Friday, April 29, 2016

Earn Bitcoins Through Advertisements.

How to Earn Bitcoins Through Advertisements on your Website.

Earn Bitcoins Free

Earn Bitcoins Through Advertisements on your Website.



Many of you having a site with good traffic always look for a advertising network that provides you some extra money or at least have stumbled across several sites that pay you to click on a number of ads each day for cash. While some of these can be cast aside as scams or ignored as their payouts are not lucrative enough, there is a new money-making opportunity online that may prove more profitable than it seems – Bitcoin advertising. In this article, we will show you how to earn bitcoins through advertisements on your website.

For those who know about Bitcoin or have read about it on a Cryptocurrency or Bitcoin News website, you are probably aware that the currency is volatile and may have chosen to stay clear of it. However between January 2015 and January 2016, the value of a single BTC (Bitcoin) has soared from $177 to $447! So just why could this be a money-making opportunity aside from the obvious answer of us telling you to blindly invest in it ... It’s simple – there are now several major networks that will pay you in BTC for advertising space on your site and just to click other adverts from registered BTC Advertisers. A simple search in Google for Bitcoin advertising will yield hundreds of trusted networks that are looking for users to help generate traffic or host banners for them and this is where you can make a fortune.

 Over 2015, imagine that you had earned $10,000 by hosting adverts on your website/s or by following number 6 on our students advice post and clicking thousands of web pages. Today that $10,000 will still be worth the same value, but if you had been paid out in Bitcoin and not spent it, it would now be worth over $25,000! That’s over 2.5x your return on investment for the exact same amount of work!

How to Earn Bitcoins by placing Advertisments on your Website 


 So if by reading this article so far you have been persuaded into starting a new website or changing yours to make some real money online and are open to taking a punt on an e-currency that, while unpredictable, could offer huge returns for you, here are a few site networks to check out.

 Moonbit. – snazzy site and has a referral site for secondary income when you tell your mates

Time For Bitcoin – Refer and receive commission.

 BitClix – High CPC offerings and daily payments, plus a 20% referral fee ... a great option

 Coinad – Niche websites with high Alexa rankings get accepted but great CPC rates

 Ads4BTC – Earn while you click exclusively in BTC and let your wallet build up over time

Hope this article may have help you in learning how to earn bitcoins through advertisements on your website. Bitcoins advertising can be a great alternative to Adssense because the payouts are remarkable.






Source: www.mybloggerlab.com

Monday, April 25, 2016

The Four Types of Bitcoin Users


The Four Types of Bitcoin Users

Dr Paul Ennis is a research assistant at The Centre for Innovation, Technology & Organization at University College Dublin, specializing in bitcoin and blockchain studies.
In this opinion piece, Dr Ennis discusses the wide range of bitcoin users and how their varying opinions on how the technology should develop is impacting network progress.
business, diversity
There are many assumptions about bitcoin users – that they are oddballs, fantasists, nerds, criminals, idealists and so on.
But what are they actually like?
Some of the assumptions listed above are technically true in some cases, but the reality is never as simple as that. Of course, one of the simplest, but nonetheless effective, means of ascertaining who uses bitcoin is to analyze Google Trends, as we find in Yelowitz and Wilson (2015).
Although an imperfect method, since "search query need not imply active participation", Yelowitz and Wilson identify four types of broad bitcoin users: computer programming enthusiasts, speculative investors, libertarians and criminals (2015, pg 1030).
This very much fits the "expected" profile of bitcoin users, and it also closely fits the results of a 2013 survey of 1,000 bitcoin users that found "the average user is a 32-year-old libertarian male".
(Full disclosure: I am a 32-year-old male, but not a libertarian as such).
From the perspective of these four types, the major reasons for bitcoin's appeal are:
  • For computer programmers, the rewards for mining
  • For speculators, the volatility
  • For the libertarians, the perceived lack of regulation
  • For criminals, the perceived anonymity.
Libertarians are well-represented in bitcoin's non-academic literature, with themes concerning the potential of the technology to alter the prevalent social and economic orders (eg Kelly, 2015; Casey and Vigna, 2015).
Books aimed at speculators, as one might expect, focus on bitcoin’s potential as an investment (Wilcox, 2014). Computer programmers enthusiasts are well-served by Swan (2015) and Antonopoulos (2015). The former is very blockchain-focused while the latter, true to form, is bitcoin-focused.

Criminal elements

Another prominent community, criminals came to be associated with bitcoin via the story of the Silk Road marketplace.
Silk Road was an online marketplace operating on what is known variously as the Dark Web, the Dark Net or, erroneously, the Deep Web. The latter covers all the parts of the web that search engines do not index, but the "dark" aspect refers to sites that feature user anonymity and are, by default, difficult to access. Unsurprisingly, these markets are popular among this subset (Bartlett, 2014).
In terms of scale, for the criminal vector, the classic study by Christin (2013) of Silk Road put the revenue numbers in an eight-month period in 2011–2012 to roughly $1.2m, with $92,000 going to the operators of the marketplace.
Now, the above description tends to relate to what one might term the generic bitcoin community, meaning they are the people who either mine, buy, trade or use bitcoin routinely (or are committed hoarders with an eye toward using it as a store of value).
Even if bitcoin is arguably not a currency, as some claim, it is treated as such by this community.

