You can send USDC to/from any wallet that implements it.
This is a benefit of the blockchain, a protocol for money.
Moreover there seems to be a misunderstanding, square cash allows you to instantly move money between bank accounts, via your bank, have at it, totally interoperable because dollars.
Same with Venmo, and PayPal, and everything else...
Venmo and PayPal are even owned by the same company. Have you ever asked why they're not interoperable?
The ACH system underneath links all US bank accounts, but it's so slow and burdensome that private companies need to build apps on top of it that abstract away all of its problems.
None of them work together because regulation makes the operation of money so difficult that you need an entire company to run such an app, and they're all walled gardens applying their own versions of KYC/AML.
When you have a unified protocol, all of that melts away and the opportunity for money to have a higher velocity and greater ease of use is upon us.
This is what blockchain, and in this case USD Coin based on it, provide.
It seems silly to me that such a system would not become popular. Interoperability and protocols are good. They are something HN is typically in love with.
When google tried to remove basic support for one protocol for contacts from Gmail, people were up in arms because it broke interoperability.
Imagine being in that world with money. I don't know why you wouldn't want it. It's superior by all measures.
And it would be silly for anyone in that world to create a wallet that didn't support such currencies. It would be like creating an email client that only lets you read email from other users of the same service. That's not email, that's just a private messaging platform.
I think you have to look towards the future and see how, if adopted, things like this would make money easier to use. Rallying against that is silly indeed.
I think the interoperability is nearly solved for the quick transfer world as well. Cross-border is solved through remittance schemes as mentioned up/down thread.
ACH is for cheap, remote batch transfers. Fedwire is for real-time, remote transfers. Cash is for cheap, real-time, in-person transfers. (FX exchanges, as centralized databases, are faster and safer than stablecoins.)
Hey wouldn’t you know it they support their own stablecoin, but not others...pretty sure that’s the type of centralization cryptocurrency/Blockchain was trying to avoid.
Then, you say that USDC is superior, because it cannot communicate with the other two.
I'm saying its superior because if adopted it would unite the two.