Peter Thiel, the notable entrepreneur and Silicon Valley venture capitalist who co-founded PayPal, has expressed his dissatisfaction with the current volume of bitcoin payments, saying a payment system to surround its technological base is “badly lacking”.
Thiel made the comments while participating in a Reddit AMA (ask-me-anything) earlier today, where several questioners asked his opinion on bitcoin and other digital currencies.
He responded:
“PayPal built a payment system but failed in its goal in creating a ‘new world currency’ (our slogan from back in 2000). Bitcoin seems to have created a new currency (at least on the level of speculation), but the payment system is badly lacking.”
“I will become more bullish on Bitcoin when I see the payment volume of Bitcoin really increase.”
Thiel did not respond to follow-up questions on the matter.
Given his anti-establishment political stance and past involvement with PayPal and hardcore libertarian projects like The Seasteading Institute, German-born Thiel has long been watched by the bitcoin community. As he noted himself, a key goal behind the original PayPal concept was to create an internet-based global currency.
His Founders Fund was also an early investor in BitPay, to the tune of $2m.
His views on bitcoin otherwise, however, have been lukewarm. While he appears to believe in its underlying principles, in 2013 he said bitcoin had a “20% chance of success”.
Just a couple of months later he appeared more optimistic, telling a conference that bitcoin and encrypted money systems had the potential to change the world.
He said at the time:
“It is worth thinking about money as the bubble that never ends. There is this sort of potential that bitcoin could become this new phenomenon.”
He also noted that many of the arguments against bitcoin, including that its value was fake or the result of a bubble, also applied to the world’s fiat currencies including the US dollar.
Image via Fortune Live Media / Flickr
Peter Thiel
Original author: Jon Southurst