An Australian company says it has produced one of bitcoinâs holy grails: a cashless ATM that allows users to buy bitcoins using a credit card, and sell bitcoins via a direct deposit to their bank account.
The first fully functional Diamond Circle ATM arrived from its manufacturer in Brisbane this week. Unlike competing ATMs and vending machines that rely on QR codes and cash, Diamond Circleâs solution is based on near-field communication (NFC) technology with paper receipt backups.
This unique approach is the brainchild of CEO Stephen Rowlison, a seasoned FinTech (financial technology) entrepreneur with 30 years of IT experience in Australia, Asia and the US. Before founding Diamond Circle, Rowlison was working on various projects developing NFC payment and loyalty card systems for retailers. He said:
âI was interested in NFC technology and payments, but just needed a unit of transfer. After learning about bitcoin, I figured I could combine the NFC chip with the ATM idea.â
He added: âWhat Iâve really done is just brought together two existing technologies: contactless NFC and BTC. QR code payments have been outlawed in China and have no inbuilt card security, which is why using contactless technology makes so much sense.â
Although Rowlison is exploring other NFC devices for his ATMs, he has decided to focus on a âwallet tagâ for now, which is a small disc that can be used as a pendant or keychain.
âItâs got the same smarts as banking technology except we mandated a Personal Identification Number for all tags that are registered online.â
Itâs the same contactless technology being deployed in some countries by Visaâs PayWave and Mastercardâs PayPass. Australiaâs point-of-sale debit card network EFTPOS, which uses PC compatible devices, has also begun using NFC chips.
This all means Diamond Circle will be in a dominant position to launch its second phase: POS integration that will enable retail merchants to accept payment in bitcoin using devices they already have.
The âwallet tagâ devices function as cold storage wallets that communicate with the cashless ATMs. Customers also have the option to print out paper receipts and use them with more traditional smartphone or desktop wallet clients. The paper receipt can also be used as a backup for wallet tag users.
Diamond Circle customers can use the NFC âwallet tagâ device with a number of smartphones to check bitcoin balances and broadcast their public address.
Diamond Circle provides customers a secure way to store and use bitcoins. The company does not provide online bitcoin wallets that are often susceptible to theft. Diamond Circle wallets and private keys are stored only on the wallet tag devices and paper receipt backups.
âEven if we get hacked, thereâs nothing to take,â Rowlison said.
Diamond Circle will save a fortune by not handling physical cash. Once a machine needs to handle paper (or in Australiaâs case, polymer) dollar bills it reduces the value proposition by increasing the costs of its production, materials and maintenance.
He insisted the technology itself was a lesser challenge, since it uses mostly off the shelf components that have already been tested in other payment systems.
âOnce we ironed out the problems of bitcoin, the value proposition for consumers and the entire supply chain becomes obvious. instant cheap international money transfer and payments.â
Often the bigger test faced by Diamond Circle and other bitcoin startups is learning to function within the regulatory environment. Rowlison said his focus has been on developing a compliant product with all KYC/AML regulations built in, meaning Diamond Circle ATMs are fully compliant.
This focus has helped the company form the necessary partnerships with banks and other financial institutions, though there has still been some resistance.
âIt hasnât been easy, weâve had two rejections from major banks,â Rowlison continued.
âThey just need to understand risks can be managed, itâs just a matter of getting that through to them. I donât see it as an âUs vs Themâ situation, bitcoin is just another currency, we can coexist. We need to figure out how we can cooperate.â
He said there had also been âa bit of pushback on locationsâ from larger shopping malls worried about the product being delivered. The company may need to prove its technology first in a smaller location, like the coffee shops and cafes that house bitcoin ATMs elsewhere, then move to larger centers.
The company is an âEnrolled Money Transmitter Businessâ and is run by a team with extensive C-Level experience in various fields of compliance in Australia and in the US.
Diamond Circle has received international interest in their ATMs already with queries from customers in in the UK, Canada, USA, Asia and the Middle East, and says it has already sold two of its ATMs within Australia and one to the UK.
The company is listed on cryptostocks.com under the ticker XDC, a direct pass through to their underlying shares, which helped them raise initial seed capital.
Images via Diamond Circle