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Based on our record, Crypto.com seems to be a lot more popular than MakersPlace. While we know about 13655 links to Crypto.com, we've tracked only 15 mentions of MakersPlace. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I had seen some people intentionally flexing off their crypto.com visa card when making payment in any kind of shop. Notice the behavoir of us, indicate an overheat of current market sentiment, this would lead to a short term correction to the market. Source: 5 months ago
I was asking what coins and assets you lost and where did you buy them from? If you bought your coins from a well known site like Coinbase, Binance, or crypto.com and your wallet got hacked, that would be one thing. Source: 5 months ago
Not to mention central exchanges like crypto.com likely never bought the bitcoin anyway. So they're only up 163% on paper and likely hiding their losses thru accounting tricks like FTX/Alameda + Binance, etc have done. Source: 5 months ago
I've seen this happen with both GAS and SOL with crypto.com. Sometimes they take a bit to credit your account with the deposit...many hours sometimes. It's rare but it happens. Source: 5 months ago
What you described as requirements Nowpayments does, and I think its popular on my site do to the flexibility in crypto it can accept. The main thing between the 2 is to use crypto.com as a customer you have to have an account with them, to use Nowpayments you just have to have crypto and know how to send it. Source: 5 months ago
To take Beeple's $69M NFT as an example, its JSON metadata points us to an IPFS gateway run by http://makersplace.com. Source: about 2 years ago
In theory, but if the hashed file is a JSON that contains a link for the media source of "ipfsgateway.makersplace.com/[UNIQUE STRING]", and makersplace.com goes under, wouldn't it be very challenging to recover the actual file stored on the p2p network and update the embedded link? Source: about 2 years ago
Most IPFS hash's return a JSON file that contains a link to an IPFS gateway that is hosted by the company that minted the NFT. Sure this type may not expire on its own, but if makersplace.com goes under, ipfsgateway.makersplace.com will cease to be hosting anything. Source: about 2 years ago
More likely that the art will live as long as the gateway provider lives. Even for the $65M Beeple purchase, the IPFS hash points to a gateway provided by makersplace.com, which is an NFT minting startup. If they go bust, no one maintains the IPFS gateway, and the $65M NFT points to an IPFS hash that returns a json file that contains a description, a few properties related to the NFT, and a dead link. Source: about 2 years ago
More than half of the artists $100K club sell on more than one platform, the average being two. SuperRare was the most popular amongst the sample group followed closely by MakersPlace. https://media.giphy.com/media/l0MYvOjkBiEB0zjTq/giphy.gif. Source: about 2 years ago
Gate.io - Gate.io is dedicated to security and your experience, offering you not only a secure, simple and fair Bitcoin exchange but also promising to safeguard your asset and trading information.
SuperRare - Create, collect and trade rare crypto art and collectibles
CoinMarketCap - Crypto-currency market capitalizations.
OpenSea - Ebay for cryptogoods. Buy and sell items on the blockchain.
Coinbase - Bitcoin, safe and easy.
Rarible - Create, sell, collect digital items secured with blockchain