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El Salvador’s bitcoin digital wallet beset by technical glitches – Metro US

El Salvador’s bitcoin digital wallet beset by technical glitches

FILE PHOTO: El Salvador use Bitcoin as legal tender, in
FILE PHOTO: El Salvador use Bitcoin as legal tender, in San Salvador

SAN SALVADOR (Reuters) – For a fourth day in a row technical glitches have beset the Salvadoran government’s bitcoin digital wallet Chivo, a setback that could discourage residents from signing up to the app promoted by President Nayib Bukele.

Problems accessing the wallet, withdrawing money from ATMs, and data verification, as well as the government not depositing the $30 bonus Bukele promised all Chivo users were the most frequent issues, according to interviews with at least 10 users and user complaints posted on Twitter and Facebook.

Melvin Vasquez, a 30-year-old tattoo artist, downloaded Chivo on Tuesday, when the bitcoin law went into effect, but has since been unable to use it.

“I want to see if I can buy something, but it won’t even let me enter,” Vasquez lamented, after trying to buy pizza at a restaurant on the outskirts of San Salvador. “They should have prepared more… It is not so convenient.”

User complaints were also stacking up in Apple’s App Store and Alphabet’s Google Play.

“I downloaded it and entered all my data. Now when I want to log in again, it doesn’t let me and it doesn’t recognize my pin or face ID. I don’t have other options. Truthfully, a really bad app!,” said one user.

Bukele stepped in https://www.reuters.com/technology/it-guy-in-chief-president-tries-fix-el-salvadors-bitcoin-woes-2021-09-08 on Wednesday to manage the fraught roll-out of the payments app that underpins El Salvador’s adoption of bitcoin as legal tender. Chivo, which promises commission-free transactions and his administration hopes will be adopted by the unbanked, has been disconnected several times to repair the glitches.

Bukele’s administration is aiming for 2.5 million Salvadorans, some 39% of the population, to download Chivo, named after a local word for ‘good.’ He has argued that bitcoin would allow Salvadorans to save on $400 million each year in commissions for remittances.

But many of the very people sending or receiving dollars to El Salvador are mistrustful of bitcoin. Some expressed fears of losing money, given the high volatility of the cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin has experienced daily trading moves of 10% or more 10 times this year, as it did both in 2020 and 2019, according to Refinitiv data. In 2018 and 2017, there were 17 days each year of 10% moves or more.

(Reporting by Nelson Renteria in San Salvador; Additional reporting by Diego Ore in Mexico City; Writing by Anthony Esposito; Editing by Rosalba O’Brien)