It's all so absurd that if there wasn't some sort of photographic proof (as in the tweet below), we'd have dismissed this out of hand as a hoax. That said, the idea that a cynic would use the boxer's image to convince unwitting gamblers, flush with their slot machine winnings, to invest in a wildly risky and untested currency is pretty easy to imagine. As with Tyson, the ATM hasn't arrived without its own fair share of detractors, and CoinDesk has previously reported on accusations that the enterprise is a scam -- something that Bitcoin Direct boss Peter Klamka has refuted.

The first @MikeTyson bitcoin ATM announced July is just another @LamassuBTC was expecting more http://t.co/GA34r895UW pic.twitter.com/1GIqSvBrU6 — Coin ATM Radar (@CoinATMRadar) August 19, 2015 If you really want to go use it, CoinTelegraph has pegged the machine's location as on the promenade at the LINQ Hotel and Casino. We'd probably advise against it, since the machine is also charging 10 percent more than the current exchange rate for USD - BTC. Those Mike Tyson decals don't come cheap, kids.