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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/23/2006 4:40:12 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
PATCHIE, THAT HACKERS TRADE IN YOUR ACCOUNT AT 22 CENTS LOOKING PRETTY GOOD:

JAG Media Holdings Inc. DL (10/23/2006 4:23 PM)

JAGH Last: 0.152 Change: -0.008(-5.01%) Volume: 141.02 k Last Trade: 3:51



Today 5 Dy 1 Mo 3 Mo 1 Yr more
Last Price
0.152





To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/23/2006 8:33:33 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
GO GET EM PATCHIE->To arrange for its listings in Hamburg, World of Internet relies on
market-making firms, usually Borsenmakler Schnigge. That company's
Hamburg broker, Klaus Pinkernell, also sits on World of Internet's board of
supervisors.

Portly and pony-tailed, Mr. Pinkernell hunches over his computer in Berlin,
watching the trading on the Hamburg Exchange and occasionally exclaiming
at the screen. "Robbers!" he cries, as he watches a lowball bid for Rhombic
flash over the monitor.

The Market Maker

Mr. Pinkernell makes his money primarily through arbitrage between the
U.S. and German exchanges and by charging a small fee for executing
trades. Because Hamburg requires its companies to be sponsored by a
market maker, he also charges World of Internet about $2,500 per listing.
"Believe me, they charge their clients much more," he says.

August 24, 2000

Some Pretty Lonely U.S. Stocks
Call Hamburg Exchange Home

By CHRISTOPHER COOPER
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

HAMBURG, Germany -- Some obscure U.S. companies, tired of being
ignored by American investors, are seeking relief in an unlikely place: the
tiny Hamburg Stock Exchange.

Driven to the brink of obsolescence by the far larger bourse in Frankfurt, the
Hamburg exchange now offers a new specialty: micro-cap U.S. stocks. A
new trading board, launched in January, currently features about 40
companies, all of them based in North America, few with any deep
connection to Europe.

Yet some of these stocks generate more trading volume in Hamburg than
they do in the U.S. The board, called the High Risk Market, is the product of
an unusual alliance between the exchange and a Hamburg-based
stock-promotion firm, World of Internet.com AG.

World of Internet, which operates a financial Web site called
Stockreporter.de (stockreporter.de), is one of many paid stock touts, offering
publicity and analyst reports about tiny U.S. firms in return for cash and
stock options. With its deal in Hamburg, World of Internet also offers clients
a stock listing there. About half of its 50 or so customers have signed up.

Who's Trading Here?

Typical of the companies on the exchange is Rhombic Corp., which
describes itself as a scientific research company working on, among other
things, a material the company says may one day replace silicon. The
company, founded in Nevada but based in Vancouver, British Columbia,
reported a first-quarter loss of $605,000 on revenue of $1,207. It is listed on
the OTC Bulletin Board in the U.S., where investors have shown little
interest.

In March, after Rhombic paid World of Internet $18,000 for "a package of
investor relations services," which included a listing in Hamburg, interest in
the outfit picked up. These days, some 200,000 Rhombic shares change
hands in a single session in Hamburg, according to local securities firm
Borsenmakler Schnigge AG, more than double the average volume in the
U.S.

"Peculiar, isn't it?" says Larry Horowitz, a spokesman for Rhombic. "The
Germans understand our company better than investors in the U.S."

Bids and Beer

For the Hamburg exchange, Germany's oldest bourse but one of its smallest,
creating the High Risk Market is an attempt to stand out from the crowd of
regional bourses, says Deputy Business Manager Kay Homan. "People need
to know that Frankfurt isn't the only exchange in Germany," he says.
Walking through the cavernous trading floor, all but deserted on a recent
midday, he passes a lone trader, who monitors a trading screen in between
swigs of beer. "We need to advertise, but we don't have any money," Mr.
Homan says.

At this point the new board is "pretty much a hobby," Mr. Homan says,
generating little income for the exchange. The bourse hopes it will grow into
something more lucrative.

