Archive for the ‘webmoney’ Category

E-Currency Auctions Coming Soon—DGC ‘s Answer To E-Bay!

E-Currency Auctions (EA), a premiere auction site catering to digital e-currencies, will officially launch on September 25, 2008.  Registration is FREE and is now open.  Go to http://www.e-currencyauctions.com now and sign up.  EA will allow the following payment methods for purchases:  E-Gold, E-Bullion, Pecunix, Liberty Reserve, WebMoney, AlertPay and PayPal.  Additional e-currencies will be considered upon request.  This vastly increases the number of buyers and sellers that can participate in the online auctions. 

By signing up you are supporting the Digital Currency Community, and therefore promoting the use and acceptance of digital currency.  The site is also multi-lingual, allowing you to reach millions of buyers and sellers. 

Sign up for a FREE account now, and get ready to enjoy a whole new beginning in the online auction world.  For those interested, advertising is available as well.  Just send an email to advertising@e-currencyauctions.com. 

We look forward to an exciting launch!  

E-Currency Auctions Team


“If You Can’t Trust Banks, Who Can You Trust?”

In a post 9/11 world, “due diligence” is constantly on the forefront—or at least we are expected to believe that. Although banks these days are preaching “due diligence,” it appears that at least one bank does not practice what it preaches. Monterey County Bank, based in Monterey California, http://www.montereycountybank.com that supports several card platforms for businesses providing prepaid debit card products for use on the internet and at atms, has missed the boat on “due diligence,” at the expense of those who entrusted it.

One of those businesses that it sponsors, Digital World Global Card, Inc., http://www.digitalworldcard.com , based out of New York, New York, is owned in full by sole shareholder Joseph Simon LaCroix, aka Joseph Simon, a convicted felon in the province of Ontario, Canada, according to Rowena McDougall, Senior Manager, Public Affairs, for the Financial Services Commission of Ontario (FSCO) .

On October 3, 2005 Joseph LaCroix, the sole officer and director of Digital World Financial, pleaded guilty to the charge of conducting the business of a loan and trust corporation without being registered in the province of Ontario. LaCroix was fined $50,000 and placed on probation for two years. As a condition of the probation LaCroix must pay approximately $2.2 million in restitution to depositors. Good luck on collecting that!

LaCroix also pleaded guilty to carrying on the business of insurance in Ontario without a licence and was fined $5,000. Seems Canada garners favor with criminals, as its criminal penalties certainly don’t seem to discourage crime.

For more on LaCroix’s convictions, see the following:

http://www.claimsurvey.com/english/pubs/news/2005/20051007-digitalworld.asp

http://www.fsco.gov.on.ca/english/pubs/news/2005/20051007-digitalworld.asp

http://www.ontarioinsurance.com/english/licensing/ceasedesistorders/cdo-digitalworld.asp

http://www.ontarioinsurance.com/english/pubs/bulletins/mebulletins/2006/g-03_06.asp

http://www.sfsc.gov.sk.ca/ssc/files/enforcementorders/2002_enf/temporary/digitalworldfinancialinc(temp)feb27-02.pdf

http://www.sfsc.gov.sk.ca/ssc/files/enforcementorders/2002_enf/extending/digitalworldfinancialinc(ext)mar13-02.pdf

http://www.fsco.gov.on.ca/English/licensing/ceasedesistorders/cdo-digitalworld.asp

Now, less than three years later, LaCroix’s Digital World Global Card, Inc. was shut down on April 1, 2008, by Monterey County Bank after LaCroix has allegedly misappropriated the funds of its many cardholders. Those cardholders had put their trust in Digital World Card, Inc. as well as Monterey County Bank—after all, if you can’t trust a bank, who can you trust? To add insult to injury, LaCroix had his staff to tell cardholders that their accounts were being audited by the bank, implying that they had somehow done something wrong. His staff has since become non-existant. Calls to the company (866) 878-8020 go directly to voice mail, and are not returned. Calls to LaCroix’s cell phone (347) 853-4746 went unanswered.

It should be noted that apparently all of LaCroix’s resellers were left out in the cold. It should also be noted that the ONLY cards affected are those that have the name Digital World Global Card at the top of the card – No others. Funds were sent to Digital World Card, Inc. for the benefit of cardholders, and instead, went to the benefit of LaCroix. In reported cases, LaCroix even emptied funds already on cardholders cards!

