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1121  Economy / Services / Re: Who can make a coin flip script? on: October 13, 2014, 03:42:30 PM
well i have coin flip script but it does not have bitcoin API.It have Liberty Reserve API. You can hire a coder to implement bitcoin to it
1122  Economy / Services / Re: Can anyone develop a gambling site for me? on: October 13, 2014, 01:50:27 PM
Would you like a sportsbook, poker live dealer slots or just like a dice site....


No its something entirely different
1123  Economy / Services / Re: Can anyone develop a gambling site for me? on: October 13, 2014, 01:36:43 PM
0.25
Nobody will make a good gambling site for that amount. Roll Eyes
Thanks for your information well I can negotiate 
Recommend you allocate 10-20 BTC for a GOOD gambling site.

LOL.I got a dev who will work in my budget
1124  Economy / Service Discussion / Bitlanders.com | Discussion on: October 13, 2014, 08:31:03 AM
Hi
Anyone tried bitlanders.com?
I heard about this site from facebook.I think it is social network that pays bitcoin by using there service.
They pay users for the buzz that users gets on his post.
Well I still didn't understood the website working completely can anyone explain its working?

You can join this site: http://bitlanders.com
1125  Economy / Economics / Re: [ANN] Announcing the first Bitcoin Exchange In Pakistan on: October 13, 2014, 07:19:14 AM
Nice exchange.I will use it in future
1126  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Pakistan’s First Bitcoin Exchange Launches with Community Building Ambitions on: October 13, 2014, 07:14:06 AM
Pakistani bitcoin exchange Urdubit launched today in an effort to facilitate greater adoption of the digital currency in the region.

The launch aims to usher Pakistan into the wider bitcoin community, as its operators are bullish on the digital currency’s potential as a solution to greater geopolitical issues in the area.

For now, Urdubit is focused on bringing liquidity to local bitcoin trading markets and educating newcomers on its promise as a decentralized commodity. Its founding partners, Zain Tariq and Danyal Manzar, are the founder and chief operating officer, respectively, of bitcoin community and advocacy group BitcoinPk.

Manzar told CoinDesk:

“When we started out educating people about the block chain and how it can be used as a payment gateway, we found many people mining bitcoins who did not have any medium to trade them directly into Pakistani rupees.”

Urdubit uses the BlinkTrade open-source software and technology, which offers operators a cost-effective way to open bitcoin exchanges without having to hire a developer.

This is BlinkTrade’s third client. It also powers digital currency exchanges in Paraguay and Venezuela.

Instant deposits

The cloud-based, decentralized nature of the BlinkTrade software enables exchange operators to bring bitcoin liquidity to regions with less active bitcoin trading markets.

instant deposits

Unlike other exchanges, Urdubit offers Instant Deposits technology, which allows users to access their traded bitcoin immediately without having to wait for confirmations.

BlinkTrade head Rodrigo Souza said to CoinDesk:

“Most of the traders leave their bitcoins at exchanges because they don’t want to wait for three to six confirmations to trade, and this creates a pot of gold that attracts hackers. It is not good for the exchange operators and not good for the system.”

To do this, verified Urdubit users first need to confirm their bitcoin addresses. Once validated, the next transaction from that address will credit the bitcoin into the trader’s account, so it is available for him or her to use instantly, with zero confirmation. This way, Souza explained, the trader doesn’t have to leave his or her bitcoin sitting statically in any exchange.

Users are unable to withdraw any bitcoins or fiat while a deposit is unconfirmed, in a measure to prevent double spending. In the case of a double spending attack, Souza explained, the trader would lose access to his funds, and the exchange operators will get access to all his account data.

Urdubit charges a 0.75% fee on all trades, and 1% on deposits and withdrawals in Pakistani rupees. Bitcoin deposits are free; there is a 0.0001 BTC miner’s fee on withdrawals.

‘Money in the new world’

Doing business in Pakistan is heavily influenced by Islamic guidelines, Tariq told CoinDesk; people there are generally motivated by peace but challenged by education.