The bourse doesn't claim to offer much oversight of companies listed on the
new board. Instead, officials say, they rely on the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission for policing. The name alone should make investors
wary, Mr. Homan says: "It's called the High Risk Market -- that should be
warning enough."

The market has proved a boon to World of Internet, which charges its
customers a fee, generally several thousand dollars, to list in Hamburg.

Not all of the companies are as happy as Rhombic with World of Internet's
services. Houston-based Adair International Oil & Gas Inc. also listed in
Hamburg in March but has yet to catch on with German investors. The
company, which lists an oil lease in Yemen among its assets, recorded a loss
of $1.14 million for the first quarter. Over the past year, the company's stock
price has fluctuated between a high of $3 and a low of about 12 cents.

Glowing Reports

As payment, World of Internet received 270,000 shares of Adair at 10 cents
apiece. In return, World of Internet's Stockreporter service provided a
Hamburg listing and a glowing analyst report, calling Adair a "strong buy"
and predicting a "conservative" price target of $3.90 a share.

Indeed, shortly after Stockreporter issued its report, Adair hit its 52-week
high. But the Hamburg listing has been a bust, says the company's chief
executive officer, Bill Adair. "Stockreporter pitched this as a way to build
active interest in our company, but hell, I haven't seen it," he says.

Other World of Internet clients listed here include Hartcourt Cos., Long
Beach, Calif., which has at various times been involved in gold mines, real
estate and Chinese Internet ventures. Winners Internet Inc., St. Augustine,
Fla., a former mining company that now says it is developing software, is
also listed. Other firms listed on the Hamburg bourse were recently delisted
from the Bulletin Board in the U.S., leaving them to trade in the so-called
Pink Sheets, where price quotes aren't readily available and regulatory
scrutiny is light.

Dennis Haas, the 29-year-old executive vice president and co-founder of
World of Internet, says he and two friends came up with the idea for the
business a few years ago when they were humanities students at a college
near Hamburg. Although Mr. Haas often appears as the author of the
analyst reports, he cheerfully admits to having scant business training.
Stockreporter relies on the companies to provide information for the reports.
"We don't have the time or the capacity to do all of the reporting," he says.
"We're not analysts."

Disclosure of the Arrangement

Generally, U.S. securities laws allow companies such as World of Internet to
provide paid analyst reports, so long as they disclose the payments. World of
Internet does so, behind a link on its Stockreporter Web site. Asked if he
thought all Stockreporter readers know of the disclosure, Mr. Haas shrugs.
"Maybe some people don't know," he says.

To arrange for its listings in Hamburg, World of Internet relies on
market-making firms, usually Borsenmakler Schnigge. That company's
Hamburg broker, Klaus Pinkernell, also sits on World of Internet's board of
supervisors.

Portly and pony-tailed, Mr. Pinkernell hunches over his computer in Berlin,
watching the trading on the Hamburg Exchange and occasionally exclaiming
at the screen. "Robbers!" he cries, as he watches a lowball bid for Rhombic
flash over the monitor.

The Market Maker

Mr. Pinkernell makes his money primarily through arbitrage between the
U.S. and German exchanges and by charging a small fee for executing
trades. Because Hamburg requires its companies to be sponsored by a
market maker, he also charges World of Internet about $2,500 per listing.
"Believe me, they charge their clients much more," he says.

Mr. Pinkernell takes an existential view of the High Risk Market and the
companies and people who trade there.

"People who buy stock in these companies, I wouldn't call them investors,"
he says. "I'd call them gamblers."

Write to Christopher Cooper at christopher.cooper@wsj.com



To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/23/2006 9:19:09 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
31 Oct 2004 UCAD/CMKX Vegas Party. It's in 6 parts

cmkxunplugged.com



To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/23/2006 10:28:46 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
CMKX THE BRE-X OF THE DIAMOND WORLD. MIGHT BE BIGGER THAN BRE-X EXCEPT WITHOUT THE PART WHERE THEY THROW THE GUY OUT OF THE HELICOPTER.