LaCroix’s site, Digital World Card, Inc., still maintains its website at http://www.digitalworldcard.com . Do Not Order From This Site! Do not become one of his victims! If the bank backing your prepaid debit card is Monterey County Bank, do your OWN due diligence!

Please remember that Monterey County Bank merely shut his program down on April 1, 2008. They offered absolutely NO COMPENSATION for their cardholders whatsoever. Do you think they would feel the same if you owed them money?

Remember, Buyer Beware!


WebMoney: Well Liked & Established Digital Currency From Russia

WebMoneyWebMoney is a well known and popular online digital currency. WebMoney Transfer enables worldwide users to conduct secure online transactions in real time. The transactions are not reversible so there is no chargeback risk to merchants. The company has well over a million users at this time.

It is free to set up as many accounts as you like. Simply download their free software package and you can begin creating accounts and transacting business in WebMoney. The WM software and the web sites are available in both English and Russian. Online currency units are also available in Russian Roubles and USD. No ID is required to open an account.

If you take a close look at WebMoney, this currency provides a very useful online financial service for a large population of users who may not have bank accounts or credit cards. Using Webmoney these people are able to easily and locally convert cash into digital currency then pay bills online, shop or transfer funds to others worldwide at an extremely low fee. No bank account verification or transfers and no credit rating is required, just a quick cash conversion to digital currency.

WebMoney is a digital currency solution which, because of its users, heavily focuses on a particular geographic region. The retail services offers by the currency vendors are filling a great need. A similar situation can now be found in the United States as financial institutions scramble to create products for the massive population of Spanish speaking unbankable immigrants from Mexico, Centeral and South America. The SiGo SiGoMasterCard is a great example. There is a recent article in the NYTimes that further explains this point. Because the demand exists for a cash to digital exchange, companies in the US are now seeing this as a great opportunity to expand their client base. Financial companies are creating products like prepaid Mastercards and catering to non English speaking customers.

WebMoney Transfer has a verification system which any account holder can use. This system asks that the user provide basic identification and information about himself. That user is then ‘verified’ and known to other users. PayPal has a very similar policy, however, WebMoney does not require a user to become verified. A WebMoney account can be used instantly after opening. Each user has a WebMoney passport. This passport is a digital certificate based on personal data provided by a WebMoney member.

WebMoney is sold through an independent network of agents mainly located in Russia and the Ukraine. However, there are WebMoney agents to facilitate a currency exchange in over 2500 cities in 40 countries around the world including the US & Canada. Much like e-gold, these agents maintain a digital inventory of WebMoney which they can exchange to retail clients for cash, bank wires, Western Union and a long list of assorted other payment methods. Agents can set their own fees for each transaction and anyone can become an agent.

WMcardsOne of the most convenient features of WebMoney is the prepaid WM card. WebMoney is available on a prepaid card. Users can purchase these cards locally using cash, take them home and fund their account instantly. A network of vending machines in Russia also distributes these cards making WebMoney even more available and easy to purchase.

ROBOXchangeThe important information to know about WebMoney is that the digital currency is very integrated into the everyday physical brick and mortar business, in that part of the world. Thanks to businesses like ROBOXchange, you can pay everyday bills and buy important items using WebMoney. Person’s living in Russia, Ukraine and the surrounding areas can pay their local phone bills, cell phone bills, digital TV bill, local Internet service provider and even purchase virtual gaming currency using WebMoney. The digital currency is integrated into local daily life due to the wide use of cash and lack of adequate banking or credit facilities.

Services such as ROBOX Cash Register, which is similar to Gold-Cart, are the equivaltant to a digital currency merchant account. These services allow an online seller’s web site to accept a variety of digital currency types from the customer at checkout and then automatically converts their payment into one currency which the seller has previously requested. Just like a merchant accepting Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover, online checks, ACH, etc. and settlement is then made to the merchant - ROBOX Cash Register accepts over two dozen different currency types (mostly local to that region).

