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181  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: Crave: NextGen on: February 02, 2018, 08:10:59 AM
It seems that I now with the newer CRAVE platform get fewer rewards as before.

With six masternodes on the old platform, I got between eight to twelve rewards a day.

Now on the PIVX platform, I get only three to four rewards with seven masternodes.

The total amount of masternodes between the versions didn't change much. Total 500-600 MNs on both versions.

I discovered the same effect on other PIVX clones as well. The same thing also occurred on the PIEX -> SEND coin swap.

182  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: Exchange KuCoin and KuCoin shares on: February 01, 2018, 02:01:35 PM
Price fell very much and has almost not recovered yet. And did not understand because of what - just a correction or KuCoin have some problems?

No, Kucoin has no problems, its the crypto market in general which is going down - also the price of Kucoin shares (KCS).
183  Other / Meta / Re: Plagiarism, "paraphrasing" and copy/paste on: February 01, 2018, 11:15:30 AM
Also found some:

------------------------------------- #1

User: Matrix3 https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1176049

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2817840.msg29371702#msg29371702

Initial coin offerings (ICOs) are a fairly unique part of the crypto market, as they allow people to buy in to newly-formed coins.
Experienced investors like to invest in these, rather than larger coins, because these coins are usually very cheap initially and have the potential to 1000x in value, whereas a larger coin may be limited to relative market cap.
Most coins have extremely low volume these coins are very llliquid, and may result in strange price behavior, such as when they oscillate between two very different prices.
Daneel is the personal assistant of tomorrow for the Crypto-Investors, powered by Watson ™ (IBM) and he can help you with a good selection of choices.

Archived post: http://archive.is/qOmgk

Original source 1st/2nd/3rd sentence: https://hackernoon.com/crypto-markets-oddities-whales-pumps-and-icos-5307fff92774
Quote
Initial coin offerings (ICOs) are a fairly unique part of the crypto market, as they allow people to buy in to newly-formed coins.
Quote
Experienced investors like to invest in these, rather than larger coins, because these coins are usually very cheap initially and have the potential to 1000x in value, whereas a larger coin may be limited to a 10x gain due to relative market cap.
Quote
Generally, these coins are very illiquid, and may result in strange price behavior, such as when they oscillate between two very different prices

------------------------------------- #2

User: reymartH https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1257052

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2678937.msg29348527#msg29348527

International regulation could be developed that significantly inhibits one's ability to exchange Bitcoins, or other, for local currencies. Essentially forcing the cryptocurrencies underground like a drug cartel thereby adding to de-legitimisation. The media alongside a covert multi-government effort could conduct several propaganda campaigns to sway public opinion that the cryptocurrencies are either a massive scam or somehow bad.

Archived post: http://archive.is/GJe1Z

Original: https://steemit.com/cryptocurrencies/@thehutchreport/10-ways-governments-could-stop-cryptocurrencies
Quote
International regulation could be developed that significantly inhibits one's ability to exchange Bitcoins, or other, for local currencies. Essentially forcing the cryptocurrencies underground like a drug cartel thereby adding to de-legitimisation.
Quote
The media alongside a covert multi-government effort could conduct several propaganda campaigns to sway public opinion that the cryptocurrencies are either a massive scam or somehow bad.

------------------------------------- #3
New one:
User:  H. Veron https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1452260

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2249486.msg29246069#msg29246069
Peculium is the first savings platform based on the blockchain technology. It is powered by the Artificial Intelligence engine AIEVE.

Peculium is lead by the French team of data scientists. It is registered under European law and is fully compliant with the legal requirements. Peculium is first ICO ever to allow fiat investments.

Original: https://steemit.com/peculium/@journey-of-life/peculium-celebrates-new-year-partners-up-with-cloudera
Quote
Peculium is the first savings platform based on the blockchain technology. It is powered by the Artificial Intelligence engine AIEVE.

