Is there any option for a publisher so that the statistics are not public? I maybe am less concerned about revenues as a whole (determined from the bitcoin address in the ad code) being public, but more so the Impressions, Clicks, CTR, and RPM that shows in the "Partner Statistics". - http://bitcoinadvertisers.com/partnerstat.php?p=[bitcoin address used in publisher's ad code] Without having an account, there's no easy way to protect this I suppose. So to offer this would probably involve me associating an e-mail address and password, so that viewing the partner statistics would require the password. (and the e-mail to be able to recover from a lost password situation). And that probably adds complexity you were not looking towards having. So I'm not sure what you could to do to restrict access to this statistics report.
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So the running total is 35 BTC, right? +1 BTC if open source There were some other +1's back there... we're at about a 200 USD bounty right now
I think the OP's offer (20 BTC) was more than a year ago, so maybe there needs to be a check to make sure the offer is still good. The other (10 BTC + 5 BTC + 1 BTC (conditional) + 1 BTC (conditional)) are more recent. Depending on what the deliverable is, I know there is interest in this that would raise the bounty a bit.
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There's someone stuck in the Newbies forum with $40 of Dwolla USDs, I mentioned that I'ld relay the info here in case anyone wants to do a trade. Unfortunately, now I'm being told there is a 30-day waiting period to send my DwollaUSD to any of the exchanges or intermediaries I've tried. I have a verified Dwolla account (Drivers license and bank account approved), but can't seem to get around the 30-day hold. Frustrating as I've already waited 4 business days for the $$ to clear from my bank into Dwolla.
I'd like to buy Bitcoins tonight. Is there any method or roundabout anyone can recommend so I can get my Dwolla USD into my MTGox account tonight? I'd honestly be very appreciative.
**EDIT: I have $40 Dwolla USD that I'd like to trade for BTC or MTGoxUSD.
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Just trying theBTCNetwork ... but my ad code isn't getting a response: - https://thebtcnetwork.com/ac/?ci=103&code_type=image&w=200&h=200The full ad code I get: <script type="text/javascript" src="https://thebtcnetwork.com/ac/?ci=103&code_type=image&w=200&h=200"></script> Whassup? (Also, I'm having to manually change '&" into just "&" right?
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Alternatively allow port 8332 to be open and limited to wifi provider's node. So your bitcoin client can get online but nothing else can. Once you pay it unlocks full access. Bitcoin doesn't really have the density yet but I could see it being popular way to pay for service someday.
Or if at a retail joint, the cashier can sell scratch-offs with an Instawallet URL, preloaded with whatever the hotspot charge is. Incidentally, there are multiple threads over time with basically the same topic of conversation. Perhaps better progress would be possible if the conversation all occurred in the same thread: - http://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=7998.0
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MtGox has verified they perform a check which is not standard.
This substantially increases the security of yubikeys at gox.
Phew. Thanks for sharing this and for updating status.
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What's the fastest way to go about doing this? Skimming this sub-forum makes it sound like Mt. Gox is broken/slow and Tradehill is gone. I'd prefer an automated exchange versus having to make half a dozen trades to fill out my order. I'm looking to buy roughly 200 -250BTC in one order. Anyone have an exchange/process they've had good success with?
Fastest? - http://www.BitInstant.com Deposit at a bank. They'll limit you to $1,000 per day thought. How about BitFloor, cash deposit at Chase. - http://www.BitFloor.comHeh, pick Chase bank as the option for BitInstant and when you visit do two transactions, one for BitInstant, one for BitFloor. Next time, though, ... if you are verified, Dwolla to Mt. Gox is going to be the cheapest. But you asked fastest, not cheapest.
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Will you send first for a person with a trusted history in the #bitcoin-otc WoT? If not, will you allow a bitcoin deposit sent to a third party escrow for this? That you way can send first with nearly no risk?
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Well,I think whats happening,in part now,is there are accounts being hacked on MTgox,
I doubt your 15 BTC that you lost is moving the market that much. There were a total of three reports of Mt. Gox accounts being hacked. Yours was likely due to your using a password that is just 8 characters long including a five letter dictionary word and three digits (as you've described in another thread). Sorry that ended badly, but that was only a matter of time before that would be cracked. Most people with larger amounts of funds have already implemented Yubikey, and those that haven't yet now have Google Authenticator as an option as well.
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I need to get the block hash of the block containing specified transaction. I have been parsing blockexplorer for this data, but it seems to be having some difficulties lately, so I'm looking for alternatives. Blockchain.info json api doesn't seem to have this information. Are there any other alternatives? Thanks in advance.
Blockchain.info's API is written to be compatible with the BlockExplorer API. What approach are you taking on BlockExplorer? The API does give transactions for each block: - http://blockchain.info/rawblock/183164Though how to figure out which block has a transaction, I'm not sure.
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I see there is a Greek translation of Paytunia released. Is this the first translation of the app? (i.e. no other languages other than the original English version are available yet?) Any plans for additional translations?
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80% of the american public (me included) is dumber than box of rocks & will never accept those extremes of security,on a personal level.
He has a point there. That's why (in the U.S.) when the banks have losses from identity theft they find it cheaper to either pass along the cost when they can (reverse transactions) or eat the remaining loss when they can't. That's cheaper than the cost of customer training and lost customer satisfaction when trying to impose security procedures like a Yubikey, for instance. I don't know the solution. Now that there is Google authenticator on Mt. Gox, hopefully more people can secure their accounts. Right now it seems the password crackers are just shooting fish in the Mt. Gox barrel.
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Correct me if im wrong but even if they have your info, they still arent able to trace what you do with your coins.
They know which account withdrew which bitcoins. So if they have your ID then they can tie identity to the bitcoins you've withdrwan. From there, those bitcoins are traceable as that is tne nature of bitcoin transactions. Mt. Gox does assist law enforcement in investigations. So if your coins went somewhere and the authorities went backward through the transactions they'ld know they came from Mt. Gox, and Mt. Gox would know which account they were withdrawn from, and if they have your ID, they would know it was you. That being said, if I were to withdraw and transact in a manner that maintains privacy before I spend, then it becomes much harder to trace. That's why there's not been any bitcoin heists where the perpetrator has been caught, for instance, as they know how to transact anonymously. Yet at the same time, Goat was able to trace his 400 BTC payment with the help of the bitcoin community (where there was no attempt to transact anonymously): - http://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=82600.msg918402#msg918402
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