Newsweek

The Swiss Town of Zug Has Become Known As Crypto Valley

The town of 30,000 has attracted entrepreneurs who have created cryptocurrency startups.
Dubbed "Crypto Valley," Zug, the tiny Swiss town with million-dollar Alpine views 20 miles south of Zurich, has become a worldwide hub for entrepreneurs working with digital currencies like bitcoin.
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In Zug, a tiny Swiss town 20 miles south of Zürich with million-dollar Alpine views, a small machine is doing big things. One of the 10 bitcoin ATMs installed across Switzerland by Zug-based Bitcoin Suisse, the machine accepts Swiss francs and euros in exchange for a slip of paper with a code that represents the equivalent amount in bitcoin. Scan the code with your smartphone, and the currency is yours.

The ATM isn’t really necessary. Bitcoin has no physical form. Instead, it is made up of lines of computer code conceived in 2009 by a coder working under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. For those who wish to purchase the digital currency but find the prospect of the transaction difficult to conceptualize without physical proof, the ATM provides a helpful bridge.

A bitcoin ATM might seem unconventional, but it makes sense in Zug. The town of 30,000 has persistently attracted entrepreneurs who specialize in digital

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