WebMoney is also easily converted into other digital currencies including e-gold, Pecunix, e-Bullion, Yandex, imoney, MoneyMail, INOCard, RuPay, InterBill RUR & UkrMoney (mostly local Russian money). The point here being….if you have Webmoney and you need to pay an online bill in another digital currency, there are many agents who will exchange your WM for the currency of your choice. The value of using WebMoney extends way beyond their network of WM retailers. As a digital currency, WebMoney can be easily converted into another digital currency anytime. This is simply not possible with PayPal or everyday online banking. There is an extensive network of reliable web sites that will even automatically convert WebMoney into another digital currency for a small fee. The transaction is instant and a majority of these webs are fully automated. It is a very convenient service.

The ‘terms of use’ allow WebMoney to be used at online casinos and sports books plus adult websites. Finally, WebMoney, unlike PayPal is never “hacked”. You will never get a WM phishing email. Since users must download the secure WM software and extensive security is used on both ends of the online transaction, WebMoney has a great reputation as a secure digital currency. There are also many ATM debit cards that accept WebMoney making it very liquid in just about any country around the globe.

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Online Gambling & Betting Still Strong via Digital Currency

2006 was a tumultuous last year for online casino gambling. In July, David Carruthers CEO of BetOnSports was arrested in Texas while making a connecting flight from the UK to Costa Rica. He and others were charged with allegedly committing conspiracy, racketeering and fraud while taking sports bets from U.S. residents. Later in September, Peter Dicks CEO of Sportingbet was also arrested at JFK Airport on a warrant issued by Louisiana from an investigation of illegal gambling activity dating to May of 2006.

The DOJ is seeking the forfeiture of $4.5 billion in USD, cars and computers from the BetOnSports defendants…most of whom reside outside of the US. The final blow to US online gambling came late in 2006 when President Bush signed the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, attached to the Port Securities Bill, making it illegal for US banks to accept payments from online casinos and gambling websites. Its a shame that the US just did not follow Britain’s lead and legally tax the proceeds. That is around 6 Billion a year from US players.

Now….since it is almost impossible to stop Internet gambling because of the freedom which comes along an Internet connection, the US is trying to prevent Internet gambling by prohibiting access to funding vehicles such as US credit cards and bank processing. That is precisely what the bill accomplishes, it stops the US connection to online gambling through US credit card and banks. Federally regulated establishments.

Online Payment Systems & Digital Gold Currency

This first group are most commonly referred to as ‘Online Payment Services’ or eWallets. To understand more about this type of digital payment you can read this previous post. Three popular online financial services still accepted for gaming and bets are:

  • Moneybookers - An e-payment wallet or ‘eWallet’ which enables anyone to quickly and cheaply transfer money into a ‘virtual’ Moneybookers account. They offer direct banking in over 30 countries.
  • NETeller - An online payment service. A NETeller account is another eWallet allowing you to deposit, withdraw, and transfer funds to any merchants that support NETeller Online Payments. Including casinos.
  • Firepay - A free personal Web-based account that works like a debit card - you deposit money into your FirePay Personal Account, and then use the ‘virtual’ money to purchase goods and services online.

Not to mention online gaming webs accepting digital gold currency like TheGoldCasino. The Gold Casino ONLY accepts DGC. Their stock has been on the rise ever since mid last year. Find it on dBourse at around 115-117 per share. dBourse even pays stock dividends in digital gold currency.

The Gold Casino accepts e-gold, 1MDC, GoldMoney and Pecunix which anyone can buy from an online third party exchange agent in any of a two dozen countries around the globe including the US. The Gold Casino players seem totally unaffected by the new US laws. Besides The Gold Casino, most online betting Webs will now also accept Webmoney which is another easy to obtain digital currency based in Russia. Most all digital gold currencies such as e-gold are easily changed into Webmoney by a third party agent.

TGC TheGoldCasino offers Blackjack, Slots, Video Poker, Roulette, and multiplayer games. The Gold Casino requires no download and they are all Flash games. You can instantly withdraw your entire balance of gold (including winnings) at any time, in real time. It is commonplace for players to withdraw kilograms of gold (tens of thousands of Euros worth of gold) in real-time, instantly. There are no restrictions on withdrawals at The Gold Casino.

Where Does It Go From Here?

The UK plans to further regulate the industry and encourage offshore companies to base their headquarters in the UK. While they will generate more taxable income, the US will get simply more headaches from the overload on banks, merchant service companies and ISPs tracking transactions and it is still possible and practical to gamble online from the US.

