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| Payment Processors, E-Currencies, & Currency Exchange Services From Paypal, E-Gold, AlertPay, StormPay and MoneyBookers to all the hundreds of payment processors and currency exchange services on the web. Discuss and describe your interaction and business with each. Please stick to factual and rational discussion regarding these many companies. |
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Well,
e-Gold is not supported by most of the well known companies such as eBay, Buy.com, Amazon.com, etc. e-gold is a digital gold currency operated by Gold & Silver Reserve Inc. under e-gold Ltd., and is a system which allows the instant transfer of gold ownership between users. e-gold Ltd. is incorporated in Nevis, Lesser Antilles. According to the company's website, as of April 2007, e-gold had 112,188 oz (3,489,436 grams) of gold and 138,567 oz (4,309,923 grams) of silver in storage, which is worth approximately US$86 million. There are typically 66,000 e-gold spends each day totalling 15,000 oz (460 kilograms), which is about US$10.5 million. There are over three million e-gold accounts of which about one quarter are active. On 27 April 2007, a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C. indicted e?Gold Ltd and its owners on charges of money laundering, conspiracy, and operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. e-gold, however, considers the charges completely groundless, and has responded to the allegations in their own press release. Unlike credit cards, there is no way of having transactions reversed, even in case of a legitimate error or an unauthorized expenditure. e-gold's Terms of Use stipulate that all transactions are final and e-gold cannot be held responsible for any spend. In this respect, an e-gold spend is more akin to a cash transaction (except for the fact that there is a fee levied) while PayPal transfers, for example, could be considered more similar to credit card transactions. As with any online payment system, e-gold is vulnerable to various threats, notably phishing (for example, forged emails asking for login details) and malware (such as keystroke logging spyware). e-gold offers no protection whatsoever if an attacker succeeds in obtaining: * the user's e-gold account number * the user's e-gold password * access to the user's registered email account (web-based email accounts without a secure login are especially vulnerable) as the e-gold account will then be completely open for malicious use. All three pieces of information can be gathered with a trojan keylogger which monitors accesses to the e-gold web-site. All online services are affected by this security issue, but what makes e-gold especially vulnerable is that any losses resulting from a security breach cannot be undone since transfers are non-reversible and, unlike online banking, e-gold do not provide any insurance against such abuse. Also if funds are stolen, e-gold will not block a recipient's account without being issued with a court order. Since there is a lag time in obtaining a court order, the stolen funds can easily be withdrawn from the offending account and the e-gold system, rendering the recovery of any funds virtually impossible. This is not clearly stated in e-gold's user agreement, but an abused user will receive the following explanation from the company: Unfortunately we will not be able to refund your money because all e-gold spends are final and not reversible as stated in the e-gold account user agreement. e-gold is also contractually prohibited from freezing e-gold accounts or releasing e-gold account information in the absence of a court order or subpoena. You might want to consider obtaining some combination of help from a legal professional or law enforcement to obtain a court order, if the size of your loss warrants expenditure of your resources (time and money) to resolve.
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