Mary you don't get it do you? Rossi is not selling to the public.
Rossi's customers are engineering firms that I will assure you will not
part with 1 dollar unless the E-Cat plant meets their min agreed conditions.
Spin this any way you try but your time here claiming scam / fraud is
over. Rossi's payment conditions and his selected customer base has seen
to that.
AG
On 11/12/2011 12:25 PM, Mary Yugo wrote:
On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 5:06 PM, Aussie Guy E-Cat
<aussieguy.e...@gmail.com <mailto:aussieguy.e...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Nice to see the web site is registered to Rossi but what the heck
does the validity of the E-Cat have to do with the software that
was used to create the web site or who the web site was created by
or who it is administered by?
I agree, very little. But it's unlikely that a prosperous and
sophisticated company would do it that way, that's all.
I suggest the sales and payment conditions has just totally taken
the wind out of the sails of all the scam / fraud group.
Oh, Gee! Not at all. A common form of scam is to take money
somewhere near the start from secret investors who sign an NDA so they
can't talk or write on public forums. The NDA is usually extremely
broad in scope and if someone hints at breaking it, all sorts of
threats of law suits begin.
Meanwhile, the perpetrators buy an ad or two or do a web page or other
introduction, have news releases and press conferences, and announce a
new company that promises all sorts of wonders. They usually have
some sort of photo op and maybe a carefully contrived demonstration
that believers can sop up but which really proves nothing. The next
step is to announce that a lot of the proceeds will go to charity.
Blogs sprout up praising the device and fantasizing what will happen
in the future when it is widely adopted. Skeptics are scorned and
insulted and eventually banned from enthusiast sites. Then, the
scammer says they won't be taking investment money now. Maybe in the
future they'll go public but they're doing this "on their own". The
secret investors aren't mentioned and they can't say a peep due to
their NDA. They also don't want to jeopardize success and future
profits. Some are simply too embarrassed to speak.
Customers are announced but somehow they're never produced. Test are
declined if they're too definitive. Hey, they'd reveal too many trade
secrets. Patents? "Sometimes it's no, sometimes it's yes, it just
couldn't matter less" (from Gigi, 1958, IMDB).
Along the way, more secret investors may be picked up. The investment
amount can get really large -- Steorn so far has been $21 million
Euros. The money is spent or squirreled away. It can go on for years
with no product, no proper testing and no customers who can verify
that the product is real.
That's the quick version. Is that what Rossi is? In my mind, he fits
the script but he's more daring about demos than most --but who
knows? The more time goes by between the customer announcement and
some credible souls vouching for a bona fide sale and of course a
proper test -- the longer it takes, the more likely it's a scam. Nine
months and counting now.
You think people are too sophisticated to give money to scammers? You
must read different news articles than I do.