The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has reported a massive increase in losses to Bitcoin ATM scams, nearly ten times the amount from 2020 and reaching over $110 million in 2023.
Bitcoin ATMs are typically located in convenience stores, gas stations, and other busy areas, but instead of dispensing cash like the traditional ATMs they resemble, they allow you to buy and sell cryptocurrency.
It's kind of a pain to go through the process of signing up for a crypto exchange, so for some people it's probably a more convenient and less intrusive way to acquire it.
Yes and no, the user is still forced to transfer that immediately (with additional expensive fees) to their wallet as the paper receipt is printed on that thermal paper that deteriorates in a few days - not something you do for convenience, it's something you do for extreme urgency like need to pay hackers a ransomware decryption fee or other phone scammers
yes, but in that case you use your wallet or a crypto exchange, because the Bitcoin ATM fees (usually 15% + couple dollars fixed fee) negate this use case.
My mom needed $5 and then i send them by spending $5 in transaction fees and $5 in ATM fees.
For this use case you would save money with a western union or similar