About 96% of Pakistanis are Muslim. An estimated 21% of the population lives below the poverty line, and the country has a total adult literacy rate of 55%.

“We plan to create a platform where people feel safe with the world of bitcoin and hopefully substitute it for trading locally as easily as Pakistani rupees, while giving everyone an opportunity to invest in this commodity,” Tariq said.

Michael Sweeney is founder, secretary and treasurer of the Women’s Annex Foundation (WAF), a platform that encourages young women to exercise their intellectual freedom through blog-writing and social media and pays them in bitcoin to do so. While most of its operations are based across Afghanistan, it also has a presence in Mexico, Egypt and Pakistan.

Speaking to CoinDesk ahead of the Urdubit launch, Sweeney said the people that WAF has seen use and accept bitcoin in Pakistan are “very entrepreneurial”, and that although there aren’t any bitcoin exchanges in the region he was aware of at the time of the interview, he’s observed that users find ways to use the digital currency through gift or phone cards.

He told CoinDesk:

“It has changed my perception of ‘money’. Here in the US, we are so used to the USD being our currency. It creates the basis for accounting, finance, day-to-day groceries. Now I see things in terms of ‘value’ and ‘time spent’. How much time did it take me to earn that new mobile phone or how many years did it take for my house to double in value? That is money in the new world.”

Geopolitical considerations

Sweeney echoed the argument that bitcoin’s use cases are best demonstrated in the developing world, where many are unbanked and suffer from weak and volatile government-backed currencies.

“In the US, I have seen the data that 8% of households are unbanked and 25% of households are underbanked,” he said. “In developing countries like Pakistan, those numbers can easily flip the other way and the majority of the people are unbanked. […] Clearly the huge opportunity for bitcoin and its peer-to-peer transactions is in developing countries.”

Manzar maintains that Pakistan’s geography makes it poised for a successful bitcoin economy. It borders two of the world’s fastest growing markets, India and China. China is one of its largest trading partners.

Chinese importers and exporters would benefit from an exchange that allows instant trades and payments in bitcoin without having to worry about dollars, he added, alluding to the country’s record-low trade deficit and hence depleted dollar reserves.

He said:

“We have to be dependent on loans from the IMF, Asian Development Bank and World Bank. Bitcoin can open the path for Pakistan to bypass dollar-only trade barriers.”

Whether the Pakistani government and bitcoin community can foster the digital currency’s development well enough and long enough for it to become such an impactful economic force remains to be seen.

“There is only one thing that will give bitcoin value,” Sweeney said, “and that is for people to start using bitcoin in their daily lives.”

Educating the community

Closing the awareness gap, Tariq suggested, will be one of the first hurdles to overcome not just for Urdubit but for the growth of Pakistan’s small but active bitcoin community. Right now it’s unconcentrated, and sustained through other means of trust-based, peer-to-peer trading.

He said:

“You have to realize that even wealthy Pakistani people fear what they don’t understand, and English being second language – it creates a small understanding barrier.”

A friend of Tariq that goes by the alias Diablo Raja has been committed to promoting bitcoin in the local language, Urdu. Tariq is also touring the country at the end of the month to teach bitcoin newcomers about its uses and benefits.

“Most people are not aware of the bitcoin economy and think that they might be cheated by someone,” Manzar added. “Pakistan has seen a lot of scams in daily life and over the Internet that people fall prey to.”

SOURCE: http://www.coindesk.com/pakistans-first-bitcoin-exchange-launches-community-building-ambitions/
1127  Economy / Services / Re: Can anyone develop a gambling site for me? on: October 13, 2014, 06:31:35 AM
0.25
Nobody will make a good gambling site for that amount. Roll Eyes
Thanks for your information well I can negotiate 
1128  Economy / Services / Re: Can anyone develop a gambling site for me? on: October 13, 2014, 06:20:00 AM
How much your budget for this?

0.25
1129  Economy / Services / Re: Can anyone develop a gambling site for me? on: October 13, 2014, 06:07:39 AM
How do you play bitcoin bomber man? Will it be provably fair? Or is this like some FPS or side scroller or board game?

