Linkbee pays you to shorten URLs and put ads on top of them

Linkbee pays you to shorten URLs and put ads on top of them

I never used a URL shortener before the micro-messaging service Twitter came along. These are services that take long URLs, for example: http://venturebeat.com/2008/06/25/twitter-adding-employees-losing-features/ and turns it into something like this: http://is.gd/G6W. Both go to the same place, but the latter is decidedly more friendly with a service that limits the amount of characters you can use in messages — like Twitter.

A new entrant in this field is Linkbee. It differentiates itself by allowing you to… Continue Reading