Zug residents will be able to make payments of up to 200 Swiss francs ($205) using Bitcoin. Mayor Dolfi Mueller said that the Zug City Council wants to show its "openness to new technologies" and cater to local financial technology companies, BBC News reports. The Zug area is known as the "crypto-valley," as it hosts more than a dozen....
It was early May when the Swiss town of Zug convened a city council meeting. By the end of it, bitcoin was accepted as a valid mode of payment for municipality services, part of a pilot program. Fintech-friendly Zug, a picturesque and serene town on the banks of lake Zug made headlines in May after gaining the distinction of the first municipality or locality in the world to accept bitcoin. The cryptocurrency was accepted by the city council as a part of a pilot program, enabling adopters and users to pay for municipal services with the cryptocurrency. The considerable media coverage that....