Provably fair
1130  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / THE RISE AND RISE OF BITCOIN – FIRST IMPRESSIONS on: October 12, 2014, 11:22:21 AM
I recommend the film to everyone, to Bitcoin experts and enthusiasts as a useful historical recap and motivation booster, and to newcomers as a good first introduction (newcomers should also read the book “Bitcoin and the Future of Money“).

I watched the film with my wife, who isn’t into Bitcoin and technology. She found it informative, entertaining and understandable, and gave it a 4 out of 5. I think she gets Bitcoin now.

The film is narrated from the point of view of the filmmaker and Bitcoin enthusiast Daniel Mross, and tells the history of Bitcoin from the first post of Satoshi Nakamoto to the Cryptography mailing list in 2008 to early 2014, until the arrest of Bitinstant’s Charlie Shrem for alleged money laundering, the Mt.Gox crash, and the rumors about Dorian Nakamoto. Watch also this video Q&A with the filmmakers Nicholas and Daniel Mross, by Reason TV.

CCN: World's Largest & Leading Independent Bitcoin News Source

The closing voice over an awesome sunset says: “Maybe we won’t ever know who created Bitcoin, but the truth is, it doesn’t really matter. Bitcoin belongs to everyone, and the future is ours to build.” The rolling list of featured participants is a who’s who of the Bitcoin world, with some omissions, but many of those who matter are there.

Of course, parts of the film are focused on the most visible aspects of cryptocurrencies, frequently reported by the media – the identity of the mysterious Satoshi Nakamoto, the epic rises and falls of Bitcoin in huge price swings, basements full of Bitcoin mining hardware with blinking lights, Silk Road and the growing use of Bitcoin by the criminal underground.

The Libertarian Roots of the Blockchain

But other parts of the film, more interesting in my opinion, are focused on the real thing – the power of the Bitcoin blockchain as a distributed engine for a better payment and financial systems open to the unbanked of the world, a better Internet, and a better society. Bitcoin is a digital commodity backed by mathematics. It’s scarce by design, decentralized, democratic, and can’t be controlled by Big Government and Big Business. Therefore, it’s a good foundation for the future economy.

The Libertarian, anarcho-capitalist roots of the Bitcoin culture are evident in the scenes filmed at a festival in the woods organized by the Libertarian Free State Project, where most vendors accepted Bitcoin and most visitors were enthusiastic supporters of the cryptocurrency. At the festival, Ethereum main developer Vitalik Buterin said that the world is seriously changing in a very interesting, very radical decentralized way.

Please Send A Donation to the Filmmakers

I’ve been criticized for sharing the film’s torrent from The Pirate Bay in my previous post. “Maybe if you’ve ever created a quality feature-length film in Final Cut, or something like it, you might actually buy the movie instead of stealing it off Pirate Bay. Nice job of letting everyone know where they can just go get for free. Two thumbs up brother!” says an angry reader.

I totally support the need to compensate filmmakers for they hard work, but the torrent address was already on the Reddit front page and all over the Internet when I shared it. What I did, was to send a donation to the official Bitcoin donation address, posted to Reddit and confirmed on Twitter. This option is open to the unbanked and all those who don’t have a credit card they can use for online payment, so I am persuaded that the torrent will result in more money for the filmmakers, not less. If you downloaded the film without paying, I would encourage you to send a donation to the filmmakers.


In a review, I am supposed to find something to criticize, so I will mention the fact that the words of non-native English speakers (perfectly understandable in my opinion) are often subtitled. That was unnecessary, and I find it slightly offensive to the persons concerned, sort of. Bitcoin is global like the Internet itself, and we must get used to accents different from pure London, or Brooklyn.

SOURCE: https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/rise-rise-bitcoin-first-impressions/
1131  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: which type of website is still lacking in bitcoin world? on: October 12, 2014, 11:18:14 AM
I think it will be really hard to make site, which do not exist in BTC world.
This is rally hard task  Angry !!!

