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Free Bitcoin

Free Bitcoin
more bitcoins here....

Saturday, December 19, 2015

How to Create Bitcoin Wallet?

How to Create Bitcoin Wallet?

How ‪#‎Nerdy‬ are You? This Signs you are definitely a ‪#‎Geek‬.


***What is Bitcoin?Bitcoin is a peer-to-peer payment system introduced as open source software in 2009. The digital...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Sunday, November 22, 2015

#Throwback....Simple short video clip:- (the monitoring process with Mining Speed approx of 4116.0 h/s and...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Sunday, November 22, 2015

Part3:Simple short video clip:- the Mining Speed approx of h/s...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Sunday, November 22, 2015

proxy mining configuration for rigs.....base on php by Bitcoins Philippines

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Tuesday, December 8, 2015

The Sample of hashing1 workers only.. grabe ang bilis diba , kumpara sa 3 workers na nilagay ko na medyo mabagal ng...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Thursday, December 17, 2015

acutally nakakatamad po talaga ang maging bitcoin miner...kasi wala ka ng ibang gagawin, kundi pagmasdan na lang...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Thursday, December 17, 2015

hello goodmorning everyone, this is pinoyunknown...today is December 18 2015... i just want to share my simple video...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Thursday, December 17, 2015

by: AsianCryptonist (PinoyUnknown) | PinoyDev | ScriptsAndCodes

Thursday, September 17, 2015

SparkProfits Pics (Jenny)

#What_is_Spark_Profit?What is Spark Profit?Spark Profit aims to be the world's most rewarding app! It teaches you how...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Thursday, September 17, 2015

The easiest, cheapest, and best cloud mining solution. Start with as little as $10 using PayPal and choose between any cryptocurrency including Bitcoin, Litecoin, Peercoin, Namecoin, Feathercoin, Dogecoin, NautilusCoin, and Vertcoin. /and other Cryptocurrencies.

Click to Join

About the author
  
 Technical Writer at #BitcoinsPhilippines, ScriptsAndCodes. Social Media Publisher and Gadgets Lover. AsianCryptonist, Web-Developer & Designer, Application Dev., Speaker, Cyber Security Expert and Article Writer. __ :)





Bitcoin Cloud Mining #Eobot



Sunday, September 6, 2015

What is Sparkprofit?

What is Spark Profit?

Spark Profit aims to be the world's most rewarding app! It teaches you how to profitably trade on the financial markets, and pays you cash rewards when you do well.


Discover your hidden talents

Virtual trades, real profits! Make predictions to build up your score and receive weekly rewards.
Top players earn $50 or more per month, with no investment and no risk of loss.
   

What is SpartProfit?

Spark Profit aims to be the world's most rewarding app! It teaches you how to profitably trade on the financial markets, and pays you cash rewards when you do well.


How do I earn money?

There are two ways to earn money: predict well or invite friends.
You can do both at the same time.
Before you can earn money you will need to register your email and phone number (Why?).

How do I get started?

PC and Macs: just go direct to the Spark Profit web application.
(You might want to bookmark it!)

Apple phones and tabletsdownload it from the Apple App Store.

Android phones and tabletsdownload it from the Google Play Store.

Others: If you are on a mobile device but cannot use the links above, try the Spark Profit web application. It will actually work fine for most devices direct in your mobile browser. Then you can you the "Add to Homescreen" link from your browser's menu to get a better fullscreen experience.



click to start #SparkProfit



Bitcoin Cloud Mining #Eobot



Friday, September 4, 2015

What is the Eobot? ---[Bitcoin Cloud Mining]


Earn Bitcoins Per Seconds with 100% Trusted Cloud Mining.click to join! http://bit.ly/EobotBitcoinCloudMining

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Friday, September 4, 2015
The easiest, cheapest, and best cloud mining solution. Start with as little as $10 using PayPal and choose between any cryptocurrency including Bitcoin, Litecoin, Peercoin, Namecoin, Feathercoin, Dogecoin, NautilusCoin, and Vertcoin. /and other Cryptocurrencies.

