📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!

GCs PCs - DO NOT BUY FROM [Removed]

Options
19798100102103195

Comments

  • Money_Grabber13579
    Money_Grabber13579 Posts: 4,445 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Newshound! Name Dropper
    edited 28 January 2020 at 8:00PM
    sporedude wrote: »
    If you order an iPhone from [Name removed by Forum Team] , You may end up with this:


    Iphonetool.jpg

    Or he might come and get you with this (hope this is allowed!)

    funny-pic-4016.jpg
    Northern Ireland club member No 382 :j
  • sporedude
    sporedude Posts: 1,563 Forumite
    Hah! How longs GCsPCs been running?*






    *Scamming
  • trisontana
    trisontana Posts: 9,472 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    edited 28 January 2020 at 8:00PM
    I have just had a fairly civilised phone conversation with [Name removed by Forum Team] . But, as usual, everyone is in the wrong but him. This includes the people on these forums, the police, Trading Standards and Computer Active.

    I first asked him about the insecure credit-card page, but he denied that it was insecure. When I pointed out to him that you can complete a transaction using random numbers he said that was impossible.

    I then asked him about people not getting phones or refunds. He said that was the fault of Barclays who stopped his merchant facility but would not let him pay back people with cheques but insisted the money went back onto the original card.

    Next question was about him having his company in Basingstoke and not Southend. This, he said was a "virtual office", whatever that is.

    I then asked him if he had a very large warehouse for all the stuff he sells. He said this is stored "in a very secure site" in Essex which was robbed last December. I then pointed out that it could't have been that secure if people were able to break into it. He says now that this warehouse is now protected by some sort of "air-pressure" system which rings an alarm when someone breaks in.

    So make of that as you will. He certainly has got the gift of the gab. How much of that you believe it's up to you.
    What part of "A whop bop-a-lu a whop bam boo" don't you understand?
  • sporedude
    sporedude Posts: 1,563 Forumite
    He's so full of s**t.
  • JamesGilmour
    JamesGilmour Posts: 114 Forumite
    edited 28 January 2020 at 7:59PM
    trisontana wrote: »
    I have just had a fairly civilised phone conversation with [Name removed by Forum Team] . But, as usual, everyone is in the wrong but him. This includes the people on these forums, the police, Trading Standards and Computer Active.

    I first asked him about the insecure credit-card page, but he denied that it was insecure. When I pointed out to him that you can complete a transaction using random numbers he said that was impossible.

    I then asked him about people not getting phones or refunds. He said that was the fault of Barclays who stopped his merchant facility but would not let him pay back people with cheques but insisted the money went back onto the original card.

    Next question was about him having his company in Basingstoke and not Southend. This, he said was a "virtual office", whatever that is.

    I then asked him if he had a very large warehouse for all the stuff he sells. He said this is stored "in a very secure site" in Essex which was robbed last December. I then pointed out that it could,t have been that secure if people were able to break into it. He says now that this warehouse is now protected by some sort of "air-pressure" system which rings an alarm when someone breaks in.

    So make of that as you will. He certainly has got the gift of the gab. How much of that you believe it's up to you.

    Everything is a lie, at any time, at any day of the week, including Sundays; if you ask them a question and receive an answer, the number of lies is directly proportionate to the number of words and interpunction used in the sentence.

    Interpunction, [Name removed by Forum Team] , is things like commas, full stops, innit.
  • trisontana wrote: »
    He says now that this warehouse is now protected by some sort of "air-pressure" system which rings an alarm when someone breaks in.

    Would a normal alarm system not do the same job? Why does he need to use air pressure?

    He's spouting plenty of hot air out of his a*se, so maybe he's got a use for it now.
    Northern Ireland club member No 382 :j
  • JamesGilmour
    JamesGilmour Posts: 114 Forumite
    edited 28 January 2020 at 7:59PM
    trisontana wrote: »
    I have just had a fairly civilised phone conversation with [Name removed by Forum Team] . But, as usual, everyone is in the wrong but him. This includes the people on these forums, the police, Trading Standards and Computer Active.

