Kim dotcom just showed a sneak preview of bitcache and shared it to media to try it out !
"Request your demo invitation now. Please tweet your opinion about K.im using the hashtag #ICO Enjoy the demo"
https://twitter.com/KimDotcom/status/902561602666283008
Kim Dotcom may be spending much of his time fighting extradition from New Zealand to the U.S., where he faces copyright infringement and money laundering charges, but he's also busy working on the successor to Megaupload, the online storage service that got him into this trouble.
The idea behind K.im is to let people upload their songs, movies, or documents once and then propagate them across a plethora of other platforms: cloud storage services such as Dropbox and iCloud, peer-to-peer networks such as Kickass Torrents, and social media services such as WeChat and Weibo. When a creator uploads a file, they also get the code for a widget that they can embed on their own websites, inviting people to buy the file. Essentially, wherever the file goes, it takes with it the functionality to demand payment for using it."We have our own file type," Dotcom explains. "So to open [it] you will need one of our apps or third party apps that will use our [application programming interface]. That way we ensure that no matter where your file is hosted, the content owner gets paid."
People uploading to K.im can set their own price (shown in U.S. dollars) for each file, and choose from several extra features for the file's availability: it can be a "limited giveaway," people can pay more than the price that's shown, and the files can also be set to be streaming-only, obviating any downloads.
One odd feature in the demo Fortune was shown was the ability to distribute files to media organizations such as The New York Times and CNN—and Wikileaks. This functionality, Dotcom explains, is for whistleblowers.
A notable effort is Flattr, an online tipping service that was this year bought by Eyeo, the company behind the ad-blocking service Adblock Plus. As we reported last year, Eyeo is trying to get publishers to adopt Flattr as a way for people to pay for the articles they read. As with Brave, a browser startup from Mozilla co-founder Brendan Eich, the idea here is to get readers to set aside a certain amount of money each month, then monitor their engagement with the articles they consume and automatically reward the publishers based on that engagement.
For Dotcom's latest endeavor, the next big step is an initial coin offering (ICO)—a trendy fundraising technique in which investors get virtual coins rather than shares—in the fourth quarter of this year. "We will go live within nine months after the ICO," Dotcom says.
http://fortune.com/2017/08/29/kim-dotcom-bitcache-bitcoin-payment/
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I tought newslink was consensus that has value, i didn't even use news tag, and pretty much i'm following those guidelines. Thanks anyway.
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Request your demo invitation now.
Please tweet your opinion about K.im using the hashtag #ICO
Enjoy the demo 🔥🔥🔥
Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.
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