Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
do you think maybe something is wrong if the ceo is incommunicado?
if you buy a lotto ticket there is a "chance".
based on glbts past the "chance" is very very small.
maybe hes closing shop.
yeah you gotta trust a guy who does not want to talk to his shareholders.
lmao
the sec is weak
i just send info to the doj and they do what they want.
thats ok i think the doj can find phone numbers.
you hurt his feelings.
wonder how he thinks we feel.
i will forward this to the doj
yes thank you. just needed another living being to confirm what was already known.
that is untrue, you need to review my posts.
i suggest anyone wanting to invest do the dd and call mark. he has many numbers from many different companies he has worked for, one of them should work.
85000 dollars, undisclosed debt, and no source of income.
what was the name of those loan sharks mark was doing business with ajs offshore...some thing like that.
follow the money.
i have called this number many times.
no answer. i think he has left the building.
why would the list of attendees be insider info?
juno . com?
what happened to globalnet.com?
you're telling me a ceo of a leading edge telecom can't get an email address with his own company? lol. oh i forgot, they ceased operations
<Juno Internet Service- Value-priced Internet Service Provider ...
Juno Internet Service Provider. Half the standard prices of AOL, MSN, Earthlink. Juno is available in more than 6000 cities across the United States and in ...>
value priced, lmao, glad to see they are saving money! make that 85000 dollars last.
oh yeah, almost forgot, NO CREDIT CARD REQUIRED.
i would rather call. got a number?
i think you bear the burden of proof. what evidence do you have that nobody attended?
why cant we call him?
what about all the wonderful ip that no one is using?
its so good that scott ceased operations.
i dont complain to the sec, i changed to the doj and fbi
its just money laundering.
who could argue with logic like that.
SHORTS HA HA HA
going broke and ceasing operations was the best thing that ever happened!
to the moon, i think microsoft wants us....
maybe google...
well lets get posting!
the risk metric is GONE!!!
its so low that it does not exist!!
strong buy! shorts running scared.
rotlmao.
Steven H. Bethke
anybody know him? how did he get to be a director?
ha ha good one whay were bill gate's qualifications to start micro soft? a colledge drop out? all the companies i mentioned were started buy college kids.
so what are his qualifications to be ceo? i say he is. what makes you think he is not qualified? i think the burden of truth is on you. prove he is not qualified.
ha ha .
makes as much sense as anything else i have read here.
you have not seen anything negative?
Anticipation! that always works.
lol.
i think he is in a country that does not have an extradition treaty with the usa
i think cali said that, or was it surf.
too funny, yes the 85000 dollar investment will be worth billions.
you mean a lot more bs
who started microsoft, yahoo, and google?
myspace,..... facebook....... duh.
i wonder if it is a coincidence that the sec has changed their tune since the imf started auditing americas books
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,562291,00.html
http://www.rgm.com/articles/WashingtonTimes.html
FTDs can be caused in several ways, but they commonly result from short sales in which the seller does not borrow or even locate the stock he sells (the infamous "naked" short sales). Regardless of how an FTD occurs, for each share not delivered the system creates a "phantom" entitlement the market treats as a real share. These "phantom shares" are supposed to be temporary in duration and few in number. Loopholes, however, are exploited on such a scale, and phantom shares are so persistent, they are corrupting the U.S. equity markets in three ways.
(1) Phantom shares warp corporate governance by inflating the number of voting shares. Bob Drummond (Bloomberg Markets) reported in April 2006, "The results of high-stakes company decisions may hinge on the invisible influence of millions of votes [i.e., phantom shares] that shouldn't be counted." In an analysis of 341 corporate votes in 2005 by the Securities Transfer Association, there was evidence of overvoting in all 341 cases.
(2) Phantom shares distort share prices by flooding the market with excess supply. In July 2006, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said "abusive naked short sales ... can be used as a tool to drive down a company's stock price to the detriment of all of its investors." The creation and sale of phantom shares has become a common means to manipulate share prices in U.S. equity markets.
(3) Phantom shares create systemic risk. According to the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. (DTCC), on any given day "fails to deliver and receive amount to about $6 billion daily ... or about 1½ percent of the dollar volume." Bradley Abelow, a former DTCC director, says FTDs within the settlement system "occur as a matter of course with great regularity," and calls them "endemic." The stock market has turned into a game of "musical chairs" where claims of ownership exceed shares issued. What happens when the music stops?
In a weak attempt to curb abusive naked short selling and reduce outstanding FTDs, the SEC implemented Regulation SHO in January 2005. Regulation SHO requires the stock exchanges to publish daily a list of "threshold securities" — companies that through no fault of their own have FTDs in excess of 0.5 percent of their outstanding shares. More than 6,000 companies have appeared on these Threshold Lists — many for hundreds of consecutive trading days. For these companies, Regulation SHO does not work.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) data received from the SEC reveal that FTDs have been as high as 10 percent of the average daily trading volume on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq. FOIA data also reveal that, for many companies, FTDs are a significant portion of their total shares outstanding — in at least one case more than 45 percent.
frank, to your knowledge, has anybody looked into shorting as a violation of constitutional property rights.
weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
oops, forgot the caps
WEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
i think you were the one who brought up the topic of morals.
they are not obligated in any way what so ever. this is a business. they are bound buy the law. what moral code are you referring to?
what is your problem, if you do not like owning a non reporting company sell. i think you are acting like a spoiled child who cannot get what he wants. all the whining in the world will not get you financials. get over it.
as far as i can tell the company has no legal obligation to provide you with financials. they have not been a reporting company since i can remember.
if you cannot handle this you should not have bought shares. if you think this is wrong you should contact the sec.
it reminds me of people who bought property next to a night club and then complained because of the noise.
its one thing to say buzz is manipulating the ratings, but do you have any proof? maybe you should be held to the same standard that you put on others.