Yeah
1132  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: which type of website is still lacking in bitcoin world? on: October 12, 2014, 06:10:19 AM
An easy way to buy bitcoins for anyone around the world

I hope you like this idea

Sellers list there offers and also add escrow for option.
Users will do the dealing in live chat with buyer,seller and escrower
1133  Economy / Services / Can anyone develop a gambling site for me? on: October 12, 2014, 05:44:23 AM
As the title says that I want someone who can develop a gaming website for me.I have flash source of bomber man game I want you to add bitcoin API and some other functions as well.

Please PM me or comment below
1134  Economy / Games and rounds / Re: Free BTC on Facebook. :) on: October 12, 2014, 05:38:02 AM
Everyone unlike this page now
1135  Bitcoin / Project Development / which type of website is still lacking in bitcoin world? on: October 11, 2014, 06:36:25 PM
As the topic says 'which type of website is still lacking in bitcoin world'.There are exchanges,many dice,gambling and market site.I will develop that site which is still lacking in bitcoin world.I think I have to create a market with some uniqiue functions like that users list everything for sell and buy and also a option to chat with buyer seller and escrower.

What do you think?
1136  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Why Apple Pay Is a Threat to Bitcoin | Coindesk | #bitcoin #applepay on: October 11, 2014, 06:09:07 PM
Apple Pay isn’t even here yet and, arguably, it’s already winning the war against bitcoin.

Like the digital currency, Apple is disrupting the payments system, but people will probably use it more than they use bitcoin.

Cupertino has carefully focused on three areas to make sure that happens: front-end experience, financial institutions, and merchants.

So what is the cryptocurrency community going to do about it?

Apple Pay’s holy trinity

Apple nailed the customer experience side. For starters, it rolled out the system with the new iPhone, and with the announcement of the Apple Watch, both of which garnered unprecedented attention from the tech industry.

It sold 10 million iPhone 6 models in the first weekend. The watch is going to sell in droves. Not all of these customers will use Apple Pay, of course. But many will. And far fewer people own bitcoin.

Then, there are the merchants. Apple snagged deals with major brands before Apple Pay was even announced. Retailers including Whole Foods, Bloomingdales, Staples, Walgreens and Subway are already signed up.

The firm has also timed the system’s launch expertly: point-of-sale (POS) systems need Near Field Communication (NFC) capability to work, and POS systems that support these can be expensive.

However, many retailers will be mulling upgrades to their existing POS terminals anyway, thanks to a critical deadline next October, when US retailers will be required to use the chip-and-pin technology already available in major credit cards, as an added security measure.

If they don’t, then they could be liable for card fraud, rather than the card providers, who shoulder the responsibility today. If they are upgrading their POS systems anyway, NFC will seem like an easier decision.

On the financial side, Apple has secured Visa, MasterCard, and Amex, along with several major US banks.

Users will be drawn to the better security within Apple Pay, which prevents credit card details from having to travel through merchant networks. Apple Pay uses a token instead, to represent the card, along with a one-time dynamic number designed to help authenticate transactions securely.

Thumbs up for security

Then, of course, there’s the iTouch biometric system, which will be used to authenticate the user. iTouch may have its detractors, but is a lot better than the current paper signature system in the US (which retail clerks won’t necessarily even check), and will likely be better than PIN verification too, which as security guru Brian Krebs points out are easily skimmable.

Apple Pay may help to prevent credit card security breaches such as the Home Depot and Target thefts, which haunt the headlines on a worryingly frequent basis.

With conventional swipe-and-sign credit card systems as used across the US today, the card vendor is responsible for the data on the card’s magstripe. With Apple Pay, the merchant POS systems needn’t see the credit card at all.

New tricks, same old dog

All of this will be sweet music to banks, merchants and retail customers alike. It’s like nails on a chalkboard for the bitcoin community.

For starters, as some have already said, Apple’s partnership with the banks and payment processors still puts the incumbent system firmly in control. The only thing that really changes is the payment channel.

Apple Pay is therefore still anathema to bitcoin’s mission, which involves disrupting centralized control in the financial industry and returning real financial control to the user.

