HACKER Q&A
📣 wruza

Remote jobs that pay USDT/etc.


I see some options in search results, but would like to know if anyone here works this way (either full time or freelancing), why, on which platform, and how this area compares to fiat jobs market.

Thanks!

(Disclosure: My interest is legal-based. I live in Russia with all the ensuing consequences.)


  👤 jokethrowaway Accepted Answer ✓
I have a friend who does on websites like dework.

It works fine, the only risk is that USDT is not actually dollars, you have no guarantees on the backing of the currency and it could collapse at any time.

I think it's fine as a way to get paid but personally I'd convert to safer havens immediately.

Best of luck!


👤 jbglenn
Employers should look into reserve.org. They use an RSV collateral-backed stable-coin and it's being adopted by hundreds of thousands of real-world non-crypto people and companies as a hedge to inflation, and is being used by their employers for payroll. Peter Thiel from PayPal is a founder. Venezuela is using it all over and other Latin American counties as well. Adoption is spreading and all these people finally have a viable hedge to inflation, which btw was announced at 9.1% today!!

👤 throwaway4good
Websites like freelancer.com used to have plenty of Russian freelancers.

I don't know if Russians now are barred from these sites?

If maybe there is space for a crypto-based alternative? Though as a hiring business I would need to be able to have my expense as a proper business expense.


👤 guilherme-puida
I know someone that works for a crypto company that pays in USDT. The pay is very good, and since we're not from the US it's easier than being paid in fiat currency.

I'm not able to compare whether is better or worse, though.


👤 rchaud
Out of interest, how is USDT converted into usable currency? Do you have to use USDT to buy some other cryptocoin, then convert back into fiat?