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Topic: How much does an Airdrop cost? - page 2. (Read 960 times)

full member
Activity: 616
Merit: 167
May 16, 2018, 06:42:55 PM
#21
It's kind of like facebook - if it doesn't cost you anything, then YOU are the product.
newbie
Activity: 154
Merit: 0
May 16, 2018, 06:27:33 PM
#20
yes airdrop is a waste of time for others,but for me its not because even if i get a small amount of profit it is ok and when that small amount put togehter it will become big,i need money badly that is why i am joining aitdrop and bounty.
member
Activity: 434
Merit: 18
WPP ENERGY - BACKED ASSET GREEN ENERGY TOKEN
May 16, 2018, 04:35:05 PM
#19
I agree. Airdrop is a waste of time as of now because of the low amount sent to our ethereum address. To be exact, airdrop distribution won't go beyond $20 in my experience. We all know that there will be fees when we transfer to an exchange and when we convert it to cash, almost nothing is left. Much better to just pass on airdrops because of the risk of getting your information. It can also hurt your reputation since most of them requires retweeting or sharing a page on social media.
legendary
Activity: 2352
Merit: 6089
bitcoindata.science
May 16, 2018, 03:54:41 PM
#18
i have been doing airdrops, and bounties, but not for long. at first it was like all ok. but then i saw, its so many of them, how should i know which is good and which not, how to not waste time on bad ones. i mean im not some broker, how should i know this all. and then some of my friends got scamed. on telegram some dude keeps poping offering to make fast btc, just give him etc wallet. then the companies asking for photos of id. and then, when regestering on their sites type email and pasword. and i thought, well, i cant alwayas keep making up new paswords. also there will be people who will use the same email and pasword on etc walet and on sites, and if those sites still info and pass the tokens to them self, then what, nothing. so i started slowly, to read ico rewievs, still not sure what im doing, but i guess its important to stard doing something while being vigilante and think twice are and which info about yourself you are gonna send to which site.  

Yes, I agree. Using the same password in each website and the same e-mail is dangerous.

Personally, I would just join an airdrop or a Bounty that pays in tokens for  a project which I would invest in the ICO.
jr. member
Activity: 42
Merit: 1
May 16, 2018, 01:33:27 PM
#17
i have been doing airdrops, and bounties, but not for long. at first it was like all ok. but then i saw, its so many of them, how should i know which is good and which not, how to not waste time on bad ones. i mean im not some broker, how should i know this all. and then some of my friends got scamed. on telegram some dude keeps poping offering to make fast btc, just give him etc wallet. then the companies asking for photos of id. and then, when regestering on their sites type email and pasword. and i thought, well, i cant alwayas keep making up new paswords. also there will be people who will use the same email and pasword on etc walet and on sites, and if those sites still info and pass the tokens to them self, then what, nothing. so i started slowly, to read ico rewievs, still not sure what im doing, but i guess its important to stard doing something while being vigilante and think twice are and which info about yourself you are gonna send to which site. 
full member
Activity: 728
Merit: 169
What doesn't kill you, makes you stronger
May 16, 2018, 06:55:54 AM
#16
I'm using a different email account for airdrops and I never bother to join one if they require real life data.
If they give some free ERC20 token by just providing them your Ethereum public address, so then be it.
I kinda feel like a collector who gathers different tokens, this has is a joy in itself and one of my collected token might end up having a value one day!
brand new
Activity: 0
Merit: 0
May 14, 2018, 06:40:58 AM
#16
AirDrop is a very controversial moment of ICO. I know only one thing for certain that nothing is free and you have to pay for some functions, and the profit is not so great compared to the risk.
member
Activity: 196
Merit: 10
May 14, 2018, 05:27:55 AM
#15

In my opinion, airdrops are a waste of time and they are not free, you pay with your privacy and your time.


I strongly agree with this statement, most of airdrops in my experience are worthless of your time and there is a higher risk to your accounts joining airdrops.
hero member
Activity: 1834
Merit: 759
May 14, 2018, 05:05:23 AM
#14
Well if you could provide details of throwaway accounts and stuff, that would mitigate most of the privacy risks. KYC is a huge factor though, and you should definitely not give away your information unless you're absolutely sure the project will be worth it. I personally don't bother with airdrops and bounties, and I certainly would never think of it if I had to provide personal details, but they do seem to work for some people, and they do seem to believe it's worth it. Different strokes for different folks, I guess.

I have to note that they're part of the reason why crypto is often dismissed as a scam though. It wouldn't be fair to say they're all shit, but those that are give crypto a bad reputation.
legendary
Activity: 2352
Merit: 6089
bitcoindata.science
May 13, 2018, 11:00:21 PM
#13
Absolutely agree with OP. Airdrops are something most of have to try for ourselves before we decide they aren't worth our time. That especially goes for all airdrops which require you to do something. Airdrop should be absolutely free & without any tasks attached, except KYC if necessary. All the airdrops that require social media advertising are actually bounties and I just skip those.

Regarding installation of wallets for airdrops. Be sure to use separate machine or at least Virtual machine. It is just to easy to get some nasty malware/virus/trojan or whatever that way.