''If the bitcoin industry really wants to take on Apple Pay, it has to reinvent itself.''

Second, Apple is beating bitcoin in terms of the customer experience. Its ecosystem is exceedingly user friendly and customer focused.

The company has spent years perfecting a design and user experience language that is second to none in the tech business, and, whenever it turns its attention to an existing business model, it brings these tools to bear, recrafting entire industries in its own image.

People understand Apple phones, and thanks to Jony Ive’s team, they will quickly understand the Apple Watch. Moreover, they will crave these devices.

Bitcoin, on the other hand, is still striving for mainstream adoption. Notwithstanding positive news from the likes of PayPal, Circle, and Stripe, the concept is still opaque to many. The market for wallets is fragmented, and scandals like Mt Gox still scare many away.

By its very nature, bitcoin is a grassroots movement. It doesn’t enjoy the same top-down organisation that Apple does. That means that design, user experience, and security are inconsistent across its many implementations. That makes it hard for mainstream users to understand.

A craving for control

Apple’s ability to control every detail of the user experience is also the source of one of its biggest threats: it is an inherently fascistic company. A penchant for total control is a dangerous thing in a company that likes to reinvent entire industries.

Ever since the early 2000s, if not before, Apple has thrived on locking people into its ecosystem, and it excels at cementing this structure up and down the supply chain. We saw this with the launch of the iTunes store, which Apple integrated with the iPod and iTunes products upon its launch in 2003, signing deals with the major labels.

Jobs admitted this fact not long before his death, explaining in an internal 2010 email that he wanted to “explicitly lock customers in Apple’s ecosystem”.

Apple has used its hardware and software innovations to strongarm companies – and customers – into deals. In 2010, shortly after the launch of the iPad, it made magazine and newspaper publishers wanting to sell subscriptions via iPad apps subscribe to an agency model, in which it kept all of their subscriber and credit card information. Even Rupert Murdoch had to capitulate.

Apple also agreed to pay $450m to settle a civil action lawsuit, after it was shown to have engineered retail prices on ebooks in collaboration with several top publishers, using the power of the iPad.

Since its App Store emerged, Apple has been infamous for the strong and often ambiguous control that it exerts over its ecosystem.

Although its policy on virtual currencies changed in June, leading to the launch of several bitcoin wallet apps for iOS, the fact remains that the fortunes of App Store vendors – including those offering bitcoin wallets – are entirely subject to Apple’s whim.

The struggle ahead

So, Apple Pay will probably succeed, as customers flock to it, unaware of the control that they are giving up, and of the benefits that bitcoin could offer. History has shown repeatedly that the majority will trade control for convenience. If you have any doubts, just look at Facebook.

There are positive upsides, perhaps, if you squint. Yes, perhaps Apple Pay will drive NFC into the ecosystem so that bitcoin can use it. But then, by the time that happens, Apple Pay will already be there.

Apple Pay won’t obliterate bitcoin, of course, but it is going to shine very bright as a payment channel. It will attract large numbers of users with the convenience of instant mobile payments just as bitcoin faces its next major challenge: to move from being a largely speculative asset into a true currency, used every day by millions of users around the world.

Bitcoin needs to continue that transition, to introduce more liquidity into the market and to meet its real potential.

So if the bitcoin industry really wants to take on Apple Pay, it has to reinvent itself. Make itself friendly. Market itself to people so technologically ignorant that they’re one step away from microwaving their iPhones. That’s a difficult task to pull off.

Source: CoinDesk
Link: http://www.coindesk.com/apple-pay-threat-bitcoin/
1137  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Over 800 Payment Terminals in Romania Now Sell Bitcoin on: October 11, 2014, 08:10:13 AM
Bitcoin is now available at 874  self-service payment terminals across Romania, thanks to a partnership between ATM operator Bitcoin Romania and terminal network operator ZebraPay.

The ZebraPay terminals will allow customers to buy bitcoin at a 4% commission on prices taken from the Cointrader exchange. The terminals are one-way, so customers can only trade their Romanian leu for bitcoin.

The terminals do not require customers to hand over identification documents when buying bitcoin.

