Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Discover How to Get Free Facebook Credits 2012 Method

Discover How to Get Free Facebook Credits 2012 Method

Facebook is on a roll with world domination. Not only a popular social networking site, it’s also a game addict’s heaven. Mafia Wars, Farmville, It Girl—it seems Facebook has a game for almost every demographic. The fun never stops when you’re playing games, unless your purchasing power has hit bottom.
Part of the allure of Facebook games is the useful and decorative virtual goods available to players in exchange for virtual money. The virtual money is called Facebook Credits, which you buy with real money. It’s easy to get Facebook credits; the standard way is to pay for them with credit card, PayPal, Western Union or other payment methods.

In early 2011, Facebook provided an even easier way to earn free Facebook Credits: by watching Facebook-sponsored branded videos. Other ways have cropped up since then. You can complete tasks, buy actual goods or complete surveys for free Facebook credits 2012. You can also play other games to get credits that you can use in your favorite game. Depending on the type of game, the amount of free Facebook credits 2012 can be low (one credit) or high (120 credits and up).

How to Buy Facebook Credits
These are standard ways of getting Facebook credits, by using real money through credit/debit card, PayPal or other methods.

Account Settings. To check your balance or to buy Facebook credits for later use, log in to Facebook, then go to Account Settings. Click the Payments tab. Click the “Buy More” link next to “Credits Balance”.

Facebook Games Panel. The Facebook games panel displays you balance. To get there, launch an application. If you play Farmville for example, click on the Farmville icon in the home page. The games panel is shown on the right hand side of your screen. You can buy credits by clicking the “Get More” link. Here’s the step by step process:

1. Log in to Facebook.
2. Go to an application or game that allows Facebook credits.
3. Click the button with the Facebook credits logo on it.
4. When the “Buy Now?” window appears, select a payment method: PayPal, credit/debit card or mobile phone.
5. Click “Continue.”
6. When the payment Information window opens, enter your information.
7. Click “Complete Purchase.”

How to Get Free Facebook Credits 2012
Ever heard of the kid who racked up thousands of dollars using his mom’s credit card for Facebook games? As you can see, the standard way of getting Facebook credits is super easy, but it can cost you a lot of money. Virtual goods are covetable and useful, but they can be very expensive. They’re usually not available for coins either. That’s how Facebook lures you into dropping real cash for virtual goods.

[Read our Article how to get free Facebook Credits for more info]

Let’s face it. Freebies are great, but they are usually hard to find. And when you do find them, there’s almost always a catch. Free Facebook credits 2012 are no exception. We’ve listed some methods of getting free Facebook credits 2012, but note that they may still require you to buy things.

Go to www.facebook.com/credits and click on the link “special promotions”. You’ll see a pop-up window with instructions on how to get free Facebook credits 2012. Current participating vendors are PicaJet FX, Serenata Flowers, Rebtel, Australian Jade and CrowdFlower.
Bing Rewards. By using the Bing search engine to shop for products, you get rewards in free Facebook credits or other ways.
Sign up for AppDog. AppDog is a service that allows you to download apps to your Android phone or iPhone. 10 bones = 1 Facebook credit.
Sign up for iFeelGoods. iFeelGoods is a website that pays you Facebook credits for buying certain products online and for subscribing to newsletters.
Log in to Facebook and like the Facebook Credits Page. You won’t get instant credits, but you’ll get updates about special offers and promotions.
More Ways to Get Free Facebook Credits 2012
Gift Cards for free Facebook Credits 2012. A current Facebook promotion involves exchanging gift cards for Facebook Credits using Plastic Jungle. Plastic Jungle is a gift card exchange application on Facebook. It’s a great way to turn forgotten gift cards into something you can use on Facebook games. Here’s how it works: Go to Plastic Jungle on Facebook.

Enter your gift card information, then use the prepaid label provided to mail it in. Once received and verified, your credits will be added to your account. Plastic Jungle pays out up to 92% of a gift card’s balance and you get 10 Facebook Credits for every dollar in trade-in value. For example, a $100 Target gift card earns you 920 free Facebook credits 2012.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

PayPal’s Send Money App, and Why Facebook Never Built P2P Credits Payments

PayPal’s Send Money App, and Why Facebook Never Built P2P Credits Payments

PayPal relaunched a that some news outlets are misinterpreting as a partnership between the two companies. I’ve confirmed with Facebook that it’s not. It’s just a standard application on the platform, and Facebook couldn’t really do anything to stop PayPal. But why hasn’t Facebook built its own way for friends to send money to each other using its virtual currency Credits? Because of significant fraud risks and its focus on making Credits work better for virtual goods purchases where it earns 30%.