Click to Join

About the author
  
 Technical Writer at #BitcoinsPhilippines, ScriptsAndCodes. Social Media Publisher and Gadgets Lover. AsianCryptonist, Web-Developer & Designer, Application Dev., Speaker, Cyber Security Expert and Article Writer. __ :)


Monday, August 24, 2015

Cryptography?

cryp·tog·ra·phy


kripˈtäɡrəfē/


noun

noun: cryptography
the art of writing or solving codes.




History of cryptography

Cryptography, the use of codes and ciphers to protect secrets, began thousands of years ago. Until recent decades, it has been the story of what might be called classic cryptography — that is, of methods of encryption that use pen and paper, or perhaps simple mechanical aids. In the early 20th century, the invention of complex mechanical and electromechanical machines, such as the Enigma rotor machine, provided more sophisticated and efficient means of encryption; and the subsequent introduction of electronics and computing has allowed elaborate schemes of still greater complexity, most of which are entirely unsuited to pen and paper. The development of cryptography has been paralleled by the development of cryptanalysis — the "breaking" of codes and ciphers. The discovery and application, early on, of frequency analysis to the reading of encrypted communications has, on occasion, altered the course of history. Thus the Zimmermann Telegram triggered the United States' entry into World War I; and Allied reading of Nazi Germany's ciphers shortened World War II, in some evaluations by as much as two years. Until the 1970s, secure cryptography was largely the preserve of governments. Two events have since brought it squarely into the public domain: the creation of a public encryption standard (DES), and the invention of public-key cryptography.

Cryptography?cryp·tog·ra·phykripˈtäɡrəfē/nounnoun: cryptographyCryptography or cryptology; from Greek κρυπτός...

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Monday, August 24, 2015

Ikaw, ano ang kuwento ng Buhay Media mo? Anong klase ka?Imagine If We Lived Our Facebook Activities Literally In Our Real Lives...visit (Y) Like & Share <3via Letussharethisstory II

Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Saturday, August 29, 2015

Monday, August 17, 2015

Meralco Says: They are now Accepting Bitcoins...

Time to pay for your Meralco bill? Good news! You can now do it using your Coins.ph wallet.


Time to pay for your Meralco bill?


Good news! You can now do it using your Coins.ph wallet.
  • Here’s how you can pay your Meralco bills using bitcoins:

  • 1. On the Bills Payment page, select the Bill Type and Company Name.

  • 2. Input the 11-digit ATM / Phone Reference no., Subscriber’s Name together with the exact amount as indicated in your Meralco bill.

  • 3. Click on “Pay Bill”. Done!

  • Ready to pay? You can do it here.


    Tip: Send your payments 3 to 5 days before the due date to make sure that your bill payments are processed on time. Need help? Send us an email at support@coins.ph.

    Set up your two-step verification

    Make your Coins.ph account extra secure with two-step verification

    We’re turning on two-step verification via SMS, which will serve as an extra layer of protection for your Coins.ph account. All you need to do is make sure that you verify your phone number on Coins.ph. With two-step verification, you can enjoy greater convenience and peace of mind knowing that extra security for your account is just an SMS away.

    Not yet phone verified? Go to your Account’s Settings and verify your phone number.



    CoinsPh: http://bit.ly/CoinsPh www.bitcoinsphilippines.blogspot.com

    [HOW TO]Set up your two-step verification!#coinsph turning two-step #verification (#tfa) via #SMS, for more...

    Posted by Computer and Android Tips&Tricks -InformationTechnology #DeepWeb on Monday, August 17, 2015
    #coinsph #two-step verification #2fa security #mobile #app #wallet #bitcoin philippines #sms #moneytransfer #sendmoney #buy #load #buyload

    BENCH/ is now accepting Bitcoin as a payment options...

