#Sale Gold For Cash
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Sell your silver for cash
Sell your silver for cash that you wanna sell however unfit to sell at the best cost since you don't have the bill? Presently, don't stress since we here at Cashfor gold & silverkings Pvt.Ltd. will purchase your adornments thing and gives you the best arrangements for it accessible on the lookout. Our gold ,silver and diamond purchasing shop is ideal to sell jewelry without bill in Delhi NCR. For more useful data give a call to us at 9999821702 / 22
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augmontgold · 5 months ago
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Top Gold Buyers in India - Sell Gold for Cash Online at Augmont
Augmont offers the best platform to sell gold for cash online. We provide the highest old gold selling price today and the best old gold sale rate today. Trust Augmont, leading gold buyers in India, to give you the best value per gram for your gold jewellery.
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goldbuyersimgtop · 8 months ago
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Cash For Gold- img gold buyers
At IMG Gold Buyers, we offer a hassle-free solution for turning your gold into instant cash. With our reliable and transparent process, we ensure that you get the best value for your gold assets without any complications.
Our branches are conveniently located across cities like Hyderabad, Calicut, and Bangalore, making it easy for you to access our services wherever you are. Whether you're in the heart of the city or the outskirts, our dedicated team is always ready to assist you.
Transparency is at the core of our operations at IMG Gold Buyers. Our expert appraisers carefully evaluate your gold items, ensuring that you receive fair and competitive prices. We believe in providing clear and honest assessments, giving you the confidence to make informed decisions about selling your gold.
Once the appraisal is complete, we offer instant cash payments for your gold, providing you with immediate access to the value of your assets. Customer satisfaction is our top priority, and we strive to provide personalized service and support to ensure a positive and stress-free experience for you.
Choose IMG Gold Buyers for a trusted and reliable cash-for-gold service. With our transparent appraisal process, competitive offers, and prompt payments, we make it easy for you to unlock the value of your gold assets with confidence and convenience. Visit us today and discover the IMG Gold Buyers difference.
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rizanbullion · 8 months ago
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Sell your old gold for cash in Dubai, turning unused treasures into immediate financial opportunities. Experience a seamless process and fair returns for your precious metals.
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sellandbuygold · 9 months ago
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Rizan Jewellery is the leading certified gold dealers in Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi, delivering Best Price and Service to sell your Gold for Cash in UAE.
Visit www.sellandbuygold.me
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alyssamonah · 1 year ago
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Ensuring Business Security with Commercial Safes: A Must-Have Investment
Protecting valuable assets, sensitive documents, and cash reserves is paramount in today's rapidly evolving business landscape. Commercial safes provide a robust solution to safeguarding businesses against theft, fire, and unauthorized access. This blog explores the significance of commercial safes and the key factors to consider when choosing the right one for your organization. 
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1. Importance of Commercial Safes: 
In an era where digital security threats are on the rise, it's easy to overlook the physical security of your business. However, commercial safes offer a critical defense against theft and unauthorized entry. They safeguard your cash, important documents, data backups, and valuable assets, ensuring their protection in case of burglary or disasters like fires or floods. Investing in a reliable commercial safe can minimize financial losses, maintain confidentiality, and demonstrate a commitment to safeguarding your organization's integrity.
2. Types of Commercial Safes:
Commercial safes come in various types, each designed to meet specific security requirements. Some popular options include fire-resistant, burglary-resistant, depository, and cash management safes. Fire-resistant safes protect against fire and heat damage, while burglary-resistant safes offer reinforced security against break-ins. Depository safes are ideal for businesses that handle frequent cash transactions, allowing secure deposits without compromising security. Cash management safes provide an efficient way to manage cash flow, with features like bill validators and automated tracking. Understanding the unique characteristics of each type enables businesses to choose the right safe that aligns with their security needs.
3. Factors to Consider when Choosing a Commercial Safe
 When selecting a commercial safe, several factors need careful consideration. First, evaluate the size and capacity required to accommodate your business's assets, cash reserves, and important documents. Next, consider the level of security needed based on your location, industry, and threat landscape. Look for safes with reliable locking mechanisms, solid construction, and certifications from reputable organizations such as Underwriters Laboratories.
