> You can get G&SR's e-gold account frozen the same way you can get any other
> account frozen -- get a court order. When dealing with ANY third-party, like
> G&SR or E-Gold, you have to trust the third-party. G&SR created the e-gold
> system, and the only way to challenge them is through the courts. Let's say
> that e-gold and G&SR were separate, and you had a problem with E-Gold LTD.
> If this occurred, you would need to go to the courts. With any type of
> business set-up, like E-Gold / Omnipay, you're going to find certain
> alliances which you're going to have little control over. This isn't a
> problem. Indeed, it's an asset in most cases. Look at the alliance between
> GoldMoney and FideliTrade. You're not going to get GoldMoney to freeze
> FideliTrade's account under any circumstances. This would be a serious
> breech of trust, and would have to be resolved in the courts.

This is very poor policy to have no dispute resolution mechanism in place
other than the court system.  Here is a very good report on B2B dispute
resolution that makes it clear why, for an online business to earn trust,
it should establish a dispute resolution mechanism that makes the court
system the absolute last resort.

http://www.nmm.com/documents/wired_conflict.pdf

~ Vincent


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