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Pastimes : Brokerage-Chat Site Securities Fraud: A Lawsuit -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CountofMoneyCristo who wrote (360)6/29/2001 12:39:51 AM
From: SmoothSail  Respond to of 3143
 
He's baaaaaackkkkk



To: CountofMoneyCristo who wrote (360)6/29/2001 9:22:38 AM
From: JHP  Respond to of 3143
 
your killing me<G>
roflmao



To: CountofMoneyCristo who wrote (360)6/29/2001 10:21:47 AM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 3143
 
My comment wasn't actually intended for your benefit - it was intended as a caveat to people who may not understand the pitfalls of what you're asking. I strongly suggest - for many reasons, the potential for identity theft being just one - that people not give their personal information to a stranger on the internet. Even worse is giving personal financial information.

I don't suppose most people understand how simple it is to get a social security number on the 'Net when you have a name and address - I'm not going to tell you how to do it, but the bad guys already know how. With some account information, a clever bad guy would be able to clean someone completely out.

I also think that the proper person to be engaged in the identification of potential plaintiffs is a lawyer. A lawyer has training, and a lawyer has privilege, and a lawyer has a fiduciary duty, and a lawyer has accountability. None of which you have.

You may be a good guy, and have the best intentions in the world, but you're just another alias on the Internet, so who knows?