Peculium is lead by the French team of data scientists. It is registered under European law and is fully compliant with the legal requirements. Peculium is first ICO ever to allow fiat investments.


---------------------------------- #4

User: Zyan mask https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1766720

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2678937.msg29371697#msg29371697
Short answer: no

Bitcoin is global, meaning one country shutting it down can’t kill it. With that said, japan shutting it down may actually do some damage because of how much volume transacts there.

China has banned it….multiple times. Russia banned it. Other countries have banned it. Yet here it is, at an all time high. It may or may not stay this high and more governments may try to regulate it, but at this stage Bitcoin simply won’t die - too many people have a lot of faith.

If you mean the US specifically, I think the people of the States are too demanding to let an asset like this be regulated to the ground. Regulation may cause some correcting, whipsawing and volatility, but I doubt it would be shut down. The government probably has more incentive than anyone else to keep bitcoin at a very high price. After all, the government runs around arresting hackers who generally have a sizeable holding of Bitcoin, or similar currencies. Go look at how much they nabbed from Dread Pirate Roberts from the Silk Road arrest(although this was in Bitcoins hayday and their sell timing wasn’t too great here).

If it does get regulated to the ground, smart money will just hop ship to more anonymous routes/exchanges and use a currency such as Monero.

The better question is can the government shutdown cryptocurrencies? Smiley

Archived post: http://archive.is/iqW9P

Original: https://www.quora.com/Can-the-government-shut-Bitcoin-down
Quote
Short answer: no

Bitcoin is global, meaning one country shutting it down can’t kill it. With that said, japan shutting it down may actually do some damage because of how much volume transacts there.

China has banned it….multiple times. Russia banned it. Other countries have banned it. Yet here it is, at an all time high. It may or may not stay this high and more governments may try to regulate it, but at this stage Bitcoin simply won’t die - too many people have a lot of faith.

---------------------------------- #5

User: elyfia0203 https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1769279

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2784720.msg29379677#msg29379677
Hacking and phishing attacks are among the biggest security threats to your cryptocurrencies, so you must set strong passwords for your wallets and all accounts that deal with cryptocurrencies.

Keep these tips in mind when setting up or using your bitcoin accounts:

Use different passwords for every account you use to limit any damage that can be done by hackers.
Use a unique email when opening accounts on each exchange and only use that email address for that specific exchange.
Enable two-factor authentication for your exchange accounts. This adds a software to your smartphone which adds extra security to your account. Without two-factor authentication, a hacker only needs your username and password to empty your balance.
Don’t store your wallets and passwords in the same place or an attacker can gain access to both your passwords and your wallet at the same time.
Never mention what exchange or wallet you use on social media or online forums. Any information you post online can be turned against you.
Maintain backups of your bitcoin wallets and recovery phrases to ensure your coins aren’t lost for good if something happens to your main device. External hard drives, USB sticks, and encrypted backup files can be used to secure your recovery options and programs like VeraCrypt can encrypt these sensitive files.

Archived post: http://archive.is/MGRjt

Original: https://blog.payza.com/bitcoin/protect-cryptocurrency-keep-bitcoin-altcoins-safe/
Quote
Keep these tips in mind when setting up or using your cryptocurrency accounts:

Use different passwords for every account you use to limit any damage that can be done by hackers.
Use a unique email when opening accounts on each exchange and only use that email address for that specific exchange.
Enable two-factor authentication for your exchange accounts. This adds a software to your smartphone which adds extra security to your account. Without two-factor authentication, a hacker only needs your username and password to empty your balance.
Don’t store your wallets and passwords in the same place or an attacker can gain access to both your passwords and your wallet at the same time.
Never mention what exchange or wallet you use on social media or online forums. Any information you post online can be turned against you.
Maintain backups of your cryptocurrency wallets and recovery phrases to ensure your coins aren’t lost for good if something happens to your main device. External hard drives, USB sticks, and encrypted backup files can be used to secure your recovery options and programs like VeraCrypt can encrypt these sensitive files.


