CoinURL Rejecting Tor / Anon Proxy Clicks
Content monetizer CoinURL began rejecting clicks from Tor browser and anonymous proxies a few days ago. This reduced our payouts by 30%.
If you visit our blog and wish to support it by clicking ads, please don't use Tor or an anon proxy ... or consider donating instead!
Thank you for your continued support!
Here's how to make some easy Bitcoin.
Sign up for a CoinURL account and then shorten all of the links you post online to earn bitcoin via advertising.
When someone clicks your link, they will be presented with an advertisement page first and the option to Skip the Ad. The longer they stay on the page (there is a timer) the more you can make.
On average I'd say the payment is 25 - 500 Satoshi per click. So it's easy money for doing something you already do every day. You make more for advertisements placed on your website, but links are a start.
Try it here!
‘I Am The Bullet In The Chamber’ Nike Ad Taken Off Pistorius’ Website Following Murder Charge
All ads on Australian station linked to nurse's death in UK is suspended
Radio network Austereo has suspended all ads on 2DayFM in response to advertiser boycotts following the suspected suicide of a British nurse caught up in the royal prank call scandal, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.
Earlier Saturday, Coles - a major Australian grocery chain - said it was withdrawing ads from the station.
More from the Morning Herald here.
Reverse-Engineering Twitter To Solve An Advertising Mystery
By Michael Schonfeld, Head of Developer Relations at Dwolla Does Twitter have an undocumented API for promoted tweets? Dwolla developer Michael Schonfeld tore apart the app to find the answer.
Recently I opened the Twitter app on my Mac and noticed something very strange: It was omitting promoted tweets from my timeline. In the side-by-side comparisons below, notice the "howaboutwe.com" promoted tweet from Twitter.com on the right is missing from the Twitter.app feed on the left.
An example of Twitter breaking its own rules, or just a bug? [Full Article]
Tumblr, the blogging platform with a massive audience but negligible revenues, has set its entry-level ad price at $25,000, the company said in an email. The ad spots are on Tumblr Radar and Tumblr Spotlight, adjuncts to the user dashboard that promotes interesting blogs not connected with your own. Advertisers can look at this page for more on how to buy into Tumblr Radar. The company said:
"We want to provide a great experience for both our sponsors and users, so we've taken tremendous care with these products and are looking for advertisers who will be just as thoughtful."
As an example, Tumblr used a "Hunger Games" blog created by Lionsgate to promote the film (see screenshot above). The $25,000 price point compares with Twitter, which has a $15,000 entry point.
Here's how the same "Hunger Games" blog would look promoted in Tumblr Radar (see below):
Col. Oliver North, a man convicted on multiple counts during the Iran-Contra scandal — who by his own admission had a “fairly good relationship” with the brutal, drug-running Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega — is apparently the new frontman for Activision’s next “Call of Duty” game.
In a video published this week, North does his best to fearmonger about fictional threats, like a hacker taking control of every single airplane over the U.S., plugging “Call of Duty: Black Ops 2″ in an unusual trailer that appears to depict the hacktivst movement “Anonymous” as “the enemy.”
While it wouldn’t be the first time a shooter game has seized upon current political memes — for instance, the next “Rainbow Six” game from publisher Ubi-Soft uses a fictional terrorist threat from the 99 Percent movement — it is the most galling yet, especially considering their new spokesperson’s checkered past.
In short, North was one of the most stunningly corrupt officials to face criminal charges during the Reagan administration.
During the Iran-Contra scandal, Americans got their first clear look at how the National Security Council uses the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in actual black ops — in this particular case, the U.S. was using money from the sales of illegal arms and drugs to funnel weapons to rebel fighters in south America — and North was smack in the middle of it.