Quote:
Originally Posted by AlexanderHanff
Just look at the size of the trades, it is blatantly obvious that there is a very serious effort to ramp the stock, very small trades selling at high prices.
I would suggest someone has a lot of shares they want to dump but they don't want to make a huge loss on them (bought them at 20+) so they are trying to get the price up in order to dump them again.
There certainly isn't any news I can find anywhere (not even on Phorm's site) which can otherwise account for today's market activity.
Alexander Hanff
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OK, I agree it's unlikely to be small speculators.
It could be, as you say, someone trying to drive the price up before dumping a big holding. I've noticed that large holdings tend to be dumped after 4pm, so it will be worth looking out for.
It could also be phorm shoreing which leads to speculation of why now?
Push price up, publish phorm friendly PIA this evening after close of business and leave the weekend for people to digest the PIA in preparation for Monday's opening?
---------- Post added at 15:36 ---------- Previous post was at 15:23 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dephormation
Oh no. I'm not that evil.
I would ensure the ISP gave me explicit consent... ISPs will indicate their explicit consent to be charged for commercial exploitation by Phorging a UID cookie in my domain.
As for AIM, joy to say the mechanism for generating this revenue is so simple anyone could do it. In a nutshell; force leaked UID cookie, log commercial exploitation event, invoice ISP for page impression royalties and then... either draw income from factor (and allow them to chase bad debt on your behalf) or sue ISP in small claims court for royalties once a month.
Anyone with a relatively basic web site hosting package would be able to do it (and never have to show an advert). Or you could use the expected income to upgrade your hosting package if necessary.
No legal fees, you can represent yourself in small claims.
Pete.
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Another thought.
Apart from commercial exploitation of you copyright material your fee could also cover permission to forge the cookie in your domain.
Failure to pay could then also be pursued via Fraud/Computer Misuse Acts.
i.e. try to cover as many laws as possible in your T&C's, leaving you with many options to pursue in cases of non-payment.