    CoinsPh: http://bit.ly/CoinsPh
    Online payments

    Bench

    is one of the largest fashion brands in the Philippines, with clothing, bags, accessories, footwear and fragrances. It added a bitcoin payment option on their e-commerce site, utilizing Coins.ph as the cash-in and cash-out option for customers.
    CoinsPh: http://bit.ly/CoinsPh

    [Must Read This]#Bench says: BENCH/ is now accepting #Bitcoin as a payment option for their online...

    Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Monday, August 17, 2015

    [Must Read This]BENCH/ is now accepting Bitcoin as a payment option for their online store. Perfect for the...

    Posted by Computer and Android Tips&Tricks -InformationTechnology #DeepWeb on Monday, August 17, 2015
    CoinsPh: http://bit.ly/CoinsPh
    www.bitcoinsphilippines.blogspot.com

    bench store

    Sunday, August 9, 2015

    Getting Started (Bitcoin Mining)

    1. Understand how mining works. If you are new to mining, read our Beginner's Guide.


    2. Create a pool account. Register here.


    3. Configure your miners. Connect your miners to the server(s) closest to you (most mining software allows you to specify more than one server for failover):


  • stratum+tcp://[sites name here ] + [port example :3333] (London, UK)

  • stratum+tcp://[sites name here ] + [port example :3333] (New York, USA)

  • stratum+tcp://[sites name here ] + [port example :3333] (San Francisco, USA)

  • stratum+tcp://[sites name here ] + [port example :3333] (Tor hidden service)


  • If you are behind a firewall, you can also access Stratum on port 8080. For example, miners in East Asia should connect to us2.(sites here).
    The default credentials are:

    Username: scriptandcodes.19


    Password: passwoed example


    video example:

    #Part1The #Algorithm #Scrypts #Program#Cryptography#ScriptsAndCodes

    Posted by Peralta Sadiasa on Saturday, May 2, 2015

    If you want, you can create additional workers on your account page, with names and passwords of your choice. Both the username and the password are case-sensitive. Never use your account password for any of your workers.
    4. Create a Litecoin address. Download a Litecoin client from the official website. After starting Litecoin-Qt, click on the “Receive” tab and copy your address, then paste it on your account page so that you can receive payments. If you use Electrum-LTC (recommended), you can use any of the addresses shown in the “Addresses” tab.
    Share Difficulty
    The pool automatically serves work of optimal difficulty by estimating the speed of your miners and applying gradual adjustments to the share target. It may take a couple minutes for the difficulty to stabilize. Share difficulty changes do not influence your expected earnings.
    If desired, the default adaptive mechanism can be overridden by appending “,d=N” to the worker's password (in your miner's configuration, not on the website). For example, if a worker's password is “foo”, connecting with password “foo,d=64” will ask for share difficulty 64. Keep in mind that difficulty can only be set on a per-connection basis, so if you connect multiple workers via a proxy they will all share the same difficulty (this is a limitation of the standard Stratum protocol). Moreover, the server may round or cap the difficulty you asked for in order to prevent denial-of-service attacks.
    Keep in mind that some ASIC devices may malfunction if you don't set an appropriate difficulty manually. Additionally, the pool also supports BFGminer's --request-diff option to manually set an initial share difficulty. This is especially useful for very fast miners.
    Mining Securely
    If your mining software supports Stratum over SSL/TLS, you can connect to port 3443 (instead of 3333) to obtain a secure encrypted connection. This makes it impossible for a man-in-the-middle attacker to send malicious spoofed requests to your miner. All our servers support this feature, including the Tor hidden service.

    Using a Proxy

    If you have many miners running within a local network, it is best to use the Stratum proxy for Litecoin mining.
    This proxy allows you to significantly reduce your bandwidth usage. The Python source is available here, and a binary for Windows here (note that this is not the same as Slush's proxy, as it is optimized for Litecoin).
    You start the proxy on one of your machines as follows:
  • mining_proxy -o [example sites here] -p 3333
  • Then you connect your miners to that machine on port 8332 with the usual pool worker username and password. For example, if the proxy is running on 192.168.1.123, you should connect your miners to http://192.168.1.123:8332 instead of directly to the pool.

