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Bitcoin Goes Mainstream: Vegas Juice Bars to Kenyan Malls
Bitcoin is now accepted at Las Vegas stores and Nairobi malls. Cryptocurrency is becoming mainstream in the retail industry globally.
Small shops and restaurant chains are implementing cryptocurrency payments in Las Vegas Valley stores, which are accepting Bitcoin. This follows a recent Bitcoin ATM deployment in the Nairobi malls of Kenya.
Cane Juice Bar and Cafe in the southwest valley accepts Bitcoin. The store sells fresh, pressed sugar-cane juice and allows customers to use money, a payment card, or cryptocurrency to pay.
Tyler Peterson is the manager of the Rainbow store around Windmill. Eight months prior, the shop had added Bitcoin, and he says the shop is experiencing a rush of customer interest and foot traffic.
Bitcoin is gaining popularity among mainstream users, according to Peterson. Consumers are actively searching to find Bitcoin-accepting stores, and the company is attracting new customers through Bitcoin map directories.
How Simple QR Codes Transform Checkout
The processing of payments should be easy. Jeremy Querci suggests Bitcoin implementation at Sovereign, and the strategy works with enterprises ranging from medical practices to playplaces with children.
The QR-code works with any Bitcoin app, Querci explains. The checkout presents a plain QR code, and customers make purchases in a few seconds with their mobile wallets.
Peterson regards cryptocurrency as the future of payments. With the technology becoming less complex to operate, traders in various fields are embracing it.
In November, Square launched Bitcoin payments to merchants, providing access to about 4 million U.S. businesses to cryptocurrency. There will be no processing fees to participants until 2026.
The average traditional credit card fees are 2.5 to 3.5%. Bitcoin eliminates such expenses to traders, and consumers locate Bitcoin-supporting enterprises via specialized mapping services.
Kenya Sees ATM Boom Amid Regulatory Framework
In recent times, Bitcoin ATMs were installed in Nairobi malls in line with the new cryptocurrency law in Kenya. Kiosks of Bankless Bitcoin are now located in Two Rivers Mall and Westlands.
Capital FM Kenya featured an article stating that Bitcoin ATMs were introduced in Nairobi shopping malls only a few days after the new policies. The Virtual Assets Service Providers Act became effective on November 4, and the cash-to-crypto transaction is now standard in the mainstream retail environment.
The Central Bank and Capital Markets Authority of Kenya have made warnings. None of the virtual-asset providers has an official license so far, and regulators add that asserting an authorization is now unlawful.
The legislation establishes the detailed regulations of cryptocurrency enterprises. Payment and custody functions are overseen by the Central Bank of Kenya, and trading and investment by the Capital Markets Authority.
Before the installations in the malls, the use of Bitcoin in Kenya started. Cryptocurrency has been used in lower-income areas like Kibera as early as 2022, and Afrobit Africa has given out bitcoin to local trash collectors.
Soweto West now has approximately 200 Bitcoin users. The currency is accepted by small traders and taxi drivers on motorcycles, and the Lightning network enables local transactions to be made almost instantly.
The adoption of cryptocurrencies is widespread in various sectors of the economy. Retailers in Kenya and merchants in Las Vegas are already adopting digital payments, and regulation is continuously changing with the technology.