PayPal Files Patent for ‘Expedited Virtual Currency Transaction System’

On March 1, the electronic payments firm filed an application for an ‘Expedited Virtual Currency Transaction System’, according to a new report from CoinDesk.

The patent appears to be for a system in which private keys (strings of characters that represent ownership of cryptocurrency and allow crypto to be traded) are traded between buyer and seller in a secure and anonymous manner.

The apparent goal of PayPal’s system is to make transactions on a crypto network more efficient, making it so that transactions can happen ‘off-blockchain’; in other words, so that transactions can take place directly between secondary wallets belonging to a buyer and seller. These secondary wallets will have their own.

Instant Transactions, if All Goes as Planned

The official application for the patent explained that the proposed system will “practically eliminate the amount of time the payee must wait to be sure they will receive a virtual currency payment.”

It’s not yet clear when or how the system will be introduced to the, or which cryptocurrencies the system will be compatible with.

PayPal’s system is the latest development in a series of solutions to improve transaction speed on various crypto networks, including the, which aims to solve scalability on the blockchain.

It has been argued that scalability issues have negatively affected the price of Bitcoin over the past year, which is shown in the above chart.

PayPal: Bullish on Crypto

PayPal first got involved in the blockchain space in 2014, when it announced partnerships with three crypto payment processors–BitPay, GoCoin, and , which reported last year.

PayPal’s founder, , is also allegedly very heavily invested in Bitcoin by way of the so-called ‘Founders Fund’, a Silicon Valley-based venture capital firm that became well-known as one of Facebook’s major early investors.

In October 2017, Thiel said in an appearance on Fox Business Network that he believed the world was “underestimating [Bitcoin] especially because … it’s like a reserve form of money, it’s like gold, and it’s just a store of value. You don’t need to use it to make payments.”

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