Medical Q&A platform Ask The Doctor files lawsuit against Shiba Inu, engages w...
The Canadian platform wants to expose the true identity of Shytoshi Kusama, who volunteers as project lead for the popular Shina Inu memecoin. Tuesdays can be boring, but an ongoing Twitter drama is captivating the attention of many blockchain enthusiasts. Ask The Doctor, a Canadian medical questions and answers website, announced that it would be suing Shytoshi Kusama, volunteer project lead of meme token Shiba Inu (SHIB), for alleged libel and will attempt to uncover his personal identity in court. Kusama immediately fired back, alleging that "it is illegal [for Ask The Doctor] to take....
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Online medical inquiry platform accepts Bitcoin to protect patient privacy and makes users comfortable when asking health-related questions. Ask The Doctor, a Canadian medical startup has officially announced that they are now accepting Bitcoin on their platform to pay for their services through BitPay. The main reason for this is to increase customer privacy using Bitcoin’s anonymity benefits that credit cards cannot offer. More privacy. The company’s goal is to allow users to have more confidence when asking questions that they do not wish anyone else to know or are embarrassing. The....
A doctor and former programmer is using bitcoin's revolutionary payment system as a new way to protect his patients' privacy. Earlier this year, Dr Paul Abramson's private practice, My Doctor Medical Group in San Francisco, began allowing patients to pay for their care with bitcoin. The decision has meant that people who want to keep their healthcare private can hide their medical payments from their bank. "Some patients wish to maintain extreme privacy regarding their medical care, and have identified that payment in bitcoin serves that end better than other methods," Abramson told....
Your avatar can now do the slack for you if you feel too weak to stand up and see a doctor. A medical facility in the metaverse is set to be launched in the United Arab Emirates in the coming months to enable patients to consult with physicians and get treatment using avatars. Healthcare company […]
Gem, a provider of enterprise blockchain development and operations tools, is entering Nashville’s booming health care sector. Micah Winkelspecht, the founder and CEO of Gem, said in a recent interview with Venture Nashville that the decision to increase the company's focus on health care was made after a six-month period of growing interest from the industry. Better Records for Better Care. Currently, most hospitals have closed bookkeeping, which prohibits information learned in one corner of the world to quickly be sent to another. It can also limit the speed that information one doctor....
Here's an interesting start-up that involves Bitcoin. A new start-up website dubbed CoinMD allows users to submit their questions to medical professionals for advice. If a user finds a response from the doctor useful, they can pay the service in Bitcoins. The site is still in beta, though, so it's anyone's guess as to how this payment model will evolve during further development of the site. CoinMD says their website is suitable for individuals without access to healthcare, those who are uninsured (take that, Obamacare), and those who really don't trust their primary practitioner and want....