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E-gold Article From Wired.com

Here is the complete article from : Wired.com

E-Gold Gets Tough on Crime

By Kim Zetter| Also by this reporter
02:00 AM Dec, 11, 2006

The founder of PayPal competitor e-gold has grown tired of the government characterizing his business as a haven for money launderers, terrorists, child pornographers and credit card thieves.So a year after the Department of Justice raided his offices, Douglas Jackson, president of Gold and Silver Reserve, which operates e-gold, has been wading deep into his customer transaction logs to identify and fight back against people who misuse his system. In the last month, he’s blocked about 2,000 accounts from his system, and he’s voluntarily turned over detailed account and transaction histories to federal law enforcement.In the process, Jackson says he’s exposed an illicit and previously invisible economic underground.”It’s like discovering an undisturbed tomb in Egypt where you’ve got this archaeological thing,” Jackson says about the wealth of data he’s uncovered. “There will never be another crack like this one where all of these people have left their footprints with memos that sometimes give us clues as to what they’re doing.”E-gold is a privately issued digital currency backed by real gold and silver stored in banks in Europe and Dubai. Jackson says about 1,000 new e-gold accounts are opened daily, and the system processes between 50,000 and 100,000 transactions a day.

With a value independent of any national legal tender, the electronic cash has cultivated a libertarian image over the years, while drawing the ire of law enforcement agencies who frequently condemn it publicly as an anonymous, untraceable criminal haven, inaccessible to police scrutiny.

Jackson says the image is false. Although a user can open an account using a fraudulent name and a proxy server that shields his or her IP address, a permanent record of every transaction remains in the e-gold system, which can help law enforcement agencies track criminals.

Jackson says he first became aware that credit card thieves were laundering money through e-gold from 2004 news stories about a Secret Service bust of Shadowcrew, a website where carders congregated. He contacted the Secret Service and pleaded with them to work with him to catch the carders, but the agency inexplicably rebuffed him.

Last December, the Department of Justice raided the Melbourne, Florida, office of Gold and Silver Reserve, and seized more than 100 boxes of paper records in a move dubbed Operation Goldwire.

“They basically raped our computers and also took us offline for 36 hours, took all the paper out of our office,” Jackson says. The government also froze Gold and Silver’s U.S. bank account. The company survived, Jackson says, only because its euro, pound and yen accounts are maintained outside the United States.

Jackson says the criminal affidavit, filed under seal, accused Gold and Silver of aiding terrorists and child pornographers. But prosecutors later dropped the criminal claim, replacing it with a civil complaint charging Gold and Silver with operating as an unlicensed money-transmitting business. Jackson’s lawyers say the charge is bogus because Gold and Silver isn’t a money transmitter, since the company doesn’t accept cash from customers, only wire transfers. That case is on hold until April, and a Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment on the suit.

Rather than attack him, Justice officials and the Secret Service should have been working with him, says Jackson. Because all the while they were trying to build a case against e-gold, he was gathering evidence that could help them battle the real criminals.

Around the time of the Shadowcrew bust, Jackson’s staff developed a method for doing global searches in e-gold transactions. So Jackson decided to see if he could find carders in his system by searching the “memo” field, where — like the memo line on a check — the sender can note the reason for the transaction. Jackson says some carders, apparently so convinced of their invisibility, don’t try to hide the nature of their activity.

He searched keywords from news articles about carders, such as “cvv,” “dumps” and “cob.” The first two terms refer to data encoded on the magnetic stripe of credit cards; the last one stands for “change of billing,” referring to credit card accounts for which a crook has changed the billing address to a mail drop under his control.

Jackson also searched the online nicknames of specific carders that law enforcement agents mentioned in news reports or at a cybercrime conference Jackson attended: names like Zoomer, Kayser Sose, Smash, Segvec, Jilsi, Ragoo and John Dillinger, a carder who described his crimes for Wired News earlier this year and who recently signed a plea agreement to cooperate with authorities.

Jackson says some culprits that authorities deemed “unfindable” were easy to track through e-gold. One appeared to be a high school kid in Louisville, Ohio, judging from information gleaned from his transactions. Jackson tracked two others to Egypt after one of them converted e-gold to cash and had an intermediary load it onto a debit card sent to him by courier.

Jackson identified a core group of accounts that appeared to involve carding, and made lists of accounts that exchanged e-gold with them. Patterns emerged. Beginning earlier this year, for example, one account-holder in New York purchased postal orders worth about $6,000 twice a month from three different post offices, exchanged them for e-gold and transferred the funds to an account-holder in the Ukraine. Altogether he purchased about 30 postal orders totaling more than $150,000.