Additionally, assess the safe's resistance to fire, water, and impact. Fire-resistant safes should adhere to industry standards, offering a specific level of fire protection. Water and impact resistance are equally crucial to prevent damage during unforeseen events.
Ease of use is another essential factor. The safe should provide convenient access for authorized personnel while ensuring stringent security measures for unauthorized individuals. Electronic locks, biometric scanners, or combination locks offer varying levels of convenience and security.
Finally, consider the safe's installation requirements and location. Choose a secure spot within your premises and evaluate whether the safe needs additional bolting or anchoring.
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Conclusion
 Commercial safes are a crucial investment in ensuring the security and protection of businesses. By understanding the significance of cash safes gold coast and considering critical factors like types, security features, capacity, and ease of use, organizations can make informed decisions that safeguard their valuable assets, preserve confidentiality, and instill trust among stakeholders.
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priyankakollection · 1 year ago
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north-shore-pawn-shop · 2 years ago
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🏜 NORTH SHORE PAWN SHOP 140B Lonsdale Ave In between 1st and 2nd Street North Vancouver, BC V7M-2E8 604-990-8214 Mon CLOSED Tues 10:00am to 5:00pm Wed 10:00am to 5:00pm Thurs 10:00am to 5:00pm Fri 10:00am to 5:00pm Sat 10:00am to 5:00pm Sun CLOSED #gold #diamond #pawnshop #ring #necklace #earrings #necklace #chain #jewelry #Sterling #sale #firstnations #westcoast #coast #indianartgallery #indigenous #Indian #coastsalish #art #cash #money #deals #mens #watch #loan #handcarved #local #localbusiness #game #musical #tool (at North Shore Pawn Shop) https://www.instagram.com/p/Co0CjDlvlLE/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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jwellerybuyers · 2 years ago
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gold buyers in bangalore
IMG gold buyers is the best professional Gold Buyers in Bangalore and providing the best services for your gold. IMG gold buyers is a licenced and trusted buyer of gold in Bangalore. Please contact us https://www.imggoldbuyers.com/
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Cash for your jewelry in Delhi
Are you based in the Delhi NCR region and looking for a quick and easy way to obtain cash for your jewelry? If so, you can go to one of the greatest gold buyers in the area. Goldbucks Enterprises Private Limited is our company's name. We assist you in getting the best price for your gold in Dwarka. Not only that, but we also provide home pick-up services so that you can sell gold from the comfort of your own home.
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crgoldexchange · 6 days ago
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https://www.classifiedads.com/financial_services/bfw8kz9xt3dc5
If you want to sale your gold you are at right site, and you can get here instant cash by sale your Gold, Silver and Diamonds.
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akscashforgold · 2 years ago
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foldingfittedsheets · 6 months ago
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Delighted by my morning errand! My nana has… some hoarding issues. A year or so ago my mom and I tried to go in and help her clear stuff out. I was listing piles of stuff for sale for her, she made a ton of cash off it.
But my mom was so rude and judgemental during the process that my nana called it off and told us to stop coming. Most of the stuff we excavated from her garage is still sitting out in her carport.
One of the pieces that didn’t sell was this absolutely stunning old Singer sewing machine. It came in its own table and was in absolutely pristine condition. The machine itself is black with gold accents, really sleek and beautiful.
I mentioned it offhandedly during a one shot to a friend and he asked if I had pictures. I did, and when I showed him he asked what I listed it for.
I shrugged, “I asked 200 for it. It’s in great condition and besides being an antique those things never break. All the same machines on eBay were going for $400-500. But it was too pricey I guess.”
There was a little break in conversation and I saw the wheels turning in his head. “Do you want it?”
“200?”
“My nana will be thrilled, let me set up a pickup.”
So today we met there and he looked it over. It’s just as pretty as I remembered and when we plugged it in it hummed happily along. He was glowing with delight and my nana was thrilled to be making some cash.
I hope he adores it, but I’m mostly just happy it’s going on to be used rather than sitting unloved in her mountains of tchotchkes.
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mostlysignssomeportents · 10 months ago
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Sympathy for the spammer
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Catch me in Miami! I'll be at Books and Books in Coral Gables on Jan 22 at 8PM.
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In any scam, any con, any hustle, the big winners are the people who supply the scammers – not the scammers themselves. The kids selling dope on the corner are making less than minimum wage, while the respectable crime-bosses who own the labs clean up. Desperate "retail investors" who buy shitcoins from Superbowl ads get skinned, while the MBA bros who issue the coins make millions (in real dollars, not crypto).