    I first asked him about the insecure credit-card page, but he denied that it was insecure. When I pointed out to him that you can complete a transaction using random numbers he said that was impossible.

    I then asked him about people not getting phones or refunds. He said that was the fault of Barclays who stopped his merchant facility but would not let him pay back people with cheques but insisted the money went back onto the original card.

    Next question was about him having his company in Basingstoke and not Southend. This, he said was a "virtual office", whatever that is.

    I then asked him if he had a very large warehouse for all the stuff he sells. He said this is stored "in a very secure site" in Essex which was robbed last December. I then pointed out that it could't have been that secure if people were able to break into it. He says now that this warehouse is now protected by some sort of "air-pressure" system which rings an alarm when someone breaks in.

    So make of that as you will. He certainly has got the gift of the gab. How much of that you believe it's up to you.

    What you have to bear in mind is that the [Name removed by Forum Team] s are part of the British "underclass", as are , for example, Karen Matthews and her brood. The only asset his "firm" has is an old Intel 286 computer, which [Name removed by Forum Team] and his dad probably nicked from [Name removed by Forum Team] 's school after hours. When [Name removed by Forum Team] finally publishes his overdue accounts, you'll probably find that over the 12 months period he turned over less than £5,000.

    What you also have to remember is that they have absolutely no money whatsoever; however much this scum threatens to sue any of us, they couldn't even afford 10 minutes of a lawyer's time (defamation actions don't qualify for legal aid). They can't even afford to invest the £100 or so it would cost to buy a security certificate from either GeoTrust or Verisign (to go "https"), - and avoid much of the outrage in the most recent part of this thread..

    The idea that the [Name removed by Forum Team] s have the money to sign a lease on warehouse space (or would be accepted by a landlord as tenants), however small the square footage is, is beyond ludicrous.

    For those of us, like myself, who have merchant accounts, we have all experienced the odd unhappy customer who wants their money bank; card merchants don't give a damn how you refund your unhappy customer, back onto the card, by cheque or by BACS. To be honest, card merchants don't even care whether you refund them at all, but there is one thing they don't like: Chargebacks.

    The reason [Name removed by Forum Team] has not refunded his customers, is because those customers who had the wherewithall to initiate chargeback proceedings have depleted any remaining funds he might have had, and not because Barclays forbade him to issue refunds by cheque: how ridiculous is that!
  • Jane-Nicholls
    Jane-Nicholls Posts: 34 Forumite
    edited 28 January 2020 at 7:59PM
    BANK MANAGER: Here you are, sh*t for brains, here's your chequebook
    [Name removed by Forum Team] : Thank you, Mr Mainwaring, what's it for?
    BANK MANAGER: You can buy lollipops and icecreams with it, but whatever you do, never ever ever use it to refund a customer
    [Name removed by Forum Team] : Can I use it to get sexually agitated and pervert my legal mind?
    BANK MANAGER: Yes, but remember, too many sweet smelling stains and your cheques might become null and void; now off with you, laddie.
  • ryouga
    ryouga Posts: 330 Forumite
    edited 28 January 2020 at 8:02PM
    What you have to bear in mind is that the [Name removed by Forum Team] s are part of the British "underclass"/QUOTE]

    And what has that got to do with anything? I hope you arent saying the "underclass" are all criminals and uneducated are you?
  • Jane-Nicholls
    Jane-Nicholls Posts: 34 Forumite
    edited 9 May 2009 at 8:22AM
    I think "underclass" is quite apt when it comes to describing this lying scum. Who, within the normal spectrum of British society, would tell a 22 year old girl (me!) to eat her own sh*t and write that someone is coming round to my house to sort me out?
This discussion has been closed.
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 351.1K Banking & Borrowing
  • 253.2K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 453.7K Spending & Discounts
  • 244.1K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 599.2K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 177K Life & Family
  • 257.5K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
  • 37.6K Read-Only Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.