



DigiByte has faced and solved particular challenges that many other blockchains confront. DigiByte aims to be widely supported across various platforms to encourage participation from as many entities as possible.Īccording to the whitepaper, the blockchain emphasizes scalability, security, and speed.

#DIGIBYTE TWITTER TICKER SERIES#
The DigiByte blockchain is an immutable ledger made up of a series of blocks with digital signatures that can be verified. All Rights Reserved.DigiByte is an innovative permissionless blockchain that can store digital assets, execute smart contracts, run decentralized applications ( dApps), and provide secure authentication. An earlier version of this post had the incorrect figures.Ĭopyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. UPDATE: About 77% of Twitter's users are international and 23% are based in the U.S. Since the start of 2010, Twitter has lost nearly $409 million, 47% of the revenue it has brought in during that time. The company's loss in the first nine months of 2013 nearly doubled to $133.9 million. and only 36 cents per view outside the U.S.īottom Line: Losses pile up as far as one can see for Twitter. Twitter says it charges $2.58 per "timeline view" for an ad in the U.S. International revenue: Despite more than 77% of its users being international, Twitter made only 25% of its revenue outside the U.S. Mobile Revenue: Twitter said that over 70% of its advertising revenue in the third quarter came from mobile devices, showing it can make money off of the growing turn to mobile. The company gets 89% of that revenue from advertising and 11% of it from data licensing to the ecosystem built off of Twitter's massive store of user data and stream-of-consciousness. Revenue: Twitter's revenue for the first nine months of 2013 was $422.2 million, double from the first nine months of 2012. Mobile Use: The key metric shows that 76% of Twitter's users accessed the service on a mobile device in the third quarter, up from 69% during the third quarter a year earlier. These users tweet about 500 million times a day in aggregate. The breakdown includes 23% of users in the U.S. Users: Twitter has 231.7 million monthly-active users at the end of September, up 39% from the prior year. The shares held by executives and insiders are restricted for 180 days from Wednesday's pricing. According to the filing, up to 9.9 million shares held by employees who aren't executives will be eligible for sale as early as Feb. Lock-ups: The shares held by insiders are restricted from selling for a period after the IPO. Morgan, 9% Spark Capital, 6% Benchmark Capital, 5.8% Union Square Ventures, 5.1% DST Global, 4.4% Jack Dorsey, 4.3% Richard Costolo, 1.4%. Those insiders hold about 51.4% of the shares.īiggest holders: The biggest holders and their percentage of shares after the offering, a number that could shrink if Twitter sells still more shares: Rizvi Traverse, 15.6% Evan Williams, 10.4% J.P. No current shareholders of Twitter are selling stock. Who is selling: Twitter the company is selling all the shares in the offering and says the funds, possibly around $2 billion, will be put to general corporate uses. Again, Twitter won't be available to buy on an exchange until Thursday. And don't confuse it with the bankrupt electronics store Tweeter Inc., which formerly held that ticker. Assuming all 80.5 million shares are sold, Twitter's outstanding shares will be 554.7 million. Shares: The company is selling 70 million shares in the offering and underwriters have the option, should demand warrant it, to buy 10.5 million more and sell them to the public.
