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    Author Topic: More proof that savegox.com is a sham.  (Read 29724 times)
    Phinnaeus Gage (OP)
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    April 30, 2014, 10:21:05 PM
    Last edit: May 01, 2014, 02:17:56 AM by Phinnaeus Gage
     #1

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=130313597121004&set=pb.100004270929990.-2207520000.1398891154.&type=3&theater



    http://www.wackbag.com/threads/x-men-director-bryan-singer-the-real-dirt.156502/

    Quote
    There is a convergence between WeHo pedos; some might recall the 1998 web series Chad's World which was essentially a bunch of 30-something pedos creating a project to lure boys to Hollywood with promises of becoming stars in exchange for "work" they would do while living with various members of this group of 30-something pedos. Singer is said to be connected to this project which was done under a company called DEN, the Digital Entertainment Network run by Marc Collins-Rector (who has since been convicted of child sex crimes) and Brock Pierce (former child actor known for starring in First Kid and the Mighty Ducks) who has not been convicted of child sex crimes but he probably should be. The website BoingBoing called Chad's World "a pedophile fantasy based on the founders' own lives."

    http://boingboing.net/2007/11/15/goldfarming-empire-l.html

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Collins-Rector

    Quote
    Marc John Collins-Rector (born October 16, 1959) is an American businessman best known for founding Digital Entertainment Network, an online streaming video broadcaster and notable dot-com failure.

    He changed his name from Mark Rector to Marc Collins-Rector in 1998.[2]
    In the early 1980s Rector founded Telequest, a Florida-based telecommunications company. In 1984, Rector founded World TravelNet, a company that electronically coordinated cruises and tours; its affiliate, World ComNet, was floated on the Vancouver Stock Exchange in 1987. Its valuation briefly peaked at $100 million before increasing competition led to bankruptcy.[2] Rector later founded an early ISP, Concentric Network,[3] in 1991[4] along with colleague and lover Chad Shackley.[5]

    DEN

    Main article: Digital Entertainment Network
    Rector and Shackley sold Concentric in 1995 and, using money raised here and close to $100m of investor and venture capital, formed an early Internet video pioneer, Digital Entertainment Network. Collins-Rector was the co-founder and Chairman of DEN, which exhausted its funding following a failed IPO bid and collapsed amid allegations that Collins-Rector had sexually abused children, coercing them with drugs and guns.[6]

    Later career

    Media reports claim that Collins-Rector was a silent partner in the MMORPG service company IGE, which was founded by ex-DEN VP Brock Pierce.[6] IGE initially used an address in the city of Marbella, Spain, where Collins-Rector, Shackley, and Pierce shared a villa until it was raided by Interpol in 2002.[7][8]

    Child enticement conviction

    Collins-Rector fled to Europe, ending up in Spain. He fought extradition proceedings for two years before returning to the United States, where he pleaded guilty to eight charges of child enticement and registered as a sex offender.[9] Collins-Rector admitted luring five minors across state lines for sexual purposes.[10] He received credit for time that he had served in a Spanish jail.[10][11] Some of his underage victims sued in civil court, winning a $4.5 million under a summary judgement.[12]

    https://twitter.com/brockpierce/status/424225758135853056

    Quote
    Brock Pierce
    ‏@brockpierce
    First Meta Switches to GoCoin for Bitcoin and Litecoin Payments http://www.marketwired.com/press-release/-1870108.htm …

    Six weeks later, this: http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2014/03/05/bitcoin_ceo_suicide_not_so_fast_first_meta_s_autumn_radtke_is_dead_but_we.html

    Quote
    The young woman in question was actually the head of the Singapore-based startup First Meta. According to its website, First Meta was founded in 2007, and its claim to fame was creating the first virtual credit card for the then-popular online game Second Life. Today it functions as one of many online marketplaces for bitcoin and a slew of other virtual currencies.

    http://boingboing.net/2007/11/15/goldfarming-empire-l.html

    Quote
    Around Hollywood, rumors flew that Collins-Rector, Shackley, and Pierce were about to be arrested on embezzlement and sexual offenses. Before any charges were filed, though, the three men disappeared.

    So that there's no mistake that Brock Pierce and Brock Rector are one in the same...

    https://www.facebook.com/coindesk/posts/466801573427484



    The following page was recently taken down: Chad's World to hit the Internet this month: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://oasisjournals.com/Issues/9806/cover.html

    http://articles.latimes.com/2002/may/18/local/me-den18

    Quote
    Many workers at the company said they had suspicions about then-Chairman Collins-Rector and discussed them internally before the New Jersey lawsuit. "There was something not right," a former executive said Friday. "There were too many little boys. People were willing to look the other way."

    Matt Welch, a Los Angeles writer who briefly consulted for the company, said its collapse "would have been one of the textbook classic dot-com flameouts even without this. It was a bad idea, at a bad time, done by bad people.... I wouldn't say there was an atmosphere of criminal behavior, you just felt the decadence."

    Collins-Rector, who is in his early 40s, shared a palatial Encino estate with longtime partner Chad Shackley, 24, and with Brock Pierce, a child Disney movie star who moved in when he was 17 and was paid a $250,000 salary by the company. Shackley and Pierce were executive vice presidents of the company.

    The three were described as co-founders of the company, which filmed short episodes on a number of teenage themes for playback over the Internet and at one time boasted more than 300 employees.

    The company secured big advertisers but failed to generate a significant audience or keep its expenses in check. The company's audience remained limited, in part because of the lack of high-speed Internet connections needed to stream entertainment videos.

    Although the company was at the forefront of developing entertainment for the Internet, its competitors were soon drawing greater traffic while paying little or nothing for video content.

    It spent freely on its productions and facilities and paid salaries that exceeded $1 million, unusually high figures for a start-up. In June 1999, the company was burning up $3 million a month when it had no revenue.

    Among those who have filed lawsuits are four former employees, including one hired and allegedly abused before the age of 16 and another hired at 15 and abused at 16.

    A suit by one of the teenagers was settled, but its terms were not disclosed. A suit filed by three of the teenagers resulted in a default judgment of $4.5 million.

    The suits accused Collins-Rector, Shackley and Pierce of rape, assault and death threats. Shackley and Pierce have not been charged criminally.

    If you want to see something really weird, then click the five names that liked Brock Rector's photo: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=313360395482989&set=pb.100004270929990.-2207520000.1398896243.&type=3&theater

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