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An El Salvador taxi driver used Bitcoin (BTC) to help him create a car rental company and spread awareness of the coin’s credentials as a payment tool.
Per AFP (via Mileno), Napoleon Osorio (39) used BTC adoption to go from unemployment to running his own firm in three years.
El Salvador Taxi Driver’s BTC Success Story
Osorio told the news agency that he has 21 drivers working for his BitDriver taxi firm. He also said he has made enough profit from BTC price rises “to buy four rental vehicles.”
The business owner has also become something of a Bitcoin evangelist in the first nation to grant BTC legal tender status.
He claims that his firm is “the first taxi company” to accept BTC in El Salvador. He also claimed that his BTC success means he “no longer struggles” to pay for his teenage children’s education.
Osorio claimed that the American BTC advocate John Dennehy, founder of the NGO My First Bitcoin, “encouraged him to accept payment in the cryptocurrency.”
The BitDriver founder has since become affiliated with My First Bitcoin (known as Mi Primer Bitcoin in El Salvador).
This journey appears to have taken him to high places. Osorio recently updated his Instagram account with an image showing him sitting in a Salvadoran Presidential office.
The NGO is mainly active in El Salvador. It says that it carries out BTC “education drives.”
Caveats Aplenty
However, as is the case with many mainstream media articles focusing on Salvadoran Bitcoin adoption, the AFP report also carried no shortage of caveats.
The news agency quoted University Institute for Public Opinion Director Laura Andrade as saying:
“From the beginning […] it was clear that [Bitcoin adoption] was […] an ill-advised measure that the population rejected.”
The report’s author noted that “while Osorio has grown relatively wealthy with Bitcoin,” a study by the same body “showed that 88% of Salvadorans had yet to use it.”
Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, the architect of the nation’s BTC adoption plans, has claimed the government is holding around $400 million worth of Bitcoin in offline (cold) wallets.
“We offered Bitcoin as an option. And those who chose to use it have benefited from [Bitcoin price] rises.”
El Salvador President Nayib Bukele