Chinese slab. How long before they start faking top tier slabs?
This auction was posted in another thread. I thought perhaps it needed it's own thread for disscusion.
What do you think? If, or should I say when, the Chinese start putting fake coins in fake PCGS or NGC slabs, what effect will it have on the hobby?
Link to Chinese slab.
What do you think? If, or should I say when, the Chinese start putting fake coins in fake PCGS or NGC slabs, what effect will it have on the hobby?
Link to Chinese slab.
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Comments
Robert A. Heinlein
Positive BST: WhiteThunder (x2), Ajaan, onefasttalon, mirabela, Wizard1, cucamongacoin, mccardguy1
Negative BST: NONE!
<< <i>Wouldn't running the Cert #'s verify if the slab and coin are authentic? >>
What's to stop them from doing cert lookups until they find one they can use with the fake coin they're trying to peddle?
<< <i>
<< <i>Wouldn't running the Cert #'s verify if the slab and coin are authentic? >>
What's to stop them from doing cert lookups until they find one they can use with the fake coin they're trying to peddle? >>
Good point. I'm sure they already though about that.
It certainly wouldn't work if the grade difference was dead obvious. Trying to pass off a AU58 coin as a PCGS MS65 wouldn't work (unless there are horrid pictures and a somewhat uneducated bidder).
Positive BST: WhiteThunder (x2), Ajaan, onefasttalon, mirabela, Wizard1, cucamongacoin, mccardguy1
Negative BST: NONE!
The name is LEE!
2000 Gallery PPI Registry Set
(From the auction in question)
Hi! Friend, now you are bidding on a beautiful silver coin. It was made of pure silver and by the antique skillful. Particular style!! It is a good stuff which can express antique handwork technique.It has high value of collecting.
<< <i>There are so many red flags in this auction, it's not even funny. >>
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>
<< <i>There are so many red flags in this auction, it's not even funny. >>
Now, how many times do you see scammers addressing their audience by saying "Hi Friend" or something similar? How many legitimate sales pitches start off in that manner? Why is it that scammers use this?
<< <i>
What do you think? If, or should I say when, the Chinese start putting fake coins in fake PCGS or NGC slabs, what effect will it have on the hobby? >>
As long as they don't put any MSG in them...
I don't know if someone started a TPG in China or not, but it would be pretty neat if they did and were really good about it.
It's kind of like the Omega $20 gold piece forger, though. Everyone breathed a sigh of relief when his mark in the eagle's claw became known. But he could just as easily begun making them without the mark.
These counterfeiters, be they Chinese or American, could already have begun putting good quality fakes in good quality fake TGP slabs.
--Severian the Lame
I mean think about it, you could scan your coin and have all the data and information about it entered directly in your own inventory automatically. If the RFID tag is embedded in the plastic it would be difficult for a person faking it to get it out to reuse. I won't say impossible though.
I would think all the bigger dealers and such would be clamboring for such a device.
At this time tracking ownership history might be impossible, but once the RFID tag chips were in use for a while such a system would become a lot more possible.
The current bar code is limited, and basically only meaningful to PCGS or the grading service that made it.
TorinoCobra71
<< <i>You know at the current costs for RFID chips, putting them in the slabs would be great, and it wouldn't add significantly to the cost either.
I mean think about it, you could scan your coin and have all the data and information about it entered directly in your own inventory automatically. If the RFID tag is embedded in the plastic it would be difficult for a person faking it to get it out to reuse. I won't say impossible though.
I would think all the bigger dealers and such would be clamboring for such a device.
At this time tracking ownership history might be impossible, but once the RFID tag chips were in use for a while such a system would become a lot more possible.
The current bar code is limited, and basically only meaningful to PCGS or the grading service that made it. >>
Yeah, and if you carried a slab with an RFID chip, if I had a reader powerful enough I could read exactly what you had in your pockets or unprotected cases and detect exactly what you were carrying with you .... maybe a thief would try to detect any RFID signature (without caring what it was) and tazer you and go through your pockets. I guess you could sell them with lead sleeves or something.
You could detect what's in safe deposit boxes that way too I guess...
<< <i>I asked one of my associates who is Chinese as to what it said and she said it reads as "Beijing Old money recognition center"
I don't know if someone started a TPG in China or not, but it would be pretty neat if they did and were really good about it. >>
I'd translated it "Beijing Antique Coin Appraisal Center," but I doubt it's a real TPG. I imagine it is something made up by sellers to make their counterfeits look legit.
These counterfeiters, be they Chinese or American, could already have begun putting good quality fakes in good quality fake TGP slabs.
That's why I only buy raw coins-- so I won't be taken in by fake slabs.
Obscurum per obscurius
Buying top quality Seated Dimes in Gem BU and Proof.
Buying great coins - monster eye appeal only.
As to trusting someone to translate be careful. I remember once way back when I was young, I was interested in a Japanese girl. A friend of mine, that was Japanese told me to impress her say the following. He told me some things to say and I did. He had a sense of humor and it almost got me a face slapping.
For all we know that Chinese writing may well say Stupid Americans, they'll buy anything.