Perhaps E-Gold might want to reconsider hosting it's servers in the
US in the light of this raid. All it will take is a US Attorney or
two hopped up on cocaine who decides he wants a big publicity case
with little possible backlash. They can them say (and probably quite
truthfully) that
On 28 Mar 2001, at 21:51, Bob wrote:
I don't see that there is anything particularly safer about storing
gold in Canada or the UK vs the UAE.
Bob, you are right. I didn't want to imply that it was safer in one
palce than in another. I don't really know at this point in time. Also
Danny, from Gocreative, has asked me to forward this to you guys! He
apparantly has a problem with his email program!! His contact email address
is;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dear List Members
Gocreative Ltd New Zealand are brokers of opportunity, and we would like
to
Hi Paul,You
are correct, you can transfer your funds from your E-Gold account to =your
Cash Card account FREE and have access to them at 400,000+ ATMs =worldwide
in any currency. And with our Reseller Program. you can earn =Cash from
referring other Cash Card Members.--I'm very
It's funny how every new gold currency company on
the block touts themselves as revolutionizing global commerce by providing
instantly-clearing currency transactions. This claim of having something
new and earthshaking is made by Standard Reserve, GoldMoney, and Pecunix, to
name three.
--- begin forwarded text
Date: Thu, 29 Mar 2001 17:48:50 -0800
From: Somebody
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: GoldAge meets SS
http://www.treas.gov/uss
"The Secret Service is also responsible for the enforcement of
laws relating to counterfeiting of obligations and securities of the
United
George M of SR writes: "You are assuming there are only 500,000 potential
users."
The assumption was only for the purpose of illustration. It doesn't matter
if there are 500,000 users, or 500,000,000 users. If all of the gold
currencies are compatible with each other, they all have access to
Aren't there a few MMs still taking credit cards from new customers -
and
surviving? Like GoldPouchExpress (as mentioned previously).
They must have their own methods to avoid losing $25K in two months.
It's amazing what you can do when you call people on the phone. I believe
GoldPouch
At 10:25 PM 3/29/2001 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
George M of SR writes: "As of this writing, we have surpassed that number
of committed accounts, and should have more than that in funded accounts
before the year is out."
George, please clarify for me:
Are you saying that SR has more than 500,000 accounts?
What does committed account mean??
Where are your statistics?
The only way that a system that is backed by e-gold
can have twice as many accounts as e-gold
is if those accounts have about 1 atom of gold each
I note with interest that MS's public ballance is down from 16g to 10g,
yet their website is still inactive.
Is anyone able to access their gold in MS?
Yes, absolutely no problem! I have moved kilograms in and out!
Erich sent the direct IP number to get to the current site, to this
list, it
On 29 Mar 2001, at 9:24, Steve Renner wrote:
Hi Paul,
You are correct, you can transfer your funds from your E-Gold account to =
your Cash Card account FREE and have access to them at 400,000+ ATMs =
worldwide in any currency. And with our Reseller Program. you can earn =
Cash from
On 29 Mar 2001, at 23:04, George Matyjewicz wrote:
Read my statement above once again. They are committed, but not
yet funded.
George, most of these committments are for SR-USD if I read well
what you have said over tha past many weeks. And this currency
is not part of the Gold Economy.
I don't know. I
know one may have been a trojan virus situation, but the other two were password
retrieval hacking jobs. Egold is aware of this problem and are doing NOTHING
about it. Nor will they even help the victims get their funds
back.
If they had just
responded immediatly to the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PGP private keys are stored in a keyring file on the hard disk. If an
intruder were able to steal the private key ring, can he use the private
key without the passphrase?
No.
Is it significantly easier to brute-force
the passphrase if one has the private key
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