Go to the buttons area in your paypal and make a button, it will ask you for first payment, any free trial before first payment and recurring payments. Then it will give you the code for the button.
No it doesn't make sense. Unless it's possible for a bad API key to sometimes work and sometimes not work. I would think that if the API key is expired for the month or banned or something then it would just not work and give an authentication error consistently rather than work intermittently...
If the APIs were banned then they wouldn't have been able to succeed in the first place, which is why I suspect that the problem may be IP related with someone else hammering away with a couple of my shared IPs every 10 or so seconds with their own API keys through scrapebox or some other tool...
I'm running 108 APIs and I have 108 unique keys along with 108 unique proxies too(though some may be in the same C block). I am keeping it at 100 threads. If I run it on a test list of 300 URLs I get the first 100 URLs back with a proper PA, then the following 10 URLs are 401. After those 10...
I'm getting random spurts of 401s on the PA checker. The 401s come sequentially in blocks of about 10 or 15 and then everything works for a few dozen more queries and then another block of 401s. The only thing I can think of is that perhaps my shared proxies are simultaneously being used by...
Probably because they're banned on PP and ebay already for one, and also if they have a plan they want to start executing it right now and bank on it rather than wait six months and possibly have the [method] become obsolete.
Some time in the last couple of weeks tumblr removed the post by email option where they give you a special tumblr email to which you can send your blog posts via an email client instead of a web login. Did anyone else notice that?
There probably was and still is a sandbox. I'd think it's more of a tarpit than a cage and that it was developed for sites that go viral where they don't have much authority to begin with, and google puts a damper on things because the content might not be the quality google wants seen in SERPs...
I'm personally really interested in how the seller managed to make the domain indexed, and then deindexed. It's possible he pointed some juicy links to it which were then secretly taken away after the sale. Majestic or Ahrefs may have a clue as to what those links were. Assuming the domain has...
There could have been all sorts of shenanigans going on with redirects and metric manipulation until he sold it to you when he pulled it all away and covered his tracks. Or it was something you did. It makes sense, you just aren't telling us everything probably because you don't know it all.
I can't help but wonder how the domain got deindexed. It was either through the buyer's actions after buying the domain that got it zapped or there was some sorcery on the seller's side which had propped up the metrics until after the sale. Once the domain was sold, the props were perhaps pulled.
I've seen a lot of clips on various sites removed because of a request by the owner of the clip so it's possible that's how these sites avoid being sued because before you prosecute you have to send a C&D which in it's online form would be a flag on the video claiming to be the copyright holder...
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