---------------------------------- #6

User: Sadnu https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1084834

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2784720.msg29262265#msg29262265
There are many things you can do to protect your bitcoin. that's where the password is, your password is long and does not match your name so they have no clue to your password. Many people get into the habit of choosing the same password for all of their online accounts. This puts your Bitcoins at risk. Choose a strong password for your Bitcoin wallet. You can use software like 1password or Roboform to create and store your passwords for you – this way you will never use the same password twice ever again.

Archived post: http://archive.is/jLiBj

Original: https://99bitcoins.com/4-steps-keeping-bitcoins-safe/
Quote
Many people get into the habit of choosing the same password for all of their online accounts. This puts your Bitcoins at risk. Choose a strong password for your Bitcoin wallet. You can use software like 1password or Roboform to create and store your passwords for you – this way you will never use the same password twice ever again.

---------------------------------- #7

User: mcatee https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1766584

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2784720.msg29226090#msg29226090
Hacking and phishing attacks are among the biggest security threats to your cryptocurrencies, so you must set strong passwords for your wallets and all accounts that deal with cryptocurrencies.

Keep these tips in mind when setting up or using your cryptocurrency accounts:

Use different passwords for every account you use to limit any damage that can be done by hackers.
Use a unique email when opening accounts on each exchange and only use that email address for that specific exchange.
Enable two-factor authentication for your exchange accounts. This adds a software to your smartphone which adds extra security to your account. Without two-factor authentication, a hacker only needs your username and password to empty your balance.
Don’t store your wallets and passwords in the same place or an attacker can gain access to both your passwords and your wallet at the same time.
Never mention what exchange or wallet you use on social media or online forums. Any information you post online can be turned against you.
Maintain backups of your cryptocurrency wallets and recovery phrases to ensure your coins aren’t lost for good if something happens to your main device. External hard drives, USB sticks, and encrypted backup files can be used to secure your recovery options and programs like VeraCrypt can encrypt these sensitive files.

Archived post: http://archive.is/M6iIm

Original: https://blog.payza.com/bitcoin/protect-cryptocurrency-keep-bitcoin-altcoins-safe/
Quote
Hacking and phishing attacks are among the biggest security threats to your cryptocurrencies, so you must set strong passwords for your wallets and all accounts that deal with cryptocurrencies.

---------------------------------- #8


User: Agostosmori https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1106791

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1792989.msg25712834#msg25712834
Currently i am not holding it.  But soon i will try to keep my Bitcoins and will wait for getting it at higher price. Most online Bitcoin wallets provide the option of a 2 factor authentication process. This means that whenever you log on you’re required to authenticate yourself with an additional step other than your password. Most of the time this will be a verification text message sent to your phone. Even though this may feel cumbersome at times, using 2 factor authentication reduces the risk of theft drastically.

Archived post: http://archive.is/kiSfY

Original: https://99bitcoins.com/4-steps-keeping-bitcoins-safe/
Quote
Most online Bitcoin wallets provide the option of a 2 factor authentication process. This means that whenever you log on you’re required to authenticate yourself with an additional step other than your password. Most of the time this will be a verification text message sent to your phone. Even though this may feel cumbersome at times, using 2 factor authentication reduces the risk of theft drastically.

---------------------------------- #9

User: gary_57 https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1638661

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1965985.msg28478755#msg28478755
Most online Bitcoin wallets provide the option of a 2 factor authentication process. This means that whenever you log on you’re required to authenticate yourself with an additional step other than your password. Most of the time this will be a verification text message sent to your phone. Even though this may feel cumbersome at times, using 2 factor authentication reduces the risk of theft drastically.

Archived post: http://archive.is/wOOoi

Original: https://99bitcoins.com/4-steps-keeping-bitcoins-safe/
Same as above.