    FAQ

    Would Litecoin mining be profitable for me?
    Short answer: not if you intend to use GPUs or CPUs, even if you don't pay for electricity.
    Long answer: it depends on many factors, including your hardware, the cost of electricity and the value you give to a litecoin. In practice, nowadays you can only make a profit by using ASIC (application-specific) hardware. Check out our mining profitability calculator.
    Can I use a Bitcoin ASIC miner to mine litecoins?

    No, it's not possible. Litecoin uses an entirely different and much more complex hashing algorithm (scrypt instead of SHA-256d). Can I use the same worker name and password for more than one physical miner? Yes, but if you use different workers it is easier to track your miners' performance.
    What is the share difficulty?

    The share difficulty is a number that gives an indication of how difficult it is to find a share. The lower this number, the more shares a miner will find at a given speed, and the lower their value. For this reason, the share difficulty does not affect miners' expected earnings.
    Why does the pool report more shares than my miner?

    This pool serves variable-difficulty work units, so when you solve a share the pool counts it with multiplicity, according to its difficulty. For example, if you solve a share that is four times as difficult as the baseline share, it gets counted as four shares.
    Why variable-difficulty (“vardiff”) shares?

    The technique of adapting the difficulty to each miner's hash rate allows the pool to measure workers' speed more precisely while keeping bandwidth usage optimal.
    How does share difficulty influence my earnings?

    Short answer: it doesn't.
    Long answer: a higher/lower share difficulty does not mean you will be earning more/less, because your expected earnings are independent of the share difficulty: they only depend on your hash rate and on the network difficulty. A higher share difficulty can only increase the variance, but not in a significant way.
    How is the value of a share (a.k.a. the PPS rate) computed?

    The standard PPS formula is used: BS × R / ND × (SD / 65536), where BS is the block subsidy (currently 50 LTC), R is the PPS ratio (currently 1), ND is the network difficulty, and SD is the share difficulty (expressed as a multiple of the minimum share difficulty, which is what cgminer displays).
    Is there a fee?

    No, even the nominal PPS fee was removed when merged mining was introduced.
    What is the PPS ratio?

    Short answer: the higher the PPS ratio, the more you earn.
    Long answer: a PPS ratio of 1 (or 100%) corresponds to the expected earnings of a Litecoin solo miner in an ideal world, without taking into account aspects such as orphaned blocks. (In practice, a Litecoin solo miner will always achieve a slightly lower ratio in the long run.) We say “expected” earnings because mining is a stochastic (random) process, and it is therefore impossible to know beforehand exactly how much a miner will earn in a given lapse of time.
    Thanks to merged mining, a technique that allows multiple #cryptocurrencies to be mined simultaneously, it is possible to achieve PPS ratios higher than 100%. This is unrelated to what profit-switching pools do, as in merged mining all chains are mined at the same time. For this reason, merged mining does not cause sudden difficulty spikes and does not harm any of the involved networks.
    How and when does the PPS ratio change?

    The PPS ratio depends on factors such as the current network difficulty and market price of merged-mined cryptocurrencies. Since these elements can be highly volatile, the ratio can change at any time.
    Do block finders get extra reward?

    No. That would go against one of the main goals of the PPS system, which is to minimize variance. It would also make miners who don't find blocks earn less, as the PPS rate would need to be adjusted downwards.
    We do list recently found blocks and their finders, but only for transparency purposes.
    I keep getting the message “Stratum requested work restart”.

    It is perfectly normal to get this message even 3-4 times per minute. It simply means that your miner is switching to a new work unit, because the previous one is no longer valid. Because of the stochastical nature of mining, frequent work updates (which are necessary for efficient merged mining) do not mean that your work goes wasted.
    I get the message “stale share detected, submitting as user requested”.