The first incarnation of Send Money was . It lets you pay friends through a credit card or your PayPal account. What’s new is that you can now also opt to include a digital greeting card, good for sending money on birthdays and other holidays. The only Facebook data the app needs is your friend list, and even then you still have to hunt down a payment recipient’s email address before you can transfer funds. Send Money doesn’t integrate with Facebook’s own payment system, it doesn’t require any secret

data or APIs, and I’ve heard it wasn’t even built inside PayPal.

Facebook has its own payment system that lets users receive its virtual currency Credits in exchange for money paid through credit cards, PayPal, and other means. Users spend the Credits in social games for power-ups or extended game time, and the developers redeem these Credits for 70% of their worth while Facebook keeps its 30% tax.

The primary reason Credits can only be spent in games and apps, not sent to other users, is fraud. There are several ways for users to earn Credits instead of paying for them, such as completing on-site offers, or making off-site purchases that are incentivized with Credits rewards through companies like . If users could transfer Credits to someone else, the occupation of “Credits Miner” would emerge. These people would earn Credits any way they could and sell them to others for more than they cost to earn but less than Facebook sells them for. This would essentially create a secondary market for Credits and undermine Facebook’s ability to make money on them.

P2P Credits transfers would also make users a more lucrative target for hackers. Someone could steal your account info and dump your existing balance of Credits into their own account, or even buy more Credits in your name and send them to themselves. When Facebook originally developed Credits, it correctly determined that it could significantly reduce its risk of fraud by disallowing P2P transfers.

The other main reason there’s no Credits P2P payments is because it not Facebook’s focus, due to a mix of developer ecosystem politics, long-term monetization, and Facebook’s lean startup style. Facebook and PayPal are close. They’re strategic partners, with PayPal helping the social network process Credits purchases, and PayPal’s founder Peter Thiel is an early investor and advisor to Facebook. Moving into P2P payments could upset this partnership, and lead PayPal to remove itself as a Credits purchasing method.

To be competitive, Facebook would only be able to take a few percent on transactions, and still it wouldn’t have the base of merchants PayPal cultivated through eBay. Instead, Facebook is focusing on Credits as its platform’s mandatory virtual goods payment processor for developers, where it earns its juicy 30% cut. That business is growing thanks to gaming giants like Zynga, so there’s no need to move into a risky sector such as P2P payments that’s outside its core competencies and dominated by incumbents.

Facebook is still a relatively small company. It needs its Credits team optimizing payment flows and fostering partnerships to milk the virtual goods market. It also needs to make Credits as a better payments processor for apps, through which more content companies are selling digital media like film rentals.

Right now, Facebook simply doesn’t have the resources to divert attention to P2P payments, and there’s no indication that such a need isn’t already being met off-site by PayPal, even if the Send Money app didn’t exist. One day that could change, especially if social ecommerce takes off and it allows Credits to be used to purchase physical goods from approved merchants. For now, Facebook is making the same smart choice about P2P payments as it made about virtual gifts, social games, music, and brand management — leave it to third-parties and concentrate on improving its core infrastructure.

The most effective way for developers to generate revenue in games and apps on Facebook

The most effective way for developers to generate revenue in games and apps on Facebook

Facebook Credits is a payment system that offers a safe, easy and fast way to pay for digital and virtual goods in games and apps across Facebook.

Facebook users trust the Facebook brand and feel comfortable storing their payment information with Facebook and buying with their Facebook credentials.
Facebook Credits is avaialable internationally and supports 80+ payment methods in 50+ countries around the world and we continue to actively expand our footprint.
Finally Facebook credits provides a consistent way for users to buy on Facebook across mobile, desktop, games as well as non-game apps.
Developers already building on Facebook Platform, can use the Graph API and our Dialogs to integrate with our payments APIs and get the integration up and running quickly. This enables developers to focus on building their Apps and let us take care of all payments overhead!