Some more:



User: spinno https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=1123173

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1672881.msg29228383#msg29228383
Bitcoin’s circulation is not large enough to power an entire country let alone the world. It can become a de facto standard of moving wealth/value, but will remain so as a fatherless/motherless currency (at best).
Bitcoin has its fair share of problem (confirmation takes too much time, the 51% forking issue remains, number of transactions per second is limited, block size issues, etc.)
It will most likely not die. It will definitely become an important currency to allow cross-border trade amongst various facets of business society, from free-lancers getting paid, to cross-border remittance rails.
However, it will not be the final straw or the final currency that we will see.
Yes. Bitcoin opened avenues on how peer-to-peer value exchange can be done (using the blockchain).
But all these are problems Bitcoin Version 2.0 could solve and be adopted. Who knows the next variant of LiteCoin or Dash or Ethereum’s Ethers could be exactly what we are looking at. The concept of Bitcoin gets my Yes vote for the future of money. Governments will realize the power (and benefits) of digital money - some already are, but cash and other paper instruments still remain. At some point in time governments might just issue their own version of the bitcoin enabling transactions without the need of intermediaries. I think that's true. Bitcoin has captured market opportunities so well. The increasing trend of internet users worldwide becomes a strategic moment of Bitcoin's presence. Especially with the development of the potential of global e-commerce business that encourages the global community to conduct cross-country trade transactions.
In the era of global commerce, the public needs an easier, faster, safer, transparent, efficient, and most reliable base exchange. They believe bitcoin technology is capable of replacing banking technology systems that require resources, cost enormous, time-consuming and vulnerable correction of human error in recording all world financial transactions. Bitcoin is seen as more practical and fitting as an alternative option as a currency.

Archived post: http://archive.is/2RmYC

Original: https://www.quora.com/Is-bitcoin-really-the-future-of-money/answer/Faisal-Khan-1
Quote
Yes and No, and let me explain both:

No. Bitcoin’s circulation is not large enough to power an entire country let alone the world. It can become a de facto standard of moving wealth/value, but will remain so as a fatherless/motherless currency (at best).

Bitcoin has its fair share of problem (confirmation takes too much time, the 51% forking issue remains, number of transactions per second is limited, block size issues, etc.)

It will most likely not die. It will definitely become an important currency to allow cross-border trade amongst various facets of business society, from free-lancers getting paid, to cross-border remittance rails.

However, it will not be the final straw or the final currency that we will see.

Yes. Bitcoin opened avenues on how peer-to-peer value exchange can be done (using the blockchain).

But all these are problems Bitcoin Version 2.0 could solve and be adopted. Who knows the next variant of LiteCoin or Dash or Ethereum’s Ethers could be exactly what we are looking at. The concept of Bitcoin gets my Yes vote for the future of money. Governments will realize the power (and benefits) of digital money - some already are, but cash and other paper instruments still remain. At some point in time governments might just issue their own version of the bitcoin enabling transactions without the need of intermediaries.



User: mastermold https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=300045

Post: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1672881.msg18148969#msg18148969
Yes and No, and let me explain both:

No. Bitcoin’s circulation is not large enough to power an entire country let alone the world. It can become a de facto standard of moving wealth/value, but will remain so as a fatherless/motherless currency (at best).

Bitcoin has its fair share of problem (confirmation takes too much time, the 51% forking issue remains, number of transactions per second is limited, block size issues, etc.)

It will most likely not die. It will definitely become an important currency to allow cross-border trade amongst various facets of business society, from free-lancers getting paid, to cross-border remittance rails.

However, it will not be the final straw or the final currency that we will see.

Yes. Bitcoin opened avenues on how peer-to-peer value exchange can be done (using the blockchain).

But all these are problems Bitcoin Version 2.0 could solve and be adopted. Who knows the next variant of LiteCoin or Dash or Ethereum’s Ethers could be exactly what we are looking at. The concept of Bitcoin gets my Yes vote for the future of money. Governments will realize the power (and benefits) of digital money - some already are, but cash and other paper instruments still remain. At some point in time governments might just issue their own version of the bitcoin enabling transactions without the need of intermediaries.

