(well, sorta)
BTW, guys, what's with the snoopy questions? E-gold has an excuse, they
need a snail-mail address to mail people gold bars.
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Ben Legume wrote:
Maybe you (and other e-gold lists) should have a section on suspect
or known criminal MMs/scammers?
This sounds to me like a legal liability nightmare. Far better to not
list, or at most list the distrust very explicitly as a *personal
opinion*.
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You are currently
Viking Coder wrote:
One Groupe International wrote
We are backed by
50% physical gold
50% Gold Certificates
50% Cash
Why bother with a reserve so much more expensive and so much less reliable
than 100% hard metal?
And how real is it all, anyhow? E-gold has gold bars,
Samuel Mc Kee wrote:
If one spend is repudiated, then there's a precedent for repudiating
possibly hundreds of spends. This can't be done just on someone's say-so,
but will require an (expensive) investigation into each one. The
investigators will not be omniscient, so however much they try
Eric J. Gaither wrote:
Reid has effectively told you, the e-gold user, that you may not do
business with a company that does business with another gold currency.
E-gold, which claims to be non-judgmental, non-reputable, and non-biased
(based on the idea of being Hard money) now claims it
Joyce Marie wrote:
Why would e-gold need to CYA when it comes to OSGOLD??
Unknown. Probably some variant of mud sticks. Lawyers can be very
jumpy people.
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Eric J. Gaither wrote:
What is disturbing is the action in which this method was employed.
Absolutely no warning was given to existing Market Makers or e-gold users of
this action.
I don't work for them, I'm not affiliated with them. I'm not a lawyer or
a CEO or any sort of Management
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What the hell does CYA stand for?
Cover
Your
Ass
= the deliberate setting up of an alibi to avoid being tangled up in
someone else's mess. Beloved of lawyerly types.
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I suggest you erase your listing page entirely, or at most list only
*other people's directories* such as this new association, with an
explicit warning that nothing is checked and no affiliation or approval
is implied.
This on the same principle that you have MMs in the first place:
Craig Spencer wrote:
Seriously making such an argument indicates the lack of any conceptual
means to distinguish reality from fantasy. Such people evidently will
just try anything at random to see what immediately happens and they
cannot conceive of any other means of validation. They do
Steven wrote:
Just humor me, if you will. I'm new here.
Perhaps we are not speaking the same language.
I'm talking about legitimate banking with high returns.
I'm not sure what this negative feedback is based on.
HYIP is a technical term meaning: investment schemes that are pyramid
scams
What's with this sudden deluge of I got swindled posts? You didn't
get swindled, you screwed up. You didn't do your homework.
It's good that e-gold dosn't have the elaborate snooping and ID and
paper trails that the national-currency banking system does. There's
already too damn much privacy
Tristan Petersen wrote:
Who run good e-gold based escrow systems? I've found
www.metal-escrow.com; are they any good?
Why not find out for yourself? Send them a small amount you are willing
to risk. If that goes well, and you still don't trust them, keep
increasing the amount you are
Steven wrote:
Hi Vince,
Heh ! Well I'm a Taurus and a newbie to E-Gold but it's been
frustrating. Your service (freedomhound) won't take credit cards.
GoldNow takes weeks to process transactions. And Heap of Gold
seems to be taking money and not sending it to E-Gold. So I guess
in
This is ABSOULTELY NOT TRUE! We have a bank that issues numbered
CIRRUS debit cards. You could give the name of Mickey Mouse as the
shipping address, too, it doesn't matter, they will send the card to
whatever address and name is given. All we do is pay them the money
and the card is
Destiny Worldwide wrote:
I will not comment on where the cards come from, as it is proprietary
information and I will not get into a guessing match with anyone. However,
you get what you pay for.
What is it you're selling on as what you pay for over and above the
competition, in this case?
Craig Spencer wrote:
You are entirely right. As I think I indicated: it is all a deliberate
deception.
Cuation here: this may be deliberate or semi-deliberate deception, but
it isn't conspiracy.
What I've found, is that if you extrapolate from a subtle contradictory
premise, you always hit
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rich people, nazis, politicans, etc, dont "hide their money in Switzerland"
It's not real complicated: every financial transaction in the world
is recorded in the FinCen computers in the states.
What are you gonna do?
Store my money in e-gold.
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Elwyn Jenkins wrote:
(1) Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his
home and his correspondence. (2) There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except as in accordance with the
law and is necessary in a democratic society
Julian Morrison wrote:
Priorities, most important first:
1. Visa preferably, or otherwise Mastercard. Not some "own brand" card
scheme.
2. Good trustable reputation
3. Utterly anonymous, free from legal requirements to help out nosy Feds
4. Least wasteful conversion st
Elwyn Jenkins wrote:
Julian Morrison wrote:
Priorities, most important first:
1. Visa preferably, or otherwise Mastercard. Not some "own brand" card
scheme.
2. Good trustable reputation
3. Utterly anonymous, free from legal requirements to help out nosy Feds
Further to my earlier question:
which e-gold based card systems are scams, or overpriced, or real but
nearly useless on account of poor ATM / shop support?
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Priorities, most important first:
1. Visa preferably, or otherwise Mastercard. Not some "own brand" card
scheme.
2. Good trustable reputation
3. Utterly anonymous, free from legal requirements to help out nosy Feds
4. Least wasteful conversion steps from e-gold (ie: e-gold = SR-gold =
SR-$ =
Junk wrote:
Hi - i am gathering information for the SEC
Boo, hiss! M.Y.O. damned B.
Reputation damage and account deletion is a good solution to bad guys.
Helping the nosy Feds is a very bad solution.
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Tristan Petersen wrote:
Capitalism succeeds because it is based upon one of humanity's
greatest failings... Greed.
Greed - the desire to improve one's situation - is not a failing; it
is a virtue.
Wow, I agree!
..
"The Utopia of Greed" in Atlas Shrugged comes to mind :)
Has e-gold or any other gold currency thought of situating at least
backup servers on Sealand?
http://www.havenco.com/
http://www.sealandgov.com/
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SnowDog wrote:
"The User agrees to keep his unallocated, undivided interest in the
pool of gold held in storage at a Vault free from any liens,
encumbrances, charges or claims"
In other words, GoldGrams cannot be leased or loaned nor can any
derivatives be created on them.
It
Just a quick suggestion though - for those of you who offer a small (or
no) minimum, then I suggest you make more song and dance over it. It's
scary to someone poking around e-gold, to see phrases like "$250
minimum" seemingly everywhere when checking out sites listed in e-gold's
own directory.
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