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Faudrait surtout avoir des exemples de tarifs ... car quand je vois -10%, ça veut rien dire.
-10% par rapport à quoi ? une licence pour 1-3-5-10-50 PC ? Le prix à l'unité change à ce moment-là.
M'envoyer une PM avec l'antivirus et la licence que vous voulez.
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The first buyer to PM this code: Will Get a discount of 10% in addition to the 10% if you pay with BTCitcoin, Łitcoin, Ξthereum
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The first buyer to PM this code: Will Get a discount of 10% in addition to the 10% if you pay with BTCitcoin, Łitcoin, Ξthereum
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Though major stock exchanges in London and New York have garnered the lion’s share of major media headlines, their peers internationally are moving at a similar pace to investigate the potential of blockchain tech. The Korea Exchange (KRX), South Korea’s only securities exchange, for example, announced it was moving to develop an over-the-counter (OTC) trading platform using the technology in February, a decision that could open the company up to entirely new markets if eventually launched. According to Changjin Lee, head of IT strategy planning at KRX, the project isn't simply a response to international competitors. Lee indicated that KRX has been studying the technology since early 2015, and that the decision to start working on implementations came from the highest levels of the organization. http://www.coindesk.com/korea-exchange-blockchain-innovation/
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During an appearance on Capitol Hill earlier this week, a representative for a prominent US think tank suggested that blockchain applications could fuel next-generation health and insurance data systems. American Enterprise Institute (AEI) resident fellow Scott Gottlieb spoke yesterday before the US House Committee on Energy and Commerce's Subcommittee on Health. In his remarks, Gottlieb testified about ideas for bringing innovation and competition to US insurance markets, at one point discussing using technology to design more intuitive insurance risk pools. ADVERTISEMENT Gottlieb suggested that a more technologically advanced risk pool would have the capacity to auto-regulate insurance subsidies in real time, indicating that, from AEI’s perspective, such a system could employ a blockchain. http://www.coindesk.com/us-think-tank-suggests-blockchain-application-insurance-risk-pooling/
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Earlier this week, a press release for a Hong Kong-based company called CoinFac began circulating a plan to "introduce the next generation quantum computing technology into cryptocurrency mining". The pitch promised big processing speed increases thanks to the claimed technology advances, and visitors to the CoinFac website are quickly directed to a series of cloud mining contract options. Though the website shows that contracts costing 50 BTC and 100 BTC annually are “sold out”, the site is still selling contracts costing 1 BTC and 5 BTC, respectively. ADVERTISEMENT But at least one claim in the press release appears to be false. CoinFac stated that it was owned by Palantir Technologies, a secretive data analysis software company co-founded in 2004 by PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel that originally drew funding from a CIA-connected venture fund. http://www.coindesk.com/palantir-quantum-bitcoin-cloud-mining/
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Using kespaersky and for a long time and it's okay for me, mabe better to help but i am scared.
You're scared of what? Kaspersky is one of the best antivirus, as long as it's updated you have nothing to worry about.
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The first buyer to PM this code: Will Get a discount of 10% in addition to the 10% if you pay with BTCitcoin, Łitcoin, Ξthereum
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Half of the proceeds from an apparently errant bitcoin transaction, in which 291 BTC (then $136,000) was sent as a fee, has been given away by the recipient mining pool. The Bitcoin Foundation said today that it received 146 BTC ($65,000) from BitClub, which on 27th April received the fee as part of block 409,008 on the network. The transaction drew notable industry attention and media coverage, given that the average transaction fee at the time was 31 satoshis, or roughly $0.01. http://www.coindesk.com/bitcoin-foundation-donation-mining-pool/
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I'm using a free opensource antivirus which I've learned from a linux community. name is clamwin, thi isn't very sophisticated but sure it has updated list of viruses that are determined that they can remove from the computer being treated. i like it since it don't treat the exe file as viruses.
I'm using Local Antivirus, they called Smadav
Added to the poll.
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I'm currently using goldenfrog. So far it is good and it has 200,000+ ips.
Thanks for sharing. I use VPNarea.It offers 7 days money back guarentee, accepts bitcoin payments and no logs.Recommended. About the logs. All VPN services says they don't keep logs, but they do that's how they know bandwidth usage. Does anyone here have experience with Perfect-Privacy? They look solid, but the expense seems quite high.
Never used it, but someone here must have used it.
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Y. Job is legit. Shop with him. Bought anti virus from him and it is all good. Thanks.
You're welcome and thank you for your review
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Startups focused on products and services based on bitcoin have never had an easy time opening bank accounts – or maintaining positive relationships with those firms. The problem? Bitcoin-related clients are frequently viewed as high-risk by banking institutions, and thus far few banks have shown an interest in going through the process of mitigating that risk. This is a long-standing issue that has sparked controversy in the past, but given the broader issue of de-risking by banks worldwide, it's perhaps unsurprising that bitcoin startups would find themselves in the crosshairs of bank compliance departments. Yet those risks haven't kept every bank from opening its doors to bitcoin startups. Silvergate Bank, based in La Jolla, California, was one of the earliest institutions to buck that trend. Silvergate is on the verge of opening its sixteenth bitcoin bank account, and its chief executive officer, Alan Lane, says the benefits of his bank's early adopter status might be in jeopardy. http://www.coindesk.com/silvergate-banking-bitcoin-companies/
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The global Bitcoin and digital asset exchange Kraken has announced it will be the first and only exchange enabling clients to use the (ETH) Dark Pool Trading. The Dark Pool allows users to “discreetly” place large trading orders without exposing the order book to the public. http://bitcoinist.net/kraken-eth-dark-pool-trading/
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Ghana seeks to secure transactions on the Internet first and only then start a discussion on Bitcoin adoption. As a lack of training on cryptography is still a major issue in parts of Africa, Ghana’s Chapter of the Internet Society has trained some of its members. It hopes to create awareness around this tool making communication more secure on the Internet. http://cointelegraph.com/news/ghana-first-comes-internet-security-then-bitcoin
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The recent Craig Wright-Satoshi Nakamoto debacle has spurred a new discussion as to what should happen with the coins mined by the mysterious Bitcoin creator. Theymos, the owner of BitcoinTalk, feels these coins should be destroyed to “prevent disastrous monetary inflation.” https://news.bitcoin.com/theymos-bitcoins-satoshi-destroyed/
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CoinDesk’s Q1 2016 State of Blockchain report summarizes key trends, data and events from the first quarter of 2016. This article highlights a few of the 100 new slides from the report, which is freely available to view in full here. For more of our quarterly and annual reports. http://www.coindesk.com/state-of-blockchain-q1-2016/
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