-- On 30 Dec 2002 at 10:41, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > The problem and ' that this email to also have had and it > seemed perfect and therefore I have made the login and > therefore I/you/they have been stolen of my passhare and of > 19 $.
If I understand you correctly, you seem to be saying that you were caught by one of these fraudulent letters that solicit you to login on a fake e-gold site, and thus capture your account number and passphrase. And having been caught, you would like e-gold to go after the beneficiary of the attack (who has by now probably withdrawn your e-gold and that of several other suckers and cashed it in.) I wish that e-gold had created a client program, that did not reveal knowledge of the passphrase to a possibly bogus server, but instead merely proved knowledge of the secret passphrase to the server witout revealing the passphrase itself. However e-gold has so far not implemented this, perhaps fearing unforeseen software maintenance problems on many diverse platforms. --digsig James A. Donald 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG VqAVxInNmEIMVv0TWd8dankvjkC0jfdTLeQdsNE 4DsKC93128LHH9MQfu61w1U7tivHk/p5xXdRiVqHQ --- 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.