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A Chinese Virtual Currency Challenges the Yuan

Radon360 writes "A Wall Street Journal article reports that China's fastest-rising currency isn't the yuan. It's the QQ coin — online play money created by marketers to sell such things as virtual flowers for instant-message buddies, cellphone ringtones and magical swords for online games. In recent weeks, the QQ coin's real-world value has risen as much as 70%. It's the most extreme case of a so-called virtual currency blurring the boundaries between the online and real worlds — and challenging legal limits. A Chinese Internet company called Tencent Holdings Ltd. designed the payment system in 2002 to allow its 233 million regular registered users to shop for treats in its virtual world. Virtual currencies are in use in many countries — but nowhere have they taken root more deeply than in China."

5 of 183 comments (clear)

  1. In a sense... by mycroft822 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Aren't all currencies virtual anyway? Does it matter that one can be printed on paper and one can't? I know there is more to it than just that, but as long as people deem it as valuable does it matter?

    1. Re:In a sense... by TerranFury · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sarcasm, I assume? Modern currencies generally are not backed by precious metals at all. And in history, things besides gold have been used: the UK's pound used to be backed by silver before it was backed by gold (before it stopped being backed by anything at all), and there were gold-vs-silver debates (the details of which I've forgotten) in American history too.

      Really, what's the significance of gold? What good would it do you or anyone else? Why does it have value? It's just mutual agreement and the faith that it has a value that gives it its value.

      I could even imagine some sort of public-key cryptographic scheme used to assign value to magic numbers... Think Cryptonomicon.

  2. Isn't all currency virtual? by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Currency is just an agreement on a medium to symbolize value. A coin or a bill is just a piece of paper or metal, just as bits on a server are equally mundane until someone agrees they mean something more.

    So, except for the legislative issues, is there really a fundamental difference?

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    .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
  3. Re:Aren't most currencies virtual these days? by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    THey're backed by the same thing everything, including gold, was backed by- the general population's willingness to accept it in trade. As long as I know people will take little bits of green paper, they continue to have value. Its no more silly than trading around little bits of yellow metal. Both are mutually agreed mediums of exchange.

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    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  4. Re:Nope! All currency is a commodity... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I am marooned on an island, I can eat bread. The money is useless. Cobalt is a commodity, how much use would that be marooned on an island?

    The intrinsic value of money is it's market value, which is why people get so confused over it's nature. It's still a commodity.

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