    That is also normal.
    I've just started mining and all my shares are being rejected, what's wrong?

    Make sure that your hardware and software support scrypt mining, and that they are configured correctly. Configuring a GPU for Litecoin mining requires particular attention; please refer to our configuration wizard to get an idea of what settings you need.
    My miner shows up as online, but with 0 speed. Is that normal?

    No, something is probably wrong in your configuration. See the above question.
    Why doesn't the hash rate reported by the pool match that reported by my miner?

    Because of how pooled mining works, the pool has no way of knowing your exact hash rate, so it can only estimate it based on how frequently you submit shares. After you start mining, it takes about 10 minutes for the estimates to become accurate. They will never be very precise, though; even if your miner's hash rate is steady, the pool estimate will keep fluctuating around the actual speed.
    The pool keeps reporting a much lower hash rate than cgminer. What's going on?

    If the estimate displayed on the site stays too low for more than 10 minutes, then you are almost certainly experiencing hardware errors.
    cgminer checks every solution generated by your hardware devices, and if one turns out to be incorrect because of hardware errors it (rightfully) doesn't even submit it. Since pools can only estimate your hash rate based on how many solutions you submit in a given amount of time, their estimate will be lower than your real raw hashrate. This raw hashrate, which is correctly displayed by cgminer, is, however, not meaningful if the solutions your card generates are wrong.
    You need to make sure that all (not just the top one) of the HW figures in cgminer are zero or next-to-zero; if that's not the case, you need to review your settings. Make sure you carefully read the documentation about scrypt mining provided with cgminer.
    What are stale shares?

    Servers provide each miner with some unique data that the miner must use to find a share. This data needs to be updated every time a new block appears on the Litecoin network, and that's why servers must promptly notify miners when they detect a new block. Every second you keep on mining for the old block is wasted, because that block has already been found. If a new block is found before a submitted share hits the server, the share is marked as “stale”, and yields no reward.
    Stale shares are caused by latency, which can happen at various levels.
    The most obvious cause is a high ping time to the server, which however shouldn't affect the stale rate by more than 0.5%.
    I'm getting more than 2% of stale shares, is this normal?

    No. On our Stratum servers, most miners achieve a stale rate well below 1%. If you're GPU mining, make sure the intensity parameter is not set too high on your miners. More generally, consider that anything that pushes your hardware too much can cause additional latency, which results in a higher rate of stale shares. Some software latency is sometimes unavoidable when GPU mining, but if your stale rate is above 2% then something probably needs to be fixed.

    Should I set the --no-submit-stale option in cgminer?


    No, you should not set that option. If you set it, your rewards may be lower.

    What is Stratum?


    Stratum is a network protocol for pooled mining, designed as a replacement for the now obsolete “getwork” protocol. It was originally proposed by Marek Palatinus (aka Slush), who also wrote a proxy for miners that could only understand the getwork protocol.
    Today most mining software supports the Stratum protocol natively, but the Stratum proxy is still useful for reducing network bandwidth usage on large installations.
    What is the “resume” extension to Stratum?

    It is an extension to the original Stratum mining protocol, jointly designed by Slush and ckolivas, the maintainer of cgminer. If your mining pool supports the extension and your Internet connection has a hiccup, the server may still accept any shares that your miners found while disconnected, if they reconnect and submit them within a reasonable time. As simple as this may sound, it is actually tricky to implement this feature correctly, because Stratum is not a stateless protocol.
    Why did my Google Authenticator codes suddenly stop working?

    It might be because the time on your Google Authenticator app is not synced correctly. To make sure that you have the correct time, go to the main menu on the Google Authenticator app, and select “Settings”, “Time correction for codes”, “Sync now”.
    What Android apps can I use to monitor my workers?

    To name a few: PoolWatch, CryptCoin Monitor, Coin Pool Monitor.
    What iPhone/iPad apps can I use to monitor my workers?