It's ever been thus. The California gold rush was a con, and nearly everyone who went west went broke. Famously, the only reliable way to cash out on the gold rush was to sell "picks and shovels" to the credulous, doomed and desperate. That's how Leland Stanford made his fortune, which he funneled into eugenics programs (and founding a university):
https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/malcolm-harris/palo-alto/9780316592031/
That means that the people who try to con you are almost always getting conned themselves. Think of Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) scams. My forthcoming novel The Bezzle opens with a baroque and improbable fast-food Ponzi in the town of Avalon on the island of Catalina, founded by the chicle monopolist William Wrigley Jr:
http://thebezzle.org
Wrigley found fast food declasse and banned it from the island, a rule that persists to this day. In The Bezzle, the forensic detective Martin Hench uncovers The Fry Guys, an MLM that flash-freezes contraband burgers and fries smuggled on-island from the mainland and sells them to islanders though an "affiliate marketing" scheme that is really about recruiting other affiliate markets to sell under you. As with every MLM, the value of the burgers and fries sold is dwarfed by the gigantic edifice of finance fraud built around it, with "points" being bought and sold for real cash, which is snaffled up and sucked out of the island by a greedy mainlander who is behind the scheme.
A "bezzle" is John Kenneth Galbraith's term for "the magic interval when a confidence trickster knows he has the money he has appropriated but the victim does not yet understand that he has lost it." In every scam, there's a period where everyone feels richer – but only the scammers are actually cleaning up. The wealth of the marks is illusory, but the longer the scammer can preserve the illusion, the more real money the marks will pump into the system.
MLMs are particularly ugly, because they target people who are shut out of economic opportunity – women, people of color, working people. These people necessarily rely on social ties for survival, looking after each others' kids, loaning each other money they can't afford, sharing what little they have when others have nothing.
It's this social cohesion that MLMs weaponize. Crypto "entrepreneurs" are encouraged to suck in their friends and family by telling them that they're "building Black wealth." Working women are exhorted to suck in their bffs by appealing to their sisterhood and the chance for "women to lift each other up."
The "sales people" trying to get you to buy crypto or leggings or supplements are engaged in predatory conduct that will make you financially and socially worse off, wrecking their communities' finances and shattering the mutual aid survival networks they rely on. But they're not getting rich on this – they're also being scammed:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4686468
This really hit home for me in the mid-2000s, when I was still editing Boing Boing. We had a submission form where our readers could submit links for us to look at for inclusion on the blog, and it was overwhelmed by spam. We'd add all kinds of antispam to it, and still, we'd get floods of hundreds or even thousands of spam submissions to it.
One night, I was lying in my bed in London and watching these spams roll in. They were all for small businesses in the rustbelt, handyman services, lawn-care, odd jobs, that kind of thing. They were 10 million miles from the kind of thing we'd ever post about on Boing Boing. They were coming in so thickly that I literally couldn't finish downloading my email – the POP session was dropping before I could get all the mail in the spool. I had to ssh into my mail server and delete them by hand. It was maddening.
Frustrated and furious, I started calling the phone numbers associated with these small businesses, demanding an explanation. I assumed that they'd hired some kind of sleazy marketing service and I wanted to know who it was so I could give them a piece of my mind.
But what I discovered when I got through was much weirder. These people had all been laid off from factories that were shuttering due to globalization. As part of their termination packages, their bosses had offered them "retraining" via "courses" in founding their own businesses.
The "courses" were the precursors to the current era's rise-and-grind hustle-culture scams (again, the only people getting rich from that stuff are the people selling the courses – the "students" finish the course poorer). They promised these laid-off workers, who'd given their lives to their former employers before being discarded, that they just needed to pull themselves up by their own boostraps:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/10/declaration-of-interdependence/#solidarity-forever
After all, we had the internet now! There were so many new opportunities to be your own boss! The course came with a dreadful build-your-own-website service, complete with an overpriced domain sales portal, and a single form for submitting your new business to "thousands of search engines."
