At 02:52 PM 22/04/2002 +0200, "Lourens Human" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi
When someone like my e-gold account number just because it is 108162 and decide to spend me a gram or so... hint:) hint:) - do I receive email notification of this spend? If not, why not hmmm...? No you do not, but if you write a simple web link for them, like http://107242.clicktwocents.com/?[EMAIL PROTECTED] they can change the default 2 centigrams of gold amount to whatever they like, and it will e-mail you! (Or me in this case. :) (This uses the e-gold secure shopping cart interface and requires you to only log in on the secure e-gold web site.) ... Which brings me to the next enhancement needed! I'm pretty sure this was mentioned nearly a year or so ago on the subject of getting paid to read e-mail, or of potential spam. This may need a standard default setting for the free URL clicktwocents links, such as one decigram of gold or equivalent. Any amount below this would not be notified to you by e-mail, lest spammers use it to pay you (not enough!) to read email. I know that most people would not like to read spam even for much more than one decigram, so a limit amount that is commonly acceptable should be chosen. The notification feature is most useful in the FastSCI service, but could be abused here. Even then, any number of micropayments would continue to be viewable in your e-gold history pages or report, which provides even more exposure for paying advertisers! ... Sooooo, I really don't need e-mail notification for small tips, I'll read it in my history report. (If it was a really big tip, they would probably e-mail you directly anyway! eg. Hey, I just clicked you ten grams, you changed my life!) eg. http://fastsci.com/?107242-10-gold&[EMAIL PROTECTED]&wayappreciated --- You are currently subscribed to e-gold-list as: archive@jab.org To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Use e-gold's Secure Randomized Keyboard (SRK) when accessing your e-gold account(s) via the web and shopping cart interfaces to help thwart keystroke loggers and common viruses.