To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/23/2006 10:36:17 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
CMKX 6 IS INTERESTING "AND THEN THINGS GOT UGLY" cmkxunplugged.com



To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/24/2006 9:13:04 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Vote (Patrick Byrne) for (Overstock.com) CEO of the Year

Vote early, vote often (okay, yeah, you can only vote once on your computer, but you know what I mean). Here’s how MarketWatch put it on their website:

And that’s the Faulking Truth

Location: Blogs Mark Faulk's Blog
Posted by: mfaulk 10/23/2006 5:57 PM



Vote (Patrick Byrne) for (Overstock.com) CEO of the Year
Location: Blogs Mark Faulk's Blog
Posted by: mfaulk 10/23/2006 5:57 PM
Want to send yet another message to Wall Street that we’re “mad as hell and we’re not gonna take it anymore”? Care to show those who put money before morals that there are still those among us who believe that the only way to run a successful business is in an honest business environment?

While hedge funds continue to fail, brokers continue to fail to deliver, and the SEC continues to be a failure, there is one CEO who has put his reputation, his honor, and his ass on the line time and again, while others have been content to turn a blind eye to the problems that face our financial markets.

MarketWatch is soliciting votes for their Readers' Choice CEO of the Year. Rather than attempt to influence anyone’s opinion about who they should vote for, I’ll just say that for those of us who believe that honesty and integrity should never have been removed from the Mission Statement of the SEC, the choice is obvious (and if it’s not, I’ll give you a little hint below).

Vote early, vote often (okay, yeah, you can only vote once on your computer, but you know what I mean). Here’s how MarketWatch put it on their website:

This is your chance to let MarketWatch know who YOU think should be considered for the Readers' Choice CEO of the Year. To nominate the CEO of your choice, simply click on the button below.

Be sure to submit your nomination by Friday, October 27th to be included for consideration.

And remember, come back to MarketWatch November 13th to see if your nominee made the top 10. marketwatch.com And after you’ve finished voting, click on the Overstock.com (whose CEO is the one and only Patrick Byrne) link on The Faulking Truth homepage for all your holiday shopping needs, and send another clear message to Wall Street. We do reward honesty and integrity, and we do it through our pocketbooks.

Then, on November 7, 2006, you can send the clearest message of all to Congress by voting out any incumbent who hasn’t been an active advocate for stock market reform. Big money, big business, and special interests have owned America for far too long. It’s time to take back our neighborhoods, our cities, our states, and our country.

And that’s the Faulking Truth.

Editor's note: please feel free to repost or forward this message EVERYWHERE, so that Wall Street can hear it loud and clear.




To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/24/2006 9:37:25 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
YOUR ON IN A MILLION PATCHIE. SO MUCH FOR YOUR NAKED SHORTSELLING LIE THAT YOUR ACCOUNT WAS HACKED BY MOST LIKELY SHORTSELLERS.

Hack attacks scam millions from online traders
By Herald staff and Bloomberg News
Tuesday, October 24, 2006 - Updated: 04:54 AM EST

Third World hackers are sneaking into E*Trade and TD Ameritrade online stock-trading accounts and looting them in a massive pump, dump and run scheme.

Scammers from Eastern Europe and Asia are targeting the online traders in one of the biggest cases of identity theft to strike the U.S. securities industry.

In a conference call last week, E*Trade said it spent $18 million in the third quarter to compensate customers affected by trading fraud. TD Ameritrade said it also suffered losses because of bogus trading by unauthorized users who pried their way into customer accounts, but declined to specify an amount.

In many cases, criminals use personal information, such as Social Security numbers, to hack into users’ accounts. Once in control, they loot the accounts by selling securities and wiring out the proceeds far from the United States.

In one “pump-and-dump” scheme the Securities and Exchange Commission uncovered, thieves used customers’ money to drive up prices of little-traded stocks and then sold shares they bought earlier at a profit.

