Monday, April 22, 2013

How can I Surf Several Traffic Exchanges at Once? Surf Multiple Traffic Exchanges

I described in great detail in my previous post how joining and participating in traffic exchanges can be an excellent way to gain visitors to your websites without spending money. If you decide that surfing these exchanges is what you want to do then you will want to surf several exchanges at once. How can you surf several exchanges at once? Well, it's really pretty simple. With the tabbed browsing feature that most good browsers now offer it's easy to surf several traffic exchanges at once.

I use Firefox browser and open up several exchanges at once in different tabs. You'll need to log into all of your exchanges that you have joined at once. Then you simply start clicking from one tab to the next and clicking the appropriate matching image that each exchange will require of you to earn the credit. You'll notice that some exchanges will make you click on a special link or answer a special question from time to time during your surfing session in order to have you prove that you are a real person and not some automated surfing bot program that is intended to cheat the surfing system. Yes, there are always people that are trying to cheat some way or another I guess. Anyway, these test clicks or whatever you want to call them are ways that the surfing exchanges use to help verify that you are indeed a real person clicking on the links.

A word of warning for you, there are unfortunately some potentially harmful spyware and things like that that you could get from some bad guys that stick there infected websites on traffic exchanges. You'll need to make sure that your spyware and virus protection are up to date in case you encounter one of these. Also, I recommend a Firefox plugin called NoScript which is free plugin you can use to help prevent malicious scripts from automatically running and messing up your computer somehow. For the most part, the websites are all safe and not something to worry about too much. Just make sure you have these precautions set in place and you'll be fine.

Now there is a browser that I found that is designed to surf multiple exchanges at one. It's call TE Browser and it's apparently made by a young programmer somewhere over in Russia or something like that. I paid the $1.00 or so to try it out for a couple of weeks and it was okay up to point but I also found it to easily crash and probably not quite as safe as using Firefox or Chrome. The TE Browser will actually automatically go on to the next exchange you need to click on without you having to click on the tab to do so. So, it does speed the process up a bit and eliminates some clicking needed to go from one page to the next. I decided not to continue to use it as it was going to cost me $70 dollars or so to pay to be able to use it for like 6 months or something like that. I decided that it wasn't worth it and also I was concerned about the lack of protection from malicious scripts that I was encountering occasionally from the exchanges. So, I went with Firefox for it's safety features and decided that the extra clicking was something that I could live with.

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