The service has been available for two days but it has already sold 7.2 BTC, underscoring bitcoin’s growing popularity in the country.

ZebraPay chief executive Adrian Badea told CoinDesk:

“It’s weird because we haven’t even launched it officially yet. It seems people already want to buy bitcoin.”

Bitcoin-buying features

Bitcoin Romania Zebra

The partnership between ZebraPay and Bitcoin Romania means that the bitcoin ATM operator acts as a vendor on ZebraPay’s terminal network. While customers deposit their fiat at ZebraPay’s machines, the coins are ultimately supplied by Bitcoin Romania, Badea explained.

Customers can use a ‘wallet shortener’ at the ZebraPay terminals which allows them to assign an easier to remember alias to their bitcoin wallet address. The terminals are standalone touch-screen machines with black-and-white stripes painted on their cases.

Badea said his company’s terminals will remove the complications associated with buying bitcoin for Romanians, explaining that in the past the country’s bitcoin buyers have had to deal with know-your-customer regulations, creating accounts on various exchange platforms and ensuring their bank accounts could send funds to exchanges outside the country.

He said:

“There is a [bitcoin] community here, that’s for sure. There are lots of people who know about bitcoin, but they don’t have the opportunity to try it. It was too complicated before.”

The Cointrader exchange was set up by Vancouver-based Bitcoiniacs, which operates the first bitcoin ATM, located in the Waves Coffeehouse there.

Terminal network competition

ZebraPay is working to add bitcoin as a payment option for the other services it offers through its terminals by the year’s end, Badea said. The terminals allow customers to buy mobile phone credit, pay utility bills and settle traffic fines, among other functions.

ZebraPay terminals also offer Ukash, a type of electronic money, that is popular for online games and gambling, Badea said.

The ZebraPay network is set to grow about 30% by year’s end, adding 350 new terminals by 2015, Badea said. Its machines are located in 160 cities across Romania in large supermarket chains like Carrefour, Auchan and Kaufland – some of the biggest retailers in the country.

ZebraPay competes with Qiwi in Romania. The Nasdaq-listed Russian payments giant has a network of 171,000 payments terminals and kiosks in seven countries, largely concentrated in Russia and Kazakhstan, according to its latest filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and has also reported that it hosts 15.5 million “virtual wallets”, which are mainly used for remittance services. Qiwi doesn’t report terminal numbers for individual countries.

SOURCE: http://www.coindesk.com/800-payment-terminals-romania-now-sell-bitcoin/
1138  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: my first bitcoin startup! totally confused! :( on: October 10, 2014, 04:17:02 PM


Here is my feelings
1139  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: my first bitcoin startup! totally confused! :( on: October 10, 2014, 03:55:22 PM
He doesn't have an idea, that's the point.

The most successful business model are middlemen. They produce nothing, they just move money around and keep a portion for themselves. Take, for example, PayPal - they just transfer money between accounts in their computer system, keeping 3% each time until eventually all the money is theirs. Credit cards, same thing. Casinos, pretty much the same thing too...

Bitcoin has the money transfer mechanism included in the protocol so it doesn't need such middlemen. There are still opportunities such as ATM operators, escrow agents, auction houses. eBay is one of the more clever scams, they never see the money or merchandise, but still bill a percentage of the sales price just for hosting a web page for your item for a week.

Bitcoin is just money. Why should I send you my money? Goods and services. You should have something you would pay for yourself.



LOL
I have ideas but confused where to start?
whether it will be succesfull?  Undecided
1140  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: my first bitcoin startup! totally confused! :( on: October 10, 2014, 03:48:24 PM
hi!
i am looking to make a bitcoin related website to earn some bitcoins.I really don't want to make dice or exchange.I have considered a bitcoin bomberman game,but i am not totally sure that will he get the attentions of users? will people play it? also its not handy.
do you know anything better than that? as i said i am not really interested in making dice or exchange.Please tell me something different that will gain maximum bitcoin users.

90% ideas fail because they're never implemented. If u have an idea, implement it.

Thanks!
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