Cresio CIO Comments, New 'Satoshi' and BTC Games: This Week in CT Spain

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On Aug. 22, Cointelegraph in Spanish spoke with Daniel Pons Ayala, founder and CIO of Cresio, a platform that allows users to operate on multiple crypto exchanges simultaneously using the same application.

What are the dynamics of video games that give BTC? Some time ago various developers realized that users were getting bored with simplistic ad-funded crypto gambling sites.

Developers moved to make the games themselves more entertaining.

This idea matured with time and gave birth to various video games - for tablets, smartphones and computers - where you can win Bitcoins by playing and having fun.

Most of these games are funded by advertising, so there is no up-front fee or buy-in.

Prior to the rise of Bitcoin games, there was another kind of cryptocurrency-based entertainment - crypto faucets.

They have been on everyone's mind for some time now, but what are they? Could they really give you Bitcoins or are they designed just to steal yours? Is it actually possible to earn Bitcoins on faucets? Our Spanish colleagues answered these and many other questions in the article.

Why would someone give away an asset that is constantly being revalued over time? This is where Bitcoin faucets come into play, and our Spanish colleagues explained how they work.

This week digital marketing and PR agency Ivy McLemore & Associates announced that it had signed a partnership with a company named "Satoshi Nakamoto Renaissance Holdings" and would reveal the true identity of Satoshi Nakamoto by proving his ownership of 980,000 Bitcoins, eventually naming Bilal Khalid as the creator of Bitcoin.

Spagni tracked down numerous inconsistencies in Khalid's story, including the distortion of the relationship between the domain name of Khalid's Blue Chip International and Bitcoin.

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