This was nearly 20 years ago, but even then, there was really only one search engine that mattered: Google. The "thousands of search engines" the scammers promised to submit these desperate peoples' websites to were just submission forms for directories, indexes, blogs, and mailing lists. The number of directories, indexes, blogs and mailing lists that would publish their submissions was either "zero" or "nearly zero." There was certainly no possibility that anyone at Boing Boing would ever press the wrong key and accidentally write a 500-word blog post about a leaf-raking service in a collapsing deindustrialized exurb in Kentucky or Ohio.
The people who were drowning me in spam weren't the scammers – they were the scammees.
But that's only half the story. Years later, I discovered how our submission form was getting included in this get-rich-quick's mass-submission system. It was a MLM! Coders in the former Soviet Union were getting work via darknet websites that promised them relative pittances for every submission form they reverse-engineered and submitted. The smart coders didn't crack the forms directly – they recruited other, less business-savvy coders to do that for them, and then often as not, ripped them off.
The scam economy runs on this kind of indirection, where scammees are turned into scammers, who flood useful and productive and nice spaces with useless dross that doesn't even make them any money. Take the submission queue at Clarkesworld, the great online science fiction magazine, which famously had to close after it was flooded with thousands of junk submission "written" by LLMs:
https://www.npr.org/2023/02/24/1159286436/ai-chatbot-chatgpt-magazine-clarkesworld-artificial-intelligence
There was a zero percent chance that Neil Clarke would accidentally accept one of these submissions. They were uniformly terrible. The people submitting these "stories" weren't frustrated sf writers who'd discovered a "life hack" that let them turn out more brilliant prose at scale.
They were scammers who'd been scammed into thinking that AIs were the key to a life of passive income, a 4-Hour Work-Week powered by an AI-based self-licking ice-cream cone:
https://pod.link/1651876897/episode/995c8a778ede17d2d7cff393e5203157
This is absolutely classic passive-income brainworms thinking. "I have a bot that can turn out plausible sentences. I will locate places where sentences can be exchanged for money, aim my bot at it, sit back, and count my winnings." It's MBA logic on meth: find a thing people pay for, then, without bothering to understand why they pay for that thing, find a way to generate something like it at scale and bombard them with it.
Con artists start by conning themselves, with the idea that "you can't con an honest man." But the factor that predicts whether someone is connable isn't their honesty – it's their desperation. The kid selling drugs on the corner, the mom desperately DMing her high-school friends to sell them leggings, the cousin who insists that you get in on their shitcoin – they're all doing it because the system is rigged against them, and getting worse every day.
These people reason – correctly – that all the people getting really rich are scamming. If Amazon can make $38b/year selling "ads" that push worse products that cost more to the top of their search results, why should the mere fact that an "opportunity" is obviously predatory and fraudulent disqualify it?
https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/29/aethelred-the-unready/#not-one-penny-for-tribute
The quest for passive income is really the quest for a "greater fool," the economist's term for the person who relieves you of the useless crap you just overpaid for. It rots the mind, atomizes communities, shatters solidarity and breeds cynicism:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/24/passive-income/#swiss-cheese-security
The rise and rise of botshit cannot be separated from this phenomenon. The botshit in our search-results, our social media feeds, and our in-boxes isn't making money for the enshittifiers who send it – rather, they are being hustled by someone who's selling them the "picks and shovels" for the AI gold rush:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/03/botshit-generative-ai-imminent-threat-democracy
That's the true cost of all the automation-driven unemployment criti-hype: while we're nowhere near a place where bots can steal your job, we're certainly at the point where your boss can be suckered into firing you and replacing you with a bot that fails at doing your job:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/11/robots-stole-my-jerb/#computer-says-no
The manic "entrepreneurs" who've been stampeded into panic by the (correct) perception that the economy is a game of musical chairs where the number of chairs is decreasing at breakneck speed are easy marks for the Leland Stanfords of AI, who are creating generational wealth for themselves by promising that their bots will automate away all the tedious work that goes into creating value. Expect a lot more Amazon Marketplace products called "I'm sorry, I cannot fulfil this request as it goes against OpenAI use policy":
https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/12/24036156/openai-policy-amazon-ai-listings
No one's going to buy these products, but the AI picks-and-shovels people will still reap a fortune from the attempt. And because history repeats itself, these newly minted billionaires are continuing Leland Stanford's love affair with eugenics:
https://www.truthdig.com/dig-series/eugenics/
The fact that AI spam doesn't pay is important to the fortunes of AI companies. Most high-value AI applications are very risk-intolerant (self-driving cars, radiology analysis, etc). An AI tool might help a human perform these tasks more accurately – by warning them of things that they've missed – but that's not how AI will turn a profit. There's no market for AI that makes your workers cost more but makes them better at their jobs:
https://locusmag.com/2023/12/commentary-cory-doctorow-what-kind-of-bubble-is-ai/
Plenty of people think that spam might be the elusive high-value, low-risk AI application. But that's just not true. The point of AI spam is to get clicks from people who are looking for better content. It's SEO. No one reads 2000 words of algorithm-pleasing LLM garbage over an omelette recipe and then subscribes to that site's feed.
