steam bitcoin confirmation

Valve introducing Bitcoin transactions to Steam February 9, 2016 09:23 GMT Valve looks set to introduce Bitcoin payments to its digital distribution platform Steam, according to references found on Steam's translation servers.The move will make the enormously popular platform the first major gaming service to support Bitcoin.There has been no official word from Valve yet but the references – posted on Reddit with a screenshot – seem fairly definitive.These include information regarding how the payments will work, and a messages that would be sent out to people in the process of paying with Bitcoin.It also appears that Steam will use third-party software, in the form of BitPay API, to process the payments.Below are the extracts as found.bitcoin_authorization_explanationBitcoin transactions are authorized through the BitPay website.Click the button below to open a new web browser to initiate the transaction.bitcoin_payment_tips_headerTips for Bitcoin customersbitcoin_payment_tips_textThis process can take up to 60 seconds.
To avoid purchasing failures, please do not hit your back button or close the bitpay window before the process is complete.checkout_payment_method_specific_note_bitcoinNote: Any approved refunds for purchases made with Bitcoin can only be credited to your Steam walletcheckout_receipt_pending_bitcoin_longYour purchase is currently in progress and is waiting for confirmation of Bitcoin delivery from BitPay.This process can take several minutes to a few days for confirmation.Valve will send an email receipt to you when payment is received for this purchase.During this time you may continue shopping for other games, though you will not be able to re-purchase any products that are pending in this transaction.checkout_receipt_pending_bitcoin_textFor questions regarding your payment processing status, please contact BitPayFor all the latest video game news follow us on Twitter @IBTGamesUK.As part of my mission to promote Bitcoin to the masses I have decided to purchase things using only bitcoin and record the process.Despite Bitcoin being used for a whole array of things it still has a stigma attached to it for it’s use on the dark web and in order to gain mainstream adoption this view has to be changed.For my first Bitcoin purchase I have decided to buy a game on STEAM.
Steam partnered up with BitPay in April 2016 and being that it is almost one year later to the day I thought that would make a great first purchase.The first step is to add your game to your cart like you would with any other purchase and chose whether you are buying the game for yourself or as a gift.usb bitcoin mining device buyI went with the “Purchase for myself” option.You are then taking to the payment method page, select the drop down box chose Bitcoin and click continue.The third step is similar to cart, but it has has a handy side panel with tips for paying in Bitcoin.bitcoin mining mh/sIt shows the price in your local currency, which is great but I personally feel it would be better if it integrated with BitPay to show the price in Bitcoin too.Confirm you agree with their terms and click “Continue to BitPay”You will then be presented with the BitPay popup.wiki bitcoin supply
It displays the price in your local currency as well as in Bitcoin and you are given 15 minutes to make the payment.bitcoin suksesThis locks the price so you don’t have to worry about making the conversion right yourself.You are presented with a QR code to scan or if you click the copy window you are given the address to send the Bitcoin over to.ethereum price jsonI clicked copy and did it manually as I was using my PC.Now you make the payment to above address, for this step I used the Electrum wallet.bitcoin nucleoHead over to the send tab and the address we copied to the “Pay to” field and the amount of Bitcoin to the “Amount” field.mining litecoin with bitcoin asicElectrum automatically tells you have much the value is in your set currency.I left the fee as the default that Electrum suggested which was around £0.40, this would make sure my payment would get confirmed within 2 blocks.When you have made sure everything is correct hit the “Send” button.Almost instantly after hitting the send button the BitPay window confirmed my invoice had been paid and directed me back to the STEAM window to download my game.This did make me wonder whether I had needed to do the fee that Electrum had suggested or not because BitPay accepted the payment without any confirmations.To ensure the payment is received with no issues it is probably easier to pay the suggested fee but it is something that might be worth playing around with if you have knowledge of how the fee’s work.It really is as easy as that, the whole process took minutes and I was extremely pleased with how simple STEAM and BitPay made the process.litecoin buy in australia
The pricing that BitPay suggested was accurate and not having to wait around for confirmations was a huge bonus.If you have any ideas about what you would like me to purchase with Bitcoin for my next guide feel free to leave a comment and I will add it to my list.If you like what I am doing here and would like to donate to the cause I am accepting tips.bitcoin faucet botEverything donated will go towards making Bitcoin purchases and writing guides for the masses.WinAuth is a portable, open-source Authenticator for Windows that provides counter or time-based RFC 6238 authenticators and common implementations, such as the Google Authenticator.WinAuth can be used with many Bitcoin trading websites as well as games, supporting Battle.net (World of Warcraft, Hearthstone, Heroes of the Storm, Diablo), Guild Wars 2, Glyph (Rift and ArcheAge), WildStar, RuneScape, SWTOR and Steam.The latest stable version is WinAuth 3.5 and is available to download from this source repository, or as a pre-compiled binary from WinAuth downloads.