Archived post: http://archive.is/E0Dwi

Original: https://www.quora.com/Is-bitcoin-really-the-future-of-money/answer/Faisal-Khan-1
Quote
Yes and No, and let me explain both:

No. Bitcoin’s circulation is not large enough to power an entire country let alone the world. It can become a de facto standard of moving wealth/value, but will remain so as a fatherless/motherless currency (at best).

Bitcoin has its fair share of problem (confirmation takes too much time, the 51% forking issue remains, number of transactions per second is limited, block size issues, etc.)

It will most likely not die. It will definitely become an important currency to allow cross-border trade amongst various facets of business society, from free-lancers getting paid, to cross-border remittance rails.

However, it will not be the final straw or the final currency that we will see.

Yes. Bitcoin opened avenues on how peer-to-peer value exchange can be done (using the blockchain).

But all these are problems Bitcoin Version 2.0 could solve and be adopted. Who knows the next variant of LiteCoin or Dash or Ethereum’s Ethers could be exactly what we are looking at. The concept of Bitcoin gets my Yes vote for the future of money. Governments will realize the power (and benefits) of digital money - some already are, but cash and other paper instruments still remain. At some point in time governments might just issue their own version of the bitcoin enabling transactions without the need of intermediaries.



tbc

[moderator's note: consecutive posts merged]
184  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: Exchange KuCoin and KuCoin shares on: January 31, 2018, 03:39:48 PM
Anybody also had today a minimal pay-out of the KCS bonus?
I'm holding 51 KCS and did not get a dividend in BTC, NEO, LTC, ETH, etc... Only in the smaller coins. Seems incorrect to me.
The CS told me that the systems works correctly, of the bonus is calculated it will be correct!
In total I got 0.00000061 BTC for my 51 KCS.

Coin      29th                           30th
KCS       0.00019862KCS            0 KCS
BTC       0.0000024BTC              0 BTC
ETH       0.00001431ETH            0 ETH
NEO       0.00001697NEO           0 NEO
LTC       0.00000551LTC             0 LTC
RBX       0.00018187XRB           0 RBX

Anybody else having this? I can imagine that it is possible that for smaller coins there isn't a pay-out each day. But that the trade in all the bigger coins did not result in a dividend seems strange to me.


I hold a larger amount of KCS tokens and get a payout for every listed coin every day.

It depends how much volume the specific coin/token market has.
As written on the kucoin bonus page "... and will not be released if the calculated earnings are less than 0.00000001."
So - low volume = lower fees = lower payouts, and a KCS holder with only a few shares not hitting that barrier get no payouts on that day.
185  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: Exchange KuCoin and KuCoin shares on: January 31, 2018, 03:22:31 PM
Got some red pulse too from their twitter campaign.

Yay! Got almost 7 red pulse from them too! Little but still nice  Grin Grin

How does that work??
Just for sharing their tweets?

Correct, you have to retweet the promo tweet and fill out a form, where you have to provide a screenshot of your tweet as proof.

For example, for retweeting this tweet: https://twitter.com/kucoincom/status/958701442826563584 you will get a random amount of ETH as reward.
186  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: Exchange KuCoin and KuCoin shares on: January 29, 2018, 11:05:40 AM
I have participated a lot of retweet campaign, and I should have received BTC rewards. I also had over 100 kcs as per Christmas promotion, but no award was received so far. Am I the only one with these problems?


I got the BTC reward for the christmas promo on Jan,10th and for the RPX promo on saturday.

According to the latest twitter post they will distribute the RPX,BCH,TEL,CAT,TIO and TNC promo in the next 10-15 workdays: https://twitter.com/kucoincom/status/957928759671209986
187  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: Crave: NextGen on: January 28, 2018, 09:17:50 AM
Hi, I have Crave in Yobit, but i'm unsure how to create a Yobitcode for crave, for the swap.
Could someone explain how?
Thanks very much

As far as I know you have to login, then click on your username in the upper right corner, then select "Yobit codes".
After that you select CRAVE coin, choose your amount of coins and generate the code.
188  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: Crave: NextGen on: January 28, 2018, 09:12:18 AM
What is the slack invite so I can swap my coins. 

