On behalf of the Osgold/Osopps Recovery Team we would like to extend an invitation for
you to join our discussion site where you will be updated concerning the recovery
operation. currently underway and where you can file your Osgold/Osopps claims.
It is past time that the less scrupulous indiv
I have looked in vain for the news article about the three guys that went
to Antigua, where they opened the internet gambling concern called World
Sports Exchange. The USA government claimed that the three owners had
broken USA law and indicted them. In total dis-belief, one of the three
return
> He would need a pin number to clean out your account with an ATM. That's
> what he wouldn't need with an internet transaction, and why the ATM
> withdrawal is harder to reverse.
Maybe it would be a credit card then. I don't know because I've never used
mine to do a cash withdrawal.
At any rat
> But I'm not sure what the point would be really? Is it not
> easier to fund the e-gold account directly than to fund the card using a
> similar method then use it to buy e-gold...
>
> Any opinions?
Nick,
Maybe I'm dreaming but I envision being able to buy e-gold in the shortest
time frame p
> Well then I guess I'm just doomed to eating in expensive restaurants to
have
> my card swiped by a smiling waiter with a handheld reader on his belt that
> is disguised to look like a pager so he can sell my account to the mob for
> ten or fifteen dollars. Then I can give him a generous tip and
We can accept our own Maestro cards to purchase e-gold. We may shortly
also be accepting cards issued by Lateko (Cirrus and Maestro branded
cards) for purchase of e-gold via virtual ATM. If there is a demand we
can do it. But I'm not sure what the point would be really? Is it not
easier to fund th
> An exchange service can convert a hard payment to a softer payment, and
> hence can fund your debit card or PayPal account with your hard payment.
> However, an exchange service cannot perform the transaction in reverse
> without being targetted by internet thieves.
Well then I guess I'm just d
> This sounds like the (Latvian) debit cards that Graham Kelly
> (www.GoldNow.st) sells. Apparently you can fund IN & OUT e-gold <> debit
> card at ATMs throughout the world. I remember him offering one for that
> price on this list a few months ago, having auctioned a few (that went for
> about t
Of course, GoldNow doesn't accept a CC order unless the CC holder passes
our security check. We get about 200~300 fraudulent attempts per month,
totalling from $100,000 to $300,000.
Our charge back rate is less than a quarter of 1 percent, which is way
lower than High St merchants!! So a NEW indu
At 01:54 AM 29/07/2002 -0500, Joseph Firmino wrote:
>I think I mentioned it on this list some time back but I
>can't remember the name of the provider. Anyway the next time I accessed the
>site they had dropped the option and I havn't seen anything like it
>elsewhere until the other day when I ca
> To purchase e-gold all I had to do was enter my debit card
> number on the site.
This is the problem with debit and credit cards, and why few, (if any),
exchange services will take them. On the internet, everyone can be
essentially anonymous, and there are numerous thieves with access to debit
> > healthy inventory of e-gold but I really think you've cut the
> > boat in half.
>
> I'm not sure what you mean here. Gold Age, for example, accepts
> money orders, Western Union, and even PayPal, which can be
> funded by credit card. It is not direct funding, but it's damn
> close. The fe
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