In other accounts he found a $17,000 transaction supposedly “for beer” and $10,000 for Louis Vuitton purses. Over two weeks last February, one account-holder moved $29,000 worth of e-gold to purchase Sony Vaio computers, followed two days later by $30,000 for more Sony Vaios, and $40,000 four days after that. The recipient of the funds accumulated more than $900,000 in e-gold over a brief period of time, more than half of which remained parked in his account.

The timing of the transactions, last spring, corresponded with news articles reporting a serious wave of debit card breaches across the country that caused several banks to reissue compromised cards.

By matching other data, like time stamps, IP addresses and hashes of passwords, Jackson could sometimes identify when one person controlled or used different accounts. “The good ones will have a different IP address every time they touch the internet,” he says. “But every once in a while you get one of these bad guys on one of these accounts where … he may use a fixed IP.”

Jackson decided that law enforcement needed to know about what he’d found.

He’d received and complied with hundreds of subpoenas in the past — from FBI, Secret Service, Drug Enforcement Agency and international law enforcement agencies. But this time he had trouble finding someone to work with him. Since the Secret Service had already dismissed him, he approached the FBI and U.S. Postal Inspection Service, but got the runaround. Jackson said one agency wanted his company to sign an agreement stating he wouldn’t be immune from prosecution if authorities, in the process of obtaining information from him, found something that could incriminate e-gold.

He refused to sign, but began assisting postal inspectors and other agents voluntarily.

Jackson acknowledges some discomfort over the decision to give information to the feds without legal process — a move that could save e-gold from further law enforcement aggression, while tarnishing its libertarian sheen.

His lawyers aren’t bothered by the move, however. They say agents repeatedly promised to provide Jackson with court orders since last February but have not come through.”You have a very strong documented relationship with these agents asking about particular people with the promise that they are going to be subpoenaing,” says Jackson attorney Andrew Ittleman. “Just because they never ultimately gave him a subpoena doesn’t put the fault on Jackson — it’s on the agents. He was acting in good faith.”His lawyers also say that once the company discovered evidence of possible wrongdoing, it had no choice but to hand over information to the government. Jackson could even have been charged with aiding and abetting money launderers under federal statutes if he didn’t report the suspicious activity.”E-gold, because of the way in which it operates, creates the potential for a misuse,” says lead attorney Mitchell Fuerst. “And to the extent that that can happen, I think the company has an ethical and a legal obligation to prevent those crimes from being committed.”But the company thinks it’s unlikely that anyone involved in illicit activity would sue e-gold for blocking their account or giving their data to law enforcement.

Kevin Bankston, staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, says e-gold is violating its privacy policy, which states that the company won’t hand over data except under court order. Its actions “could open it to liability under contract violation and false advertising and unfair competition claims,” he says.

In November, Jackson began running an automated script to blacklist accounts he identified as suspicious. The digital funds aren’t frozen, and the account holder can conceivably get the money out by transferring it to another account he controls, or to a different e-gold customer. But then those accounts get blocked, too.

“We’re looking to make these people into vagabond zombies,” he says. “They can log into the account and send payment to someone who’s willing to accept payment from them, but at that other person’s risk.”

But the aggressive policing is chafing some users, who say they did nothing wrong and were improperly banned.

Cesar Carranza runs a business called uBuyWeRush selling liquidation and overstock merchandise online and from three California stores. He uses e-gold for some overseas customers because, unlike credit card and PayPal transactions, e-gold purchases are irreversible and there are no charge-backs to the merchant.

“I am a reputable merchant,” he says. “I am not a con artist or a thief.”

Carranza was arrested in 2004 but never charged with anything. At the time, he was selling MSR-206s through eBay — devices used to encode data on the magnetic strip of credit cards. It’s not illegal to sell them, but carders often use them to code stolen credit and debit card numbers onto blank cards. Carranza says police accused him of selling merchandise to terrorists. He’s since sold the MSR part of his business.

Last month, e-gold blocked two of his accounts containing about $19,000, providing little information about why. Carranza says the block hasn’t hurt his business but he’ll never use e-gold again and is considering legal action to get his funds. “I no longer trust the e-gold integrity,” he says.