Different definitions

When it comes to trying to understand what bitcoin is, we often find that arguments center upon its status as a currency as understood in regulatory, financial or legal terms. Currency is one way to grasp bitcoin, albeit one related to questions about how the digital currency might come to fit into mainstream society.
Bitcoin users often seem conflicted on the issue. On the one hand, they want bitcoin to be different than what has come before, but they also, for various reasons, want to see more people using it.
This conflict helps explain why the community nearly split over the scaling debate, but from a different angle. Miners, for instance, were drawn to BIP 100 (introduced by developer Jeff Garzik) for a few technical reasons, but one social one is that it allows the miners to become active voters on the future of the Bitcoin Core reference client.
Some speculators support Bitcoin Classic because it means faster transactions that speak to this entrepreneurial spirit that wants bitcoin adoption to grow significantly faster.
Libertarians are caught somewhere in the middle. They don’t want the miners to become too centralized, but also seem tuned into the fact that the Bitcoin Core development community could be seen as a centralized structure, too.
They also might want wider adoption for ideological reasons, but also want to avoid a major screw-up in the form of a disastrous hard fork that could imperil the network's future.
Criminals will carry on as they always have, but are largely outside of the mainstream conversation at present.

Concluding remarks

Bitcoin users are, then, precisely what one would expect on paper: technically literate, politically plugged-in and economically motivated.
However, one must remember that just become someone is a libertarian, this does not translate into automatic sympathy to dark net criminals. Nor is there a clean path for the libertarian when it comes to decentralization: for the traditional technologically-focused decentralist this means disavowing large block-increases just to facilitate faster transactions.
To the more economically-minded, decentralization means no block limit at all, and thus wider adoption of bitcoin for commercial uses.
What the scaling debate has revealed is that there is no homogenous community of Bitcoin "types" per se, but rather various factions united under the umbrella term of decentralization.
Source Link: www.coindesk.com

Sunday, April 24, 2016

BITCOINS FUTURE CURRENCY

What is Bitcoins ?

A software developer called Satoshi Nakamoto proposed bitcoin, which was an electronic payment system based on mathematical proof. The idea was to produce a currency independent of any central authority, transferable electronically, more or less instantly, with very low transaction fees.


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Bitcoin uses peer-to-peer technology to operate with no central authority or banks; managing transactions and the issuing of bitcoins is carried out collectively by the network. Bitcoin is open-source; its design is public, nobody owns or controls Bitcoin and everyone can take part.


According to CNN MONEY:



How to Store Your Bitcoins.

Bitcoin wallets store the private keys that you need to access a bitcoin address and spend your funds. They come in different forms, designed for different types of device. You can even use paper storage to avoid having them on a computer at all. Of course, it is very important to secure and back up your bitcoin wallet.
Bitcoins are a modern equivalent of cash and, every day, another merchant starts accepting them as payment. We know how they are generated and how a bitcoin transaction works, but how are they stored? We store fiat cash in a physical wallet, and bitcoin works in a similar way, except it's normally digital.

Online wallets 

Coinbase, an integrated wallet/bitcoin exchange operates its online wallet worldwide. Users in the US and Europe can buy bitcoin through its exchange services.





Bitcoin faucets 

Bitcoins faucets are a reward system, in the form of a website or app, that dispenses rewards in the form of a satoshi, which is a hundredth of a millionth BTC, for visitors to claim in exchange for completing a captcha or task as described by the website like. moon bitcoin ,Time for bitcoin, CoinHD, epay , Free Bit co quick faucet ,bitcoin-freeninjafaucetMilionSatoshiFreeCryptoCoin,earn free bitcoins


Bitcoins and Forex.


Bitcoin has emerged as one of the hottest investments around. Now, as Bitcoin trading continues to evolve, it is also being linked up with another hot investment market, Forex, which involves the trading of currencies. While Bitcoin itself aims to be a currency, there are some important differences between Bitcoin trading and traditional Forex trading. Forex trading refers to the trading of currencies. In a globalized world, companies and organizations must be able to quickly exchange currencies in order to facilitate global operations and purchases. A large company like General Electric can have operations in literally dozens of countries. This means that General Electric must be able to quickly access various currencies in order to pay local staff and make purchases, among other things. The Forex market is the largest and most liquid investment market in the world. Most of the traders are large institutions, corporations, and governments who conduct trading to facilitate their various operations. Some investors, however, also trade in Forex with the goal of making money off of fluctuating exchange rates.