It’s tough for online brokers to detect hackers because their activity looks as if the holder of the account is carrying out the trading, said Sunil James, head of the security engineering and response team at Arbor Networks - a Lexington-based network security provider.

Such concentrated attacks are often carried out using “bot nets” - networks of individual compromised computers, James said. Hackers can collect individuals’ personal information and then sell it to crime rings in other countries that conduct organized attacks against particular companies, he said.

“Nothing happens piecemeal. It’s usually large swipes that happen at one time because you want to get in and get out,” James said.

James said financial traders will probably boost the layers of protection for online transactions to ensure users’ identities, but in the meantime brokers have a duty to teach customers how to avoid getting their data hacked.








To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/25/2006 12:35:51 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Scorpions chase after international cyber crooks

October 25, 2006, 14:00

The Scorpions are investigating an international online banking fraud ring and have already arrested a South African in the case.

Gerhard Nel, an advocate of the Scorpions, said the unit was going after the "big guys" in foreign countries, after a 28-year-old man was arrested two weeks ago for allegedly stealing login details of South African online banking customers.

"We do not want to give too much information about the case at the moment because we want to see if we can go after the main people," Nel said.

The South African was arrested at his home in Cape Town after joint operation between the Scorpions, the Standard Bank and a UK-based security consultancy.

The man, who is out on R20 000 bail but under house arrest, has been linked to at least 120 incidents of online fraud affecting most of South Africa's major banks. Several international banking customers were also affected.

First arrest of its kind in SA
Herman Singh, the Standard Bank security head, confirmed that the arrest is the first of its kind involving a substantial amount of money and impacting all major South African banks.

It is thought the man used the spyware on vulnerable computers in internet cafes to capture details including card numbers and customer-selected PINs and passwords.

The details were then transmitted via a remote internet access device to a file server in Estonia, and were then retrieved by the alleged fraudster, who used them to log onto internet banking sites and make numerous electronic fund transfers and prepaid airtime purchases.

Most of the affected internet cafes are in Johannesburg's northern suburbs and Pretoria, with isolated cases reported in Cape Town.

Importance of keeping banking details safe
The first incidents were reported in May, and the modus operandi was established after investigation by Standard Bank computer experts.

When Scorpions officials swooped on the suspect, they found a laptop computer, three mobile phones and about 20 SIM cards at his premises, as well as R20 000 in cash

"Once again, this attack shows the importance of banking customers keeping their details secure, and preferably avoiding Internet Cafes as a place to do their online banking," said Singh. - Sapa



To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/25/2006 4:07:51 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
=DJ SEC Sues Conversion Solutions And Its CEO

10/25/2006
Dow Jones News Services
(Copyright © 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

By Carol S. Remond
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a complaint against Conversion Solutions Holdings Corp. (CSHD) and chief executive Rufus Harris.

The SEC said in a complaint filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division, that the company made false and misleading statements in press releases and financial reports filed with the commission.

The SEC temporarily halted trading in Conversion Solutions stock because of questions about the accuracy of the company's press releases on Tuesday. Trading is scheduled to resume on Nov. 7.

The commission said in its complaint that Harris knew that statements made by Conversion Solutions were "false, misleading or recklessly disregarded the danger that they were."

Among false claims made by the Over-The-Counter company was the claim that it owns or controls the entirety of two separate Venezuelan bond issues with face values of EUR5 billion and $500 million, the SEC said in the complaint.

Conversion Solutions stock skyrocketed to a high of $4 a share on Sept. 28 with a trading volume of more than 14 million shares. The company had announced its acquisition of the euro-denominated Venezuelan bond in a press release on Sept. 27. On Sept. 28, the company said in another release that it planned to list on the Nasdaq stock exchange.

The SEC said in its complaint that 8K filings and an annual report filed by Conversion Solutions in September and October "fraudulently overstated Conversion's assets."

