The Daily Bidbot Summary for Yesterday 4/27/18 - Who's paying the most for Bidbots?
The list below represents the 25 largest net transfers to bid-bots for the promotion of articles posted on Steemit yesterday.
Due to formatting restrictions, only a few columns can be displayed.
Note: Due to the complexity of certain promotional tools and their associated refunding mechanisms, some smaller refunds may be duplicated or missed.
What is this report?
Many authors choose to promote their posts via Bid-Bots. In return for direct payment, the bots will upvote your article. This service is fully "legal" on Steemit and used by minnows and whales alike.
There are many reasons why an author may want to purchase votes.
- Give the impression that the article is of substantial value and perhaps you should think so too.
- Cause the article to make it to the "Hot" or "Trending" category where it gets more exposure and more votes.
- Cause the payout to increase so that anyone that votes on the post will share in a higher curation pool.
- Attempt to make a direct profit on the vote by receiving a vote that nets more than the cost of the bid.
- Increase the authors reputation by receiving large SP votes. High SP votes move the reputation quickly.
- Support another author or entity indirectly through a Bid-bot.
The list is sorted with the highest NET amounts paid to the Bid-bots on top in descending order.
- From = The user who sent the payment to the bot.
- Gross Bids (SBD) = The total of all bids sent to the bots in SBD or Steem for this single post.
- After Refunds (SBD) = The net total of all bids sent less refunds received back in SBD or Steem for this single post.
- Article Payout = The total STU (SBD/SP) payout value of for the entire article (not just from bots). This is the total paid to the author and curators. (This is the $ value which shows on the bottom of every post.)
- Link is the direct link to the article that has been promoted via the bid bot.
Largest Net Bids sent to Bidbots and and other post promoters
Date | From | Gross Bids | After Refunds | Article Payout | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4-27 | @gravity-protocol | $600.00 | $400.00 | $756.23 | Link |
4-27 | @dahaz159 | $302.00 | $302.00 | $803.10 | Link |
4-27 | @steemthinkcom | $303.20 | $253.20 | $475.66 | Link |
4-27 | @vaansteam | $263.00 | $203.00 | $439.09 | Link |
4-27 | @equ1l1br1um | $181.00 | $175.25 | $514.81 | Link |
4-27 | @steem.services | $157.00 | $155.00 | $391.66 | Link |
4-27 | @cryptoctopus | $150.00 | $150.00 | $534.15 | Link |
4-27 | @lazariko12 | $195.50 | $135.50 | $224.04 | Link |
4-27 | @kenmelendez | $113.00 | $113.00 | $314.14 | Link |
4-27 | @chronocrypto | $184.59 | $107.86 | $220.35 | Link |
4-27 | @brittuf | $107.00 | $107.00 | $289.40 | Link |
4-27 | @corina | $102.00 | $102.00 | $243.28 | Link |
4-27 | @wikitree | $100.00 | $100.00 | $108.44 | Link |
4-27 | @elgeko | $135.29 | $99.00 | $240.78 | Link |
4-27 | @tcpolymath | $100.00 | $98.23 | $270.22 | Link |
4-27 | @danizaharie | $98.00 | $98.00 | $204.23 | Link |
4-27 | @brittuf | $96.00 | $96.00 | $209.96 | Link |
4-27 | @digitaldreamer | $96.03 | $95.93 | $239.65 | Link |
4-27 | @onur1s | $93.00 | $93.00 | $67.10 | Link |
4-27 | @gringalicious | $88.50 | $87.24 | $302.86 | Link |
4-27 | @zannat | $80.00 | $80.00 | $155.52 | Link |
4-27 | @charles1 | $80.00 | $80.00 | $176.30 | Link |
4-27 | @alexko-steemit | $140.00 | $79.92 | $142.44 | Link |
4-27 | @themarkymark | $175.00 | $75.00 | $188.83 | Link |
4-27 | @libertyepodcast | $75.00 | $73.74 | $236.37 | Link |
Sometimes great articles get to the top because they are great articles.
Sometimes other articles get to the top because there was sufficient money to pay for that placement. It is up to the community to judge if the rewards pool is being properly managed and distributed in a fair and honest manner.
The wonderful thing about Steemit and the Steem blockchain is everything is transparent
allowing you and all those who care about this platform to be educated on how to properly use the platform as well as how to protect it.
As a result of digging even deeper on the longer term problems associated with bidbots, I have launched a new tool called @transparencybot, which seeks to bring more transparency and education on the use of bidbots to everyone.
You can read more about this mission here.
Please resteem this post if you think this information might be useful to the Steemit community.
Transparency, community, love and care about each other! We should care and help... and love... and care!
I have an amazing idea, @bycoleman. You should hear me out.
It will prove that you really care about the community. And people won't ever question what you do!
Since you don't care about money - you should not take any rewards from posts and close the payout! :)
Otherwise, it only proves that you're a hypocrate trying to earn from his bots, bullshitting everyone at the same time.
No matter what you say. It is the way it is. If you do it - then good job, I can only praise you for this.
If you won't do it - then I was right all along. And you only bullshit people with your lies. Please don't bullshit people. It's not a good thing to do.
(Wrote that in a couple of your different accounts posts so you can see. Lots of love, thanks for your bull... I mean work!).