I think KYC is the worst part of those airdrops.
I am out of all of them, except if I am really interested in the coin and willing to buy it.
jr. member
Activity: 88
Merit: 1
May 08, 2018, 09:14:23 AM
#12
The cost of an airdrop is dependent on various factors
*The ico price
The price when it hits an excha
How useful the project is...all these should be considered when filling for airdrops...
Expect that most aidrop are scams now and a total waste of precious time
member
Activity: 190
Merit: 15
May 08, 2018, 07:40:40 AM
#11
Agree. Worse than airdrops is only faucets. You're giving away your personal info and get a few dollars in return. Or nothing at all. And then you never know how they can use your data.
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
May 07, 2018, 03:18:22 AM
#10
I suppose that  participating in some kinds of airdrops its just burning your time. First, it takes a long time when you finally will get tokens to your wallet. Also, no one promises you that you will get it at all. I think the more secure way is a participant in bounties. Yes, it's a little complicated, but in most cases you will get your tokens if you participate in really serious projects.
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 436
May 07, 2018, 02:48:37 AM
#9
It's the same as with everything else (in crypto), it evolves. The "early" airdrops were definitely not a waste of time and/or money and are now worth thousands of dollars. But also airdrops in mid/late 2017 could have made you a bunch of money with near to nothing required of you.
If it's too much of you to ask to either raise your hand and/or to create a twitter and facebook account in exchange for hundreds of dollars, then, well, airdrops really aren't the right thing for you. But if you only made ~$20 per drop, then I'd say that you chose the wrong airdrops  Wink

The requirement of KYC is a relatively new practice and I wouldn't do it, ever. Same is with bounty campaigns that require it. Only over my cold dead body.
BQ
member
Activity: 616
Merit: 53
CoinMetro - the future of exchanges
May 07, 2018, 01:00:47 AM
#8
I agree with your privacy concerns, but how common are the KYC requirements?

I never apply to any bounty that asks for email and such, even if they're legit, I sometimes find these spreadsheets with just thousands of emails.
that, combined with bitcointalk username, one could cross reference from some password database and possibly find passwords, other sites using the same username and such.
quite a security issue that many people don't seem to really care about!
member
Activity: 138
Merit: 74
NotYourKeys.Org
May 07, 2018, 12:01:27 AM
#7
This is why most airdrops should be frowned upon in my opinion. The tokens you get aren't actually "free". Nothing in this world is completely free.

Andreas Antonopoulos has a good video about this topic: Bitcoin Q&A: Airdrop coins and privacy implications: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHRnqJJ0rhc
mk4
legendary
Activity: 2870
Merit: 3873
Paldo.io 🤖
May 06, 2018, 11:34:16 PM
#6
I joined a bunch of airdrops last year, about 20, I was paid by only a few of them (about 5). I have sent documents, telegram, created a twitter (already deleted anyway), etc.... did a bunch of useless tasks and received from 5cc to 20 usd.
Conclusion: waste of time and risky.

Well damn. I didn't actually know airdrops required documents as I've never got interested in airdrops anyway. Definitely a no for me then. I don't even feel comfortable giving my bitcoin wallet address to airdroppers, what much more my personal documents? It pretty much is like just selling your information to them. Definitely not worth the few dollars.
legendary
Activity: 2646
Merit: 2691
Join the world-leading crypto sportsbook NOW!
May 05, 2018, 08:35:58 AM
#5
Absolutely agree with OP. Airdrops are something most of have to try for ourselves before we decide they aren't worth our time. That especially goes for all airdrops which require you to do something. Airdrop should be absolutely free & without any tasks attached, except KYC if necessary. All the airdrops that require social media advertising are actually bounties and I just skip those.

Regarding installation of wallets for airdrops. Be sure to use separate machine or at least Virtual machine. It is just to easy to get some nasty malware/virus/trojan or whatever that way.
legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1025
May 05, 2018, 08:33:14 AM
#4
I decided to write a new topic about this after a small chat I had with bill gator.
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.35719449

In my opinion, airdrops are a waste of time and they are not free, you pay with your privacy and your time.

-snip-

Even my reputation could be at risk since I do not know what they will do with those docs. They marked me as a customer through KYC, only to inflate their numbers, although I am not really their customer, this is all too dirty.
In addition, exposing your email to these companies may incur an additional risk to your security. Your email can be distributed to third parties, exposing your e-mail to phishing and other types of scams.
As bill gator said, I just did free advertising in social media for them. This advertising through a marketing agency would be more expensive. 
 
This is indeed true and I had to learn this the hard way. I used to view airdrops as a good source of free coin. Turns out that these airdrops, tho requires a little work is risky and the coins rarely have any value.
All the emails that I have used previously in joining in airdrops were flooded by spam emails about ICOs and airdrops that then turned out as a scam pump and dump.
Even my email is used in accessing my account on exchanges which is partly my fault for being oblivious of this scheme.
legendary
Activity: 2352
Merit: 6089
bitcoindata.science
May 05, 2018, 08:13:55 AM
#3
I don't know exactly where to post this. Bitcoin discussion I think is not appropriated because this is altcoin related. If I post on the altcoins sessions only spammers and shitposters will see it... Any ideas? I can move it elsewhere, but I think this is somewhat forum related.

It's hopefully something the more seasoned denizens of the forum already understand, so I'd say Beginners & Help would be the most constructive.



For the topic at hand, Airdrops fall into the same category as ICOs.  The vast majority probably aren't worth wasting your time on, but if you're very fortunate, a rare few may prove profitable. 

To date, I've only claimed one Airdrop, which didn't require any KYC and wasn't one of the myriad Bitcoin forks.  So far, at least, it's been a win for free BTC without consequence.  Still holding some of it too, just in case it has an even better future.  I guess that makes me one of the lucky ones. 

I made sure I read plenty about it first.  It seemed safe, but I had know way of knowing that for sure when I installed the software to claim it.  There's a chance my PC could have been infected/hacked and I could have lost my bitcoins.  Some gambles do pay off, others don't.  I may not be so lucky if I indulge my greed a second time.

Thanks, just move to beginners board.

I am really afraid of those shady Wallets out there too... I don't download them. This makes Airdrops even more risky
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