According to the complaint, Conversion Solutions doesn't own or manage as an asset the entire euro-denominated bond issuance identified in its press release and 8K filing. In fact, the company wrongly stated the amount of Venezuelan euro-denominated bond outstanding as EUR5 billion when there is only EUR700 million outstanding.

Conversion Solutions also misled investors about its ownership of $500 million in Venezuelan bonds, according to the SEC.

Conversion Solutions and Harris "directly and indirectly employed devices, schemes or artifices to defraud; made untrue statements of material facts or omitted to state material facts necessary in order to make the statements made," the SEC said in its complaint.

The SEC asked the court to issue restraining orders enjoining Conversion Solutions and Harris from violating securities laws. The SEC also asked the court to order them to disgorge ill-gotten gains.

Harris wasn't immediately available for comment.

Conversion Solutions stock rose from mere cents in early July to a high of $4 on Sept. 28. The stock closed at $1.87 a share on Oct. 20 before being halted by the SEC.

-By Carol S. Remond, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2074; carol.remond@dowjones.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

10-25-06 1551ET

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Copyright © 2006 MarketWatch, Inc. All rights reserved. Please see our Terms of Use. MarketWatch, the MarketWatch logo, and BigCharts are registered trademarks of MarketWatch, Inc.

News provided by Dow Jones NewswiresSM, PR News Wire™ and Business Wire™. Dow Jones Newswires is a service mark of Dow Jones & Company. PR News Wire is a Trademark of PR Newswire Association, Inc. Business Wire is a registered trademark and service mark of Business Wire.



To: Patchie who wrote (96228)10/25/2006 6:16:25 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
"the case of the two dead directors of Xybernaut."

forums.christiantraders.com

PATCHIE, WHAT 2 DEAD DIRECTORS OF XYBERNAUT WAS BUD TALKING ABOUT?
=================================================

From: C. Austin Burrell [mailto:b.burrell1@cox.net]

Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2005 11:36 AM

To: XXXXXXX

Floyd, I saw your very biased article on short selling. The problem professionals have is with "Naked Short Selling". Such conduct constitutes a violation of Sections 5 and 6 of the Securities Act of 1933, prohibiting the sale of unregistered securities. Sale of Unregistered Securities is a civil issue. The parallel criminal cause is Counterfeiting of Commercial Securities, see 18 USC 514. EATC has filed such a criminal complaint with the Secret Service with attached evidentiary proof of naked shorting in its stock that wrecked the Company. Want to talk to some of the CEO's of one of these companies who have infinitely more knowledge about this than Byrne? Call Rod Young, CEO of Eagletech Communications, at (954) 295-0136. Remember the name. You will see it and him when the Dateline piece airs.

Ask him how many people have had their lives threatened here. I can give you more if anyone will talk to you after this article. I am sending you copies of the charges levied by the SEC against EATC manipulators just two days ago. Read them and find the charging cause errors in the last paragraph. Like many of us, Dave, who you spoke too, has had his life threatened, and he has had the name of his wife, his SSN and his home city put up on message boards. He has reported this to the FBI in Boston. If you think such threats aren't real, look to the case of the two dead directors of Xybernaut.

Dave has spoken to many of the SEC and NASD regulatory officials involved with this scandal an uncountable number of times, and he has sent them hundreds of communications. He is no crank. Neither am I. I suggest you get your facts straight before you get embarrassed worse than this article does for you.

Regarding Annette Nazareth's statements to you, ask her these incredibly simple questions, and demand a straight answer: If the short positions were no problem, why did they "grandfather" all short positions existing before Jan 3? I already know the answer. There aren't enough shares in the system for force settlement of all these shorts. That is a violation of the requirements for settlement mandated for the SEC by Section 17a of the Securities Act of 1934. If there is no shorting problem, why do DTCC and the NSCC refuse to divulge short positions in traded , and particularly, victim, companies?

Best Regards, and Good Luck