First Tesla Model S Purchased With Bitcoin

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
By Nelson Ireson | MotorAuthority

If you're not familiar with Bitcoin, you might want to change that. The electronic cryptocurrency is rapidly gaining acceptance around the globe, with many businesses--and even one university--accepting Bitcoins as readily as dollars. Now, a Tesla Model S has been purchased directly with Bitcoin.

The car, sold for an undisclosed sum of Bitcoin by Lamborghini Newport Beach in Costa Mesa, California, appears to have been a lightly used model, if only because it wasn't sold directly by Tesla Motors [NSDQ:TSLA].

Announced on the dealer's blog, the sale marks the first Bitcoin purchase for Lamborghini Newport Beach--but it won't likely be the last.

"Lamborghini Newport Beach is proud to announce that we are fully capable of accepting Bitcoin as legal tender for vehicles. We are excited to opening the door to this new currency," the company wrote on its blog.

Bitcoins are generated by "mining," wherein computers execute mathematical operations to find the coins through a distributed, decentralized network. Depending on the user's available computer power, it can take anywhere from minutes to months to generate a single Bitcoin.

Currently, the Bitcoin-U.S. dollar exchange rate is about $1,013 per Bitcoin. At that rate, a new Tesla Model S would cost about 70-100 Bitcoins.

Despite a recent spate of battery fires due to road debris strikes, and an ongoing NHTSA investigation, the Tesla Model S continues to generate a great deal of interest among new-car buyers, particularly those nearer the cutting edge of technology--so perhaps it's unsurprising the American-made electric car should be among the first known vehicles purchased directly with Bitcoin.
 

jazdoc

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Does Tesla accept tulip bulbs?
 

astrotoy

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Tesla doesn't even accept bitcoin. I was thinking the same thing when I read the headlines. A Lamborghini dealer did. And I know that actor who burned up in that fiery car crash wasn't in a Tesla - otherwise the name of the car would be in the headlines. BTW, it was a Porsche. When they catch fire, people can be incinerated.

Larry, still with my Tesla grin after 9 months in my Model S
 

FrantzM

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Apr 20, 2010
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Tesla doesn't even accept bitcoin. I was thinking the same thing when I read the headlines. A Lamborghini dealer did. And I know that actor who burned up in that fiery car crash wasn't in a Tesla - otherwise the name of the car would be in the headlines. BTW, it was a Porsche. When they catch fire, people can be incinerated.

Larry, still with my Tesla grin after 9 months in my Model S

I need to brush up on Bitcoin. Don't understand the concept .. yet.:b

Soon to join you. I love the Tesla concept
 

Orb

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Sep 8, 2010
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It is getting much harder to mine for bitcoins these days even with a very powerful computer (and combined with powerful 2+ GPUs).
A lot of network linked processing going on these days, so the more computational power from others that start , the less chance to mine a coin.

Lets see how safe it is if/when China decides it is bad for their economy/soveriegn debt they own.
Still not sure how bitcoin really has any value; ok all currencies can be debated about their "value" but in theory they are backed (yes only tenuously :) ) and at least one can easily swap between currencies or to-from gold.
Paranoid that I be :)
Cheers
Orb
 

astrotoy

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I think most of the buzz around bitcoins focuses on the speculation angle - buy some now and it will be worth more (or less) in the future. What I have read concerns the ability to use bitcoins to bypass the outrageous bank (and paypal) charges in converting currencies for transactions between countries. The bitcoins are used for a very short time, so the speculation angle is minimized. In my only experience in this type of transaction, I ended up using a currency broker who charged around 50 basis points over the interbank exchange rate, compared to 300 or more basis points for commercial banks (like my Citibank or B of A). It is more complex and did take a couple of days to complete. But the savings were substantial. My understanding is that with bitcoins the transaction costs are only a few basis points - maybe 1 point in a big transaction, and also very fast, making it very attractive.

To give a hi-fi example, you are buying 10 expensive power cords which cost US$500,000 from a person in another country who wants payment in their home currency. With the normal transaction fee, it would cost an addition $15,000 (300 basis points) for the cords. With bitcoin, it might cost an addition $50 or $100 (1 or 2 basis points).

Obviously, the big concerns are risk of fraud and stability of value in even short term transactions.

Larry
 

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