SwapSS: crypto payments for your business, plus a no-signup exchange We run swapss.lol. Two things live there: SwapSS Pay, which lets a site, a bot, or a store accept crypto, and a plain crypto-to-crypto exchange that needs no account. This thread is for both, ask anything here. Accepting payments Your customer pays in crypto, the money lands on your merchant balance, usually within 5-15 minutes, and you withdraw whenever you want, by hand or over API. - 200 assets across the major networks: BTC, ETH, USDT, TRX, SOL, TON, XMR, LTC and the rest of the usual set - Fee from 0.4%, and it is the only fee we take. Setup, withdrawals, and refunds cost nothing extra; you cover the network fee and that's it. - Integration: a hosted payment page, an API with webhooks, or no-code payment links if you don't want to touch code - Individual sellers and small teams are welcome. No company paperwork. Typical fit: digital goods, SaaS, Telegram shops, freelancers who bill in crypto. The exchange Crypto-to-crypto swaps with no registration. 0.5% on a floating rate, 1% on a fixed one, plus the network fee. The swap starts as soon as your deposit confirms. We never hold customer funds and we don't log IPs or browser fingerprints. Getting started Everything is self-serve at swapss.lol (payments live under /for-business). Contacts, including Telegram support, are on the site, or just PM me here. Want to try it first? Say so and I'll set you up with a test invoice. Or you can always write to: t.me/swappsy
USDT vs USDC: What Is the Difference USDT and USDC are both dollar-pegged crypto, but they are not the same. Who issues them, where each is accepted, and which one to pick for transfers and swaps. Both are pegged to the dollar. Both are stablecoins. Both run on several networks. The difference is who issues them and where each one sees more use. For most purposes they are interchangeable, but the details matter. Who issues them USDT is issued by Tether. It is the most liquid stablecoin by volume: accepted by exchanges, swap services, and payment platforms. It has been around since 2014. USDC is issued by Circle. It focuses more on regulated markets and corporate clients. Its volume is lower than USDT, but it is widely accepted on Western exchanges and in DeFi protocols. The practical difference Liquidity. USDT trades in more pairs on more exchanges, so swapping it is easier and the spread is tighter. If you need a stablecoin for transfers and swaps, USDT is accepted more broadly. Networks. Both are available on TRC20, ERC20, BEP20, and others. The network choice matters more than the coin choice: TRC20 is cheapest to send, ERC20 is most expensive when the Ethereum network is busy. Transparency. USDC is considered more open about reserve reporting. USDT has faced criticism over how it discloses its reserve structure, though both have operated without major incidents. Which to choose If conditions are equal, use whichever you have. USDT handles the majority of stablecoin volume and is available everywhere. USDC works better on platforms built around Western markets. Working for you - chat with us on Telegram: t.me/swappsy Or send us email: