Showing posts with label fake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fake. Show all posts

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Russian Republics and more ... 01 A Siberian Federal District - Touva 3 bis

I know this post has little to do with real stamp collecting, but I can't deny it's a funny cinderella.

The altered picture of 11 construction workers is an iconic photograph, taken by Charles C. Ebbets during construction of the GE Building at Rockefeller Center in 1932.
The photograph depicts 11 men eating lunch, seated on a girder with their feet dangling hundreds of feet above the New York City streets. Ebbets took the photo on September 29, 1932, and it appeared in the New York Herald Tribune in its Sunday photo supplement on October 2.

Picture by Charles C. Ebbets (1932)

This (altered) picture can be found on posters, T-shirts, mugs, place mats ...
And also on two so-called Tuva stamp sheets.

The two sheets are completely bogus, but nevertheless always fun looking at.
To serve equal rights, both male and female version of the sheet.

Tuva private issue - female workers
Tuva private issue - male workers
Do you recognise all 'famous' people depicted?

NOT to be continued :-)


Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Russian Republics and more ... 01 A Siberian Federal District - Touva 3

The Philatelic Period after 1995

What happened after 1995 ?

A lot of so called 'private issues' has been printed and are available on various 'stamp' sites.
The term 'private issue' is just another way to say : 'illegal issues', 'fake issues' or simply 'cinderellas'.

Just to complete the article on Tuvan stamps, I'm posting this sheet with the most adorable Teletubbies, issued in 1998.
We see, in order of appearance :  Dipsy, Laa-la, Po and Tinky Winky.

Cinderella issue of Tuva 1998

Among those issues, famous persons, wildlife, scouting, WWF, ... and other popular themes can be found.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Microstates : 18c MMM (fake)

MMM : More of Mister Mavrodi

I never tought I could write that much about 'fake' banknotes. But since I got my first Mavrodi banknote-look-a-like, I searched for more.

In my previous post, I posted all notes belonging to the first series.
Now I show you the second series.

After the first success of the biletov-notes (the notes actually represented parts of MMM shares), and the huge profits that seemed to be paid out to the first share holders, a new set was printed.
Now, the Pravda newspaper didn't mention 'biletovs' anymore in their reports, but called the vouchers 'shares'.

Again 100 biletov represented one share of the elaborating MMM company.

The 'notes' in the second set are not as uniform as those in the first set.
There are 4 notes known, but there might be more.
The first 'note' in this series came in 2 versions.

two 1 bilet 'notes' with a blue and a grey face of Mavrodi
back of the 1 bilet 'note' second version slightly darker
The higher denominations :
100, 1000 and 10000 biletov - front
100, 1000 and 10000 biletov -back
The security marks in this second set are less complicated then the first series.
(Maybe there was no time to make a 'decent' note at that time).


1. embedded fluorescent fibres in all notes
2. the 1-, 100- and 1000 notes carry a halo of fluorescent ink around the serial number
    the 10,000 note has a serial number that fluoresces green when submitted to ultra-violet light.
3. micro text
4. fluorescent MMM logo
5. decoration on the sides can not be felt (on the first series, this border is rough)

to be continued

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Microstates : 18b MMM (fake)

The Mavrodi investment system was based on shares. Like there are billions of shares on the stockmarket.
Those shares represented a certain part of the company.

Shares were devided into 100 parts, and each part, one-hundredth of an MMM share was called a 'ticket'.
The russian word for 'ticket' is bilet, and two or more are called 'biletov'.