    You can check your workers with Miner Stats or Pool Monitor.
    Any Questions?

    If you need further assistance, please send an email to support scriptsandcodes@outlook.com During business hours (8 AM UK time to 5 PM US/Eastern time), most support requests are answered within minutes. Alternatively, you can contact Pooler in the #BitcoinsPhilippines channel on Freenode IRC, or ask on the forum.

    Wednesday, June 17, 2015

    10$ - 16$ Approximately Jenny Earnings thisWeek...

    The Differential: Bitlanders Review

    0.03 approximately... week


    1 week earnings of my friends


    How To Earn Bitcoins?


    Join HERE and Start!

    Join HEREand start!

    [Must Read This]#Bench says: BENCH/ is now accepting #Bitcoin as a payment option for their online...

    Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Monday, August 17, 2015
    CoinsPh: http://bit.ly/CoinsPh
    www.bitcoinsphilippines.blogspot.com

    Sunday, June 14, 2015

    DO THESE “FREE BITCOIN” SITES WORK?

    DO THESE “FREE BITCOIN” SITES WORK?Google the phrase “free bitcoin” and you won’t be disappointed with the number of...

    Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Sunday, June 14, 2015


    FREE BITCOINS HERE!


    freebitco.in
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    BITLANDERS: SOCIAL MEDIA THAT PAYS BITCOIN

    click to join

    what is #Bitlanders?#BitLanders, formerly known as the #Film #Annex, is a #social #media #site that pays its users in...

    Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Sunday, June 14, 2015

    BITLANDERS REVIEW: SOCIAL MEDIA THAT PAYS BITCOIN



    BITLANDERS

    The Film Annex was started in 2006 by Italian entrepreneur Francesco Rulli with the aims of providing film makers a site to promote their work and help fund their projects with a shared advertising model. This model would soon inspire Mahboob and Forough in 2012 when they founded the Women’s Annex to promote online and digital literacy for women and children in their area of Central Asia. It would be later that they would incorporate Bitcoin as their method of paying users because it would be able to provide a safe, quick and global way to send funds to users around the world.

    Social media that pays… but how?


    "Click hereto start!"

    BitLanders works by calculating your social engagement into a ‘BuzzScore.’ The BuzzScore is a competitive ranking from 0 to 100 that reflects your ability to involve users on your posts, blogs, videos, pictures, content, you name it. This takes into account how many people subscribe to your content, ‘buzz’ (which is like a facebook ‘like’) your content as well as comment. After your BuzzScore is calculated at the end of every day, you are given a certain amount of Bitcoin as reflected by your BuzzScore and the current Bitcoin price. This money comes from a shared advertisement model. (At the moment, BitLanders does not have any ads; they are anticipating returning to advertisements with a native advertisement model as well.)


    Now that I’ve gotten the basics out of the way, let’s review the site.

    Usability


    You can use BitLanders similarly to how you use Facebook, WordPress, Twitter and Tumblr making the site versatile and easy to use. There is a slight hitch – in order to keep the site fruitful to positive social media and creative content, the BitLanders team monitors what is posted so that it doesn’t land the site in hot water; It’s a good thing and a bad thing. Ultimately, because you have access to other social networking sites, BitLanders itself provides a unique experience aimed at the content creator.
    The site is slow, however. With more and more users joining, the site gets bogged down with requests and many times keeping the site from loading. The BitLanders team is working hard to address this issue, but being a centralized organization over the content being shared, it’s not always that easy.

    Usability: 3.5/5


    Content


    BitLanders has its own unique experience. Instead of a profile picture, you have an avatar that you can edit to reflect you physically, metaphorically, or in any way you want. Personally, I like that more than having to judge someone on profile picture alone. It removes the personal face from your content and makes the site much more content-based.
    Unlike Facebook, you’re not going to see a lot of angry political banter or inflammatory. Unlike Tumblr, you’re not going to see sexually explicit content. The closest platform I would compare it to is Twitter, given that BitLanders allows you post in 160 characters ‘microblogs,’ however you can post full blog posts which emulate Tumblr’s format. You can also post ‘Galleries’ which remind me of Facebook’s albums and you can upload your films which is pretty straight forward.

