Buy votes on social media sites.
Get paid just for clicking buttons.
We offer one highly lucrative referral program. You can earn a percentage of the cost of advertisements from any advertisers you refer to us.
Some users make more in referral earnings than they do voting for stories with us!
Subvert and Profit runs an ever-expanding black market for votes on social media sites. We are simultaneously the easiest way to make money online and the cheapest form of advertising in the web 2.0 sphere. We are the crowdhackers, and we are very good at what we do.
Other "social media optimization" sites can only advise their clients on ways to design their sites for social media sites. Subvert and Profit actually gets you the votes, and for cheap!
By crowdsourcing our operation to over 10,000 anonymous Internet users, we can provide a cheap, effective form of undercover marketing. Read the FAQ to see how it all works.
We currently operate markets for votes on:
Dailymotion is a video sharing site.
Delicious is a highly popular bookmarking site.
We'll help get you on the front page of Digg, where your content can receive 10,000 to 100,000 visitors.
dzone is a social bookmarking site for developers.
Flixster is a movie rating site.
Furl lets you save links that you find on the Web.
Over 30 million people use iLike to share their musical tastes.
imeem is a social network for people who love media. Media includes music, video, and photos.
Kongregate is a social gaming site.
LiveVideo is a live video streaming site.
At Ma.gnolia, members save websites as bookmarks and then tag them.
Metacafe is a video entertainment site.
Mixx is similar to Digg. People submit links to pages, which members then vote on. The most popular content makes it to the front page.
MySpaceTV is like YouTube for MySpace users.
Newsvine is a social news community. It's updated instantly and read frequently.
Propeller is a social bookmarking site.
Sphinn is a news site for Internet marketing professionals.
StumbleUpon has a broad base of 4.1 million users. Its traffic flow is more linear than that of other social media sites.
Yahoo! Video is a pop-culture mashup. It features music videos and news, sports, autos, comedy, TV clips, and movie previews.
YouTube is the biggest video site on the Web.