About Us & Our Services
1: BlackFear Networks Provide VPS hosting services and How to getting free VPS
2: Blackfear Networks Provide Graphics Design services "logos,banners,youtube art channel covers and much more.
3: Blackfear Networkds Provides Youtube videos about vps and cryptocurrency detail.
4: Blackfear Network Daily update this website. about games or earn money.
Game Server Hosting
With some of the biggest sandbox and multiplayer games being released this year there is no wonder why
the demand for game hosting, voice servers and dedicated servers at an affordable price are in such high demand.
With the release of games such as Five Reborn, Conan Exile, Minecraft, The Forest and other Beta titles the demand
has grown larger for dedicated game servers that can handle the gamer’s need.
What is Dedicated Server Hosting?
Running a Sandbox or Multiplayer game requires that you dedicate part of your local computers
resources in order to host a game that your friends and other online players can connect too.
However this can cause many problems for not only your computer but also the users
connecting to your dedicated server. Hosting the game locally will slow down your computer
and will often prove fatal for other players, who often suffer with reduced lag.
This style of game hosting is very demanding of your internet connection and will often affect
gameplay and your ability to play with others online.
Why Would I Need Dedicated Game Server Hosting ?
Hosting a game via a dedicated server or VPS will allow you to enjoy the game with your friends
with visibly smoother gameplay and much lower ping. This means no ones gaming experience will suffer
and you will be able to sit back and enjoy all the benefits of dedicated hosting at an affordable monthly cost.
Game hosting from GameHosting.co ensures that your gaming experience is only the best it can be.
DDoS Protection
We include free DDoS protection on all of our servers in order to keep your games safe 24/7.
We constantly work hard with our server team in order to keep all our servers in check and free from outside attack.
Fast & Friendly Support
We offer free customer support and a contact us page which will send your queries straight
to our dedicated support team. We also included a FAQ on all our games in order
to help answer you questions quickly and effectively.
Games
A game is a structured form of play, usually undertaken for entertainment or fun,
and sometimes used as an educational tool. Games are distinct from work,
which is usually carried out for remuneration, and from art, which is more often an expression
of aesthetic or ideological elements. However, the distinction is not clear-cut, and many games
are also considered to be work (such as professional players of spectator sports or games)
or art (such as jigsaw puzzles or games involving an artistic layout such as Mahjong, solitaire, or some video games).
Games are sometimes played purely for enjoyment, sometimes for achievement or reward as well.
They can be played alone, in teams, or online; by amateurs or by professionals. The players
may have an audience of non-players, such as when people are entertained by watching a chess championship.
On the other hand, players in a game may constitute their own audience as they take their turn to play.
Often, part of the entertainment for children playing a game is deciding who is part of their audience and who is a player.
Key components of games are goals, rules, challenge, and interaction.
Games generally involve mental or physical stimulation, and often both.
Many games help develop practical skills, serve as a form of exercise, or
otherwise perform an educational, simulational, or psychological role.
Attested as early as 2600 BC, games are a universal part of human experience
and present in all cultures. The Royal Game of Ur, Senet, and Mancala are some of the oldest known games.
Cryptocurrency
A cryptocurrency, crypto-currency, or crypto is a digital asset designed to work as a medium of exchange
wherein individual coin ownership records are stored in a ledger existing in a form of a computerized database
using strong cryptography to secure transaction records, to control the creation of additional coins, and to verify
the transfer of coin ownership.[1][2] Cryptocurrency does not exist in physical form (like paper money) and is typically
not issued by a central authority. Cryptocurrencies typically use decentralized control as opposed to a central bank
digital currency (CBDC) When a cryptocurrency is minted or created prior to issuance or issued by a single issuer,
it is generally considered centralized. When implemented with decentralized control, each cryptocurrency works through
distributed ledger technology, typically a blockchain, that serves as a public financial transaction database.
Bitcoin, first released as open-source software in 2009, is the first decentralized cryptocurrency.
Since the release of bitcoin, many other cryptocurrencies have been created
History
See also: History of bitcoin
In 1983, the American cryptographer David Chaum conceived an anonymous cryptographic electronic money called ecash.
Later, in 1995, he implemented it through Digicash,[8] an early form of cryptographic electronic payments which required user
software in order to withdraw notes from a bank and designate specific encrypted keys before it can be sent to a recipient.
This allowed the digital currency to be untraceable by the issuing bank, the government, or any third party.
In 1996, the National Security Agency published a paper entitled How to Make a Mint: the Cryptography of Anonymous Electronic Cash,
describing a Cryptocurrency system, first publishing it in an MIT mailing list[9] and later in 1997, in The American Law Review
(Vol. 46, Issue 4)
In 1998, Wei Dai published a description of "b-money", characterized as an anonymous, distributed electronic cash system.
Shortly thereafter, Nick Szabo described bit gold.[12] Like bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies that would follow it,
bit gold (not to be confused with the later gold-based exchange, BitGold) was described as an electronic currency system
which required users to complete a proof of work function with solutions being cryptographically put together and published.
In 2009, the first decentralized cryptocurrency, bitcoin, was created by presumably pseudonymous developer Satoshi Nakamoto.
It used SHA-256, a cryptographic hash function, in its proof-of-work scheme.[13][14] In April 2011, Namecoin was created
as an attempt at forming a decentralized DNS, which would make internet censorship very difficult. Soon after,
in October 2011, Litecoin was released. It used scrypt as its hash function instead of SHA-256. Another notable cryptocurrency,
Peercoin used a proof-of-work/proof-of-stake hybrid.
On 6 August 2014, the UK announced its Treasury had been commissioned a study of cryptocurrencies, and what role, if any,
they could play in the UK economy. The study was also to report on whether regulation should be considered.
In June 2021, El Salvador became the first country to accept Bitcoin as legal tender, after the Legislative Assembly
had voted 62–22 to pass a bill submitted by President Nayib Bukele classifying the cryptocurrency as such.
Formal definition
According to Jan Lansky, a cryptocurrency is a system that meets six conditions:
The system does not require a central authority; its state is maintained through distributed consensus.
The system keeps an overview of cryptocurrency units and their ownership.
The system defines whether new cryptocurrency units can be created. If new cryptocurrency units can be created,
the system defines the circumstances of their origin and how to determine the ownership of these new units.
Ownership of cryptocurrency units can be proved exclusively cryptographically.
The system allows transactions to be performed in which ownership of the cryptographic units is changed.
A transaction statement can only be issued by an entity proving the current ownership of these units.
If two different instructions for changing the ownership of the same cryptographic units are
simultaneously entered, the system performs at most one of them.
In March 2018, the word cryptocurrency was added to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
Altcoins
Tokens, cryptocurrencies, and other types of digital assets that are not bitcoin are collectively known as alternative
cryptocurrencies,typically shortened to "altcoins" or "alt coins".
Paul Vigna of The Wall Street Journal also described altcoins as "alternative versions of bitcoin"
given its role as the model protocol for altcoin designers. The term is commonly used to describe coins and tokens
created after bitcoin. The list of such cryptocurrencies can be found in the List of cryptocurrencies article.
Altcoins often have underlying differences with bitcoin. For example, Litecoin aims to process a block every 2.5 minutes,
rather than bitcoin's 10 minutes which allows Litecoin to confirm transactions faster than bitcoin.
Another example is Ethereum, which has smart contract functionality that allows decentralized applications to be run on
its blockchain. Ethereum is the most-actively used blockchain in the world according to Bloomberg News
and has the largest "following" of any altcoins according to the New York Times.
Significant rallies across altcoin markets are often referred to as an "altseason".
Crypto token
A blockchain account can provide functions other than making payments, for example in decentralized applications or smart contracts.
(Units of) fungible tokens are sometimes referred to as crypto tokens (or cryptotokens). These terms are usually reserved
for other fungible tokens than the main cryptocurrency of the blockchain, that is, usually, for fungible tokens issued within
a smart contract running on top of a blockchain such as Ethereum.[32] There are also non-fungible tokens.
Architecture
Decentralized cryptocurrency is produced by the entire cryptocurrency system collectively, at a rate which is defined
when the system is created and which is publicly known. In centralized banking and economic systems such as the Federal
Reserve System, corporate boards or governments control the supply of currency by printing units of fiat money or demanding
additions to digital banking ledgers. In the case of decentralized cryptocurrency, companies or governments cannot produce
new units, and have not so far provided backing for other firms, banks or corporate entities which hold asset value measured
in it. The underlying technical system upon which decentralized cryptocurrencies are based was created by the group or
individual known as Satoshi Nakamoto.
As of May 2018, over 1,800 cryptocurrency specifications existed. Within a cryptocurrency system,
the safety, integrity and balance of ledgers is maintained by a community of mutually distrustful parties
referred to as miners: who use their computers to help validate and timestamp transactions, adding them
to the ledger in accordance with a particular timestamping scheme.
Most cryptocurrencies are designed to gradually decrease the production of that currency, placing a cap on the
total amount of that currency that will ever be in circulation.[35] Compared with ordinary currencies held by financial
institutions or kept as cash on hand, cryptocurrencies can be more difficult for seizure by law enforcement.
Blockchain
Main article: Blockchain
The validity of each cryptocurrency's coins is provided by a blockchain. A blockchain is a continuously growing list of records,
called blocks, which are linked and secured using cryptography.[33][36] Each block typically contains a hash pointer as a link
to a previous block, a timestamp and transaction data.[37] By design, blockchains are inherently resistant to modification
of the data. It is "an open, distributed ledger that can record transactions between two parties efficiently and in a verifiable
and permanent way". For use as a distributed ledger, a blockchain is typically managed by a peer-to-peer network collectively
adhering to a protocol for validating new blocks. Once recorded, the data in any given block cannot be altered retroactively without
the alteration of all subsequent blocks, which requires collusion of the network majority.
Blockchains are secure by design and are an example of a distributed computing system with high Byzantine fault tolerance.
Decentralized consensus has therefore been achieved with a blockchain.
Nodes
In the world of Cryptocurrency, a node is a computer that connects to a cryptocurrency network.
The node supports the relevant cryptocurrency's network through either; relaying transactions, validation or hosting
a copy of the blockchain. In terms of relaying transactions each network computer (node) has a copy of the blockchain
of the cryptocurrency it supports, when a transaction is made the node creating the transaction broadcasts details of
the transaction using encryption to other nodes throughout the node network so that the transaction (and every other transaction) is known.
Node owners are either volunteers, those hosted by the organisation or body responsible for developing the cryptocurrency
blockchain network technology or those that are enticed to host a node to receive rewards from hosting the node network.
Timestamping
Cryptocurrencies use various timestamping schemes to "prove" the validity of transactions added to the blockchain
ledger without the need for a trusted third party.
The first timestamping scheme invented was the proof-of-work scheme. The most widely used proof-of-work schemes are based
on SHA-256 and scrypt.
Some other hashing algorithms that are used for proof-of-work include CryptoNight, Blake, SHA-3, and X11.
The proof-of-stake is a method of securing a cryptocurrency network and achieving distributed consensus through requesting
users to show ownership of a certain amount of currency. It is different from proof-of-work systems that run difficult
hashing algorithms to validate electronic transactions. The scheme is largely dependent on the coin, and there's currently
no standard form of it. Some cryptocurrencies use a combined proof-of-work and proof-of-stake scheme