| | Re: States Go After Online Auctions; $1000 fines
|
|
(...) (starting (...) While I would never underestimate the grasping perfidity of a politician of any party other than Libertarian, this may well be one of those urban legends in the making. One which, 8 months from now, we will equate to the "Post (...) (25 years ago, 15-Dec-99, to lugnet.market.auction)
|
|
| | Re: States Go After Online Auctions; $1000 fines
|
|
(...) I'll have to dig up the article in our paper. I'm not sure who they were actually using for source material. The article seemed serious, and it seemed like it was researched and not just someone rambling. (25 years ago, 15-Dec-99, to lugnet.market.auction)
|
|
| | Re: States Go After Online Auctions; $1000 fines
|
|
(...) I'd say this was real, here is the text of an announcement from eBay: (...) copied from (URL) Frank Filz ---...--- Work: mailto:ffilz@us.ibm.com (business only please) Home: mailto:ffilz@mindspring.com (25 years ago, 16-Dec-99, to lugnet.market.auction)
|
|
| | Re: States Go After Online Auctions; $1000 fines
|
|
Thanks for pointing this out, Frank. How's that for closure? Do we know anybody in North Carolina who could be nudged into writing their legislators? In lugnet.market.auction, Frank Filz writes: (e-bay annoucement copied from (URL) (25 years ago, 16-Dec-99, to lugnet.market.auction)
|