WinAuth provides an alternative solution to combine various two-factor authenticator services in one convenient place.There is also a .Net 3.5 build of WinAuth that can be run on Windows 7 installations "out of the box".To compile and build from source: Version 3.5 includes Steam trade confirmations.If you registered SteamGuard with WinAuth 3.3.7 or earlier, you will need to remove it from your Steam account and add it again.This is because WinAuth 3.3 only kept information relevant to generating the SteamGuard authenticator codes, however, confirmations needs more information.You can go into the normal Steam client, choose Account Details, then click "Manage Steam Guard".Click the Remove Authenticator button and enter the recovery code (aka revocation code - found from right-clicking in WinAuth).Once the new authenticator is added, you will have an extra option when right-clicking called "Confirmations...".This will login with your username/password and show your current trade confirmations.
You can click to view more details, and use the buttons to accept or reject them.If you choose "remember me", WinAuth will keep you logged in (does not keep your username/password) so you can quickly go into Confirmations again.All authenticators just provide another layer of security.None are 100% effective.A physical/keychain device is by far the best protection.Although still subject to any man-in-the-middle attack, there is no way to get at the secret key stored within it.If you are at all concerned, get one of these.An iPhone app or app on a non-rooted Android device is also secure.There is no way to get at the secret key stored on the device, however, some apps provides way to export the key that could compromise your authenticator if you do not physically protect your phone.Also if those apps backup their data elsewhere, that data could be vulnerable.A rooted-Android phone can have your secret key read off it by an app with access.Some apps also do not encrypt the keys and so this should be considered risky.
WinAuth stores you secret key in an encrypted file on your computer.Whilst it cannot therefore provide the same security as a separate physical device, as much as possible has been done to protect the key on your machine.As above, physical access to your machine would be the only way to compromise any authenticator.####I'm concerned this might be a virus / malware / keylogger WinAuth has been around and used since mid-2010 and has been downloaded by thousands of users.It has always been open-source allowing everyone to inspect and review the code.A binary is provided, but the source code is always released simultaneously so that you can review the code and build it yourself.No personal information is sent out to any other 3rd party servers.It never even sees your account information, only your authenticator details.There are no other executables installed on your machine.There is no installer doing things you are unable to monitor.WinAuth is portable so you can just run it from anywhere.
####I found WinAuth on another website, is it the same thing?/p/winauth, but has been moved to GiHub since Google Code is being closed down.It is not published anywhere else, so please do not download any other programs claiming to be WinAuth.####Where does WinAuth save my authenticator information?Unlike some other authenticator applications, WinAuth does not store/send your information to any 3rd party servers.Your authenticator information is saved by default in your account roaming profile, i.e.However, this file can be moved anywhere and passed into WinAuth when run.All trademarks are recognised, including but not limited to: WinAuth was written by Colin Mackie.Bitcoin donations can be sent to 1C4bMkMATViiWYsmJSDUx2MruWM785C36Y This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.