And the omelette recipe generates pennies for the spammer that posted it. They are doing massive volume in order to make those pennies into dollars. You don't make money by posting one spam. If every spammer had to pay the actual recovery costs (energy, chillers, capital amortization, wages) for their query, every AI spam would lose (lots of) money.
Hustle culture and passive income are about turning other peoples' dollars into your dimes. It is a negative-sum activity, a net drain on society. Behind every seemingly successful "passive income" is a con artist who's getting rich by promising – but not delivering – that elusive passive income, and then blaming the victims for not hustling hard enough:
https://www.ftc.gov/business-guidance/blog/2023/12/blueprint-trouble
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I'm Kickstarting the audiobook for The Bezzle, the sequel to Red Team Blues, narrated by @wilwheaton! You can pre-order the audiobook and ebook, DRM free, as well as the hardcover, signed or unsigned. There's also bundles with Red Team Blues in ebook, audio or paperback.
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/15/passive-income-brainworms/#four-hour-work-week
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Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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treedaddymcpuffpuff · 1 month ago
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Can I get something about "Baba Jaga's Books" pwease?
indeed!!!! ❤️☺️
The sales room is nothing like you expect based on the gothic, decrepit looks of the rest of the brownstone; it’s domed in a high-reaching skylight of wintery sun, with shiny dark hardwood flooring instead of matted, once-red-now-brown carpet. A wispy spider descends through a beam of dust and sunlight, and reminds you of the woman’s delicate bony fingers tumbling from her skull. There is a large oak desk still smelling of fresh, spicy wood in the very center of the room with an updated, computerized filing system and cash register. In the middle of a far wall, next to a gaping dark corridor, is a large painting of what you assume to be a father and son.
He is tall, looming, with jet black hair that curls under his ears and satiny dark eyes that you think could mesmerize a corpse. His bones are strong and sharp under golden hues of flawless skin and neatly trimmed facial hair, and the red tie looped expertly around his collar would be the only color he sports if not for the plump, soft rose of his lips. Without thinking, you reach out to touch the intricate piece of art and jump back when you feel that familiar gritty texture under your fingertips.
Just a moment ago, you were behind the desk, with a good view of the entire room, and now you are inches away from this handsome man framed in rose gold.
You pull your fingers back and itch the lingering texture off on your blue jeans.
“He painted that.”
The voice from behind makes you jump again, now in the opposite direction, where you slam into the cold frame with the bony blade of your shoulders. You’re much too worried about the beautiful piece of sentimental decor, rather than your own sharp pain, and you turn to make sure you didn’t disturb it, horrified to find that you absolutely did, and scrambling to lift it up and hook the dangling corner back onto its wall fixture from whence it came.
A deep chuckle rumbles behind you, like warning thunder over the crest of rolling hills, and a pair of hands the size of your head gently lift the painting back onto the wall.
You turn to look up at him, and he is close, and his features are sharp and pronounced and familiar. You look back at the painting, just to make sure his likeness is still captured there, too, and did not somehow escape and form into solid matter before you.
“Hello, I’m John. Winston’s son.” He holds out his hand, and you don’t really take and shake it, but rather become enveloped it its warm, calloused sanctuary.
If his voice is thunder, his eyes are the lightning that precedes it, striking and shining despite deep pools of black. You have to look away from him, because his real time stare is far more intimidating than the painted one.
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sellandbuygold · 10 months ago
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Your gold isn't just jewelry; it's a valuable asset. Sell smart with Rizan Jewellery and discover a world of financial opportunities.
Visit at www.sellandbuygold.me
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