Credits Payment Flows

Facebook offers two different payment flows for developers:

Credits as a Payment Method

This flow enables you to use Facebook Credits as a payment platform where you can charge users directly for items in your app (including your own in-app currency).

Credits as a Currency

This flow enables you to use Facebook Credits as an in-app currency (instead of having to manage your own in-app currency) where users will see and directly access their Credits balance.

Credits as a Payment Method

Facebook offers a payments platform that enables developers to leverage our payments services to charge their users on Apps on Facebook as well as their Mobile web Applications.

You can use Facebook Credits as a payments platform to buy in game virtual currency for your app or game. The user experience looks like below. A user places an order by clicking a button in the application.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Facebook Credits - getOrders call for refunds/chargebacks

Facebook Credits - getOrders call for refunds/chargebacks

I am using the Get Orders call for our app as specified in: developers.facebook.com/docs/creditsapi/

It all works fine when I set the status=settled, but if I set the status to reserved or refunded, then I get no results. This is even over a period where I know we had refunds/chargebacks.

This works:

https://graph.facebook.com/APP_ID/payments?status=settled&since=1320537600&until=1320624000&access_token=ACCESS_TOKEN
But this never returns anything:

https://graph.facebook.com/APP_ID/payments?status=refunded&since=1320537600&until=1320624000&access_token=ACCESS_TOKEN
Has anyone else had any luck with this API call? Are my expectations wrong

How to Get 15$ in Free Facebook Credits

How to Get 15$ in Free Facebook Credits

This is not a cheat ,Hack or even a Trick of some sort. In the best case scenario it is much more a thing that already thousands of people know and practice , so i thought i share this with you.The Website i talk about is


This website is truly amazing and allow us users to generate points by completing FREE Surveys. These Points can be redeemed for almost everything

Monday, November 7, 2011

How do i get facebook credits for free

How do i get facebook credits for free

If you have an iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch or Android mobile device, you can get free Facebook Credits awarded when you download mobile apps - EVEN FOR FREE APP DOWNLOADS - through AppDog. It works for users worldwide.

I would suggest you be suspicious of others that say they offer free FB Credits. Facebook is only partnererd with a few companies - AppDog being one of them

The best way to VERIFY AppDog (or anyone else) is a legitimate Facebook partner, is by going to the official Facebook Credits page to see if they are mentioned as a Facebook partner. Here is where AppDog is cited:

http://howdoigetfacebookcredits.blogspot.com/

No forms to fill out, or tool bars to download - they do not even ask you for any personal information. You just need to sign in via your Facebook account (so they can deposit your Facebook Credits automatically), and allow them permission to identify your Apple or Android device. Each free (or paid) app download guarantees you Facebook Credits.

You need to be on your mobile device to use AppDog - just google 'appdog' or go to 'm.appdog.com' from your mobile device browser to get started.

You will see hundreds of apps that you can download - many free - and the amount of Facebook Credits you will be awarded for each.

I am personally getting free FB Credits from them every few days and have received over 200 FB Credits for free so far.

You can get your FB Credits anytime you are on your mobile device (i.e. you do not need to be within a game) and it works for users worldwide.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Who’s Really Slaying The Free Facebook Credits Scams

Who’s Really Slaying The Free Facebook Credits Scams

Scams promising free Facebook Credits still exist, but they’re withering on the vine.
We just deleted a message about free Credits that showed on AllFacebook’s page on Facebook today; after copying the text of the offer, we deleted it and did some keyword searching.
It looks like Facebook users have learned to recognize that promises of free Facebook Credits contain malware or spam — fewer people click on these posts, which helps slow down their spread as much as the social network’s own defense systems do.
People have gotten the message that there’s really no such thing as free Facebook Credits — either you earn them in a game as a bonus (or earn them through an incentive program), you purchase them, or someone you already know gives you a gift.
Here’s how we know this: the posts going up on the site about Credits are sparse, yet the web addresses in these postings don’t trigger Facebook’s systems for blocking malicious URLs. We clicked through to three different sites with the usual malware marketing surveys.
We’re not saying the social network’s systems are weak in any way, but rather that users have gotten smarter. They know not to click, and that keeps the scams from spreading.
Readers, when was the last time you saw a free Facebook Credits offer show up in your news feed?