egold is (meant to be) money

you use money to pay for things

example -- cars, boats, bills, cheques, icecream, leases, computers, books, DOMs

When you're paying $20 for a DOM, and you pay with egold, its inconceivable you'd pay like "$21.12" --- e-gold is spotty. As money, it is spotty. Exactly like the USD.

{As a clarifier, note that, say, when you go to France, the USD is not spotty. if something is like $50, and you only have USD, you grumbel and expect to pay like $55 of USD in France.}

When you're paying $20 for a DOM, or $5000 to a designer, or $30 for books, or indeed $25,000 to omni because you want a wire or check, regold is meant tobe money and you expect it to be spotty.

when you're PAYING WITH egold, you expect to pay spot.

this could possibly be simply resolved if they just called it a service fee (exactly as at bananagold), even if they dont think that way



JP, what do you mean it "should go AT SPOT?" What does "go" mean here? Buy, or sell?

And when you say it "should" go at spot, do you mean that Omnipay "should" either buy or sell it at spot?

Clarification, please! John? JP?



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