The reader is most certainly aware that most of the posts in this thread are the result of a bounty task. After participating to the airdrop of another interesting project (I posted about it earlier) I am now noticing that airdrops have been substantially replaced by bounties. Initially, I did not like bounties because they tend to transform interested users into spammers. Yet, I have used some bounty as a way of trying to get some remuneration for the time spent reading about new ICOs, so I started liking them more.
Lately, I have noticed that most bounties, including blockchain.io, are using the "entries" system. I am generally interested in ICOs of interesting blockchain technology applications to real-life problems. Blockchain.io, however, appears to be an application to crypto coins market itself, as it seems to propose a new combination of exchange and other similar services. It is not my principal subject of interest, but I would still like to know a bit about it. So I have started the bounty, of which this post is task #11, but I must admit that up to here I did not learn anything about the actual project yet.
This is a direct consequence of how the bounty of blockchain.io is structured. The standardization of bounties provided by the airdrop.xxx.xxx websites (I guess section of vyper.io) is transforming bounties in a new type of marketing assembly line, made by a combination of mechanical tasks. At the moment, I am not very happy about it.
One interesting aspect of this bounty is that the BCIO token is currently worth 0.70, and the rewards attainable go from 20.000 to 15 tokens, and higher values do not seem to difficult to reach. If you would like to participate, please do not hesitate to use my ref link
https://vy.tc/fX4sU96 - By doing so, of course, you will also get your blockchain.io ref link which should add 100 entries per new enrolment.