There is no slack channel anymore because of spam and security reasons, but you can join the CRAVE discord channel here: https://discord.gg/D7KyVSX
189  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Tokens (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN][ICO] Martcoin – Lending Coin v2.0 – chance to get 67% profit per day on: January 26, 2018, 08:19:51 PM
Actually it may turn out to be cool project... I don't know any other lending with this idea when you can get up to 67%. Devs, if you read this, keep up, don't give up, you are unique with this idea

I guess the developer of this project won't read your post because their last login on bitcointalk was over 16 days ago.

Another abandoned project.
190  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Hodl bitcoin or split it in many altcoins ??? on: January 26, 2018, 07:20:02 PM
I would suggest to hold both, a defined amount of bitcoins and some holdings in altcoins.

Diversification is always a good thing.
191  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN] [Airdrop] Credits(CRDS): CPU-only mining | Argon2d PoW - Masternodes on: January 26, 2018, 11:49:49 AM
Is there a slack channel for CRDS? I hate writing in forums.

Sincerly, Jacky

No, but there is a discord channel for the CRDS community: https://discord.gg/Hq7dKhh

Slack is dead in my opinion. They had/have massive problems with hacked accounts, hacked slackbots and a flood of phishing spam.
192  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: New Exchange Site Get 0.001 LTC Bonus on: January 26, 2018, 10:33:30 AM
If you consider over three years as new then yes, its totally new: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=821889.0

Summary of the last few pages: scam, not paying for signature campaigns and the founders' account last login date was oct, 2017.

Why are you promoting such things?
193  Other / Meta / Re: What do you think about the new rules (merit) of the Bitcointalk forum? on: January 25, 2018, 12:13:40 PM
I've searched for "merit" on the forum and can't see any official post for it - can you point me in the right direction - i..e where's the official post describing it? Smiley

Here is the official announcment of the new merit systeme and the new rank requirements: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2818350.0

I think it is a step in the right direction. It encourages people to post meaningful an constructive posts instead of flooding the forum with useless spam.
194  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: Crave: NextGen on: January 24, 2018, 02:45:24 PM
The coinswap process went super smooth, I filled out the form, sent the old CRAVE coins to the burn address and after 10 minutes I got my new CRAVE coins.

Thanks a lot CooleRRSA!
195  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: Crave: NextGen on: January 24, 2018, 12:41:01 PM

Masternode collateral amount: 500 CRAVE


Doesnt it have to be 50000 CRAVE now? if ratio 1:10?

No, according to the second post 5000 CRAVE coins are the right amount. 500 x 10.

Masternode collateral amount: 500 CRAVE > 5000 CRAVE
196  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Should I buy Eth with my Bitcoin on: January 19, 2018, 11:14:41 PM
Diversification is always a good sign in my opinion, so yeah, I suggest sell some of your btc or ltc to buy some eth.
197  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Who uses myetherwallet? on: January 19, 2018, 10:52:50 PM
I use myetherwallets for month now and it is still a good ether wallet. I think about to use the offline MEW wallet to be safe from man-in-the-middle and DNS attacks.
198  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Best exchange for beginner? on: January 19, 2018, 10:48:45 PM
I suggest Coinbase for converting your FIAT in crypto and Kucoin and/or Binance for altcoin trading.
199  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: LIST: How to evaluate ICO opportunities on: January 19, 2018, 10:46:21 PM
I really like this ICO evaluation list, just bookmarked it. Thanks for your work! I got a lot of valueable input from it.
200  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Are Airdrops Profitable? on: January 19, 2018, 10:43:32 PM
The most of the airdrops are just trash to be honest.

But there were some really good airdrops in the past like DeepOnion (still ongoing) and POStoken for example.
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