> If a customer were to sign and notarize a fraud affidavit,

> and it were
> indeed found to be true, then e-gold would have EVERY right
> to return
> the gold to its original owner.

The problem is that the gold won't be in the thief's account. It will be
moved to the account of another market maker, or traded for something on
eBay, BEFORE any action can take place, Thieves who are smart enough to
trick people out of these passwords will not keep the gold in their account.
This is the fundamental problem with repudiation. The other main problem is
that ANY type of repudiation would be based on guesswork. You don't KNOW
that the person claiming fraud isn't doing it for his OWN reasons.

E-gold is supposed to be internet currency, and this means it should be
treated like cash.

Craig



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