    Content 4/5


    Community


    There is a vibrant community of content creators here and they post a lot of great work – from stop-motion animation to updates on feature films; from experimental photography to personal thoughts. There is a lot to find and what’s even better is that they’re very diverse. It’s easy to find film makers and photographers, graphic designers and animators and many more from all areas of the world. I personally enjoy the videographers who show me artifacts and landmarks in countries I may never visit.
    However, because BitLanders has the appeal of paying Bitcoin as according to their buzz score, it has attracted a lot of people who just want the money, so they keep asking for unwarranted engagement to falsely push up their buzzscore. This tends to create a lot of clutter, but the BitLanders team is trying to comb through their users and find out which are just fake, empty accounts that don’t create any good content or post content that is not their own.
    If you choose who you subscribe to and you keep focused on content, you should have no problem in finding a great community to share with.

    Community: 4/5


    Revenue

    After about a month, I’ve accrued almost $35 in Bitcoin.


    Personally, I don’t see my experience with BitLanders as primarily a way to get money, but it is a great bonus. If you regularly post, it’s not uncommon to reach a medium buzzscore of 50, in which you’ll be paid about $1 a day in Bitcoin at that current trade value. Your revenue is paid in denominations of bitcoin, so when bitcoin rises in value, so too will your account’s revenue, but also will follow suit when bitcoin drops in value.
    At the moment, the BitLanders team has implemented a bonus system, where you’ll get +1 to your BuzzScore for every person who subscribes to you in that day, with a maximum of +10 for the day. You can get additional bonuses if you invite others to BitLanders.
    Here’s the rub, you have two options with your revenue: Either you can use your bitcoins in their on-site store to purchase a wide variety of gift cards from Amazon to Skype, or you must wait 75 days and have a balance of over .2 BTC in order to withdraw your bitcoins to an external wallet.
    Here’s an even bigger rub for US members – in order to stay away from any legal ground area, BitLanders require that before withdrawing Bitcoin, you submit your social security number or tax ID number as well as a mailing address. While I have seen a number of accounts located in the US, it just goes to show you how overbearing US regulation have become in their staunch stance against ‘money laundering’ and ‘trafficking.’ Once again, I wouldn’t focus social media on money alone. I enjoy BitLanders because I get to post my work, engage an international audience, and pick up a few bucks here and there, without those useless ‘get free bitcoin’ sites.

    Revenue: 3/5


    more on: #Bitlanders

    posted by: #AtlarepAsaidas #AsianCryptonist of #scriptsAndCodes


    source: CCN

    Thursday, June 11, 2015

    How to earn 10$ per day?

    Click and join here @CoinsPh

    What is Bitcoin?


    In non-technical language, Bitcoin is a digital currency in which transactions can be performed without the need for a credit card or central bank. It's designed to enable users to send money over the Internet in a very simple and efficient way.


    What is Bitcoin Address?


    A Bitcoin address is a unique identifier which allows you to receive Bitcoins. With PayPal you send funds to an email address, and similarly with Bitcoin you send funds to a Bitcoin address. For example, this is one of our Bitcoin addresses: 17YnaKEJ3uk8NWzgBTkjuRxscCMqc8nddg
    Please verify that you have copied the destination address exactly before sending Bitcoins to it. ("Bitcoin transactions are not reversible!")

    Who runs Bitcoin? What is the company behind Bitcoin?


    In short, no one runs Bitcoin. Bitcoin is run collectively by the users who uses the Bitcoin Client, and any changes to the Bitcoin system have to be approved by the majority of users before they are implemented.


    how to make money online...what is bitcoins?#latest_proofs ....earn 10$ to 13 everymorning!!!for all...

    Posted by Bitcoins Philippines on Thursday, June 11, 2015

    Join@CoinsPh

    click to claim your free 2000 Bits Here! --->

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    must visit http://bitcoinsphilippines.blogspot.com/ for more details! Like & Share #BitcoinsPhilippines #PhilippiNews #FutureTech #PinoyTechNews

    Monday, June 8, 2015

    What is Bitcoin? (v1)

    Last updated: 17th June 2015

    by: Peralta Sadiasa

    How to Get Bitcoins ?

    First step:

  • join and claim your free bitcoins here...
  • or join and register here at CoinsPh to create your First Bitcoin Wallet…
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    ———–> Create your Bitcoin Wallet here!

    http://letussharethisstory.tumblr.com/post/121010303963/what-is-bitcoin-v1


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    What is Bitcoins? ---Beginners Guide...

    http://letussharethisstory.tumblr.com/post/121009041688/free-bits-you-can-convert-to-load-and-more



    Join and Claim your free Bitcoin here!

    Sunday, June 7, 2015

    Who is Satoshi Nakamoto?

    Last updated: 17th June 2015, by: Peralta Sadiasa

    Who is Satoshi Nakamoto?


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    While we may not know who he (or she) was, we know what he did. He was the inventor of the bitcoin protocol, publishing a paper via the Cryptography Mailing List in November 2008.
    He then released the first version of the bitcoin software client in 2009, and participated with others on the project via mailing lists, until he finally began to fade from the community toward the end of 2010.
    He worked with people on the open-source team, but took care never to reveal anything personal about himself, and the last anyone heard from him was in the spring of 2011, when he said that he had “moved on to other things”.

    But he was Japanese, right?


    Best not to judge a book by its cover.Or in fact, maybe we should. “Satoshi” means "clear thinking, quick witted; wise". “Naka” can mean “medium, inside, or relationship”. “Moto” can mean “origin”, or “foundation”.
    Those things would all apply to the person who founded a movement by designing a clever algorithm. The problem, of course, is that each word has multiple possible meanings.
    We can’t know for sure whether he was Japanese or not. In fact, it’s rather presumptuous to assume that he was actually a ‘he’.
    We’re just using that as a figure of speech, but allowing for the fact that this could have been a pseudonym, ‘he’ could have been a ‘she’, or even a ‘they’.
    Does anyone know who Nakamoto was?
    No, but the detective techniques that people use when guessing are sometimes even more intriguing than the answer. The New Yorker’s Joshua Davis believed that Satoshi Nakamoto was Michael Clear, a graduate cryptography student at Dublin's Trinity College.
    He arrived at this conclusion by analyzing 80,000 words of Nakamoto’s online writings, and searching for linguistic clues. He also suspected Finnish economic sociologist and former games developer Vili Lehdonvirta. Both have denied being bitcoin’s inventor. Michael Clear publicly denied being Satoshi at the 2013 Web Summit.
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    Adam Penenberg at FastCompany disputed that claim, arguing instead that Nakamoto may actually have been three people: Neal King, Vladimir Oksman, and Charles Bry. He figured this out by typing unique phrases from Nakamoto’s bitcoin paper into Google, to see if they were used anywhere else.
    One of them, "computationally impractical to reverse," turned up in a patent application made by these three for updating and distributing encryption keys. The bitcoin.org domain name originally used by Satoshi to publish the paper had been registered three days after the patent application was filed.
    It was registered in Finland, and one of the patent authors had traveled there six months before the domain was registered. All of them deny it. Michael Clear also publicly denied being Satoshi at the 2013 Web Summit.
    In any case, when bitcoin.org was registered on August 18th 2008, the registrant actually used a Japanese anonymous registration service, and hosted it using a Japanese ISP. The registration for the site was only transferred to Finland on May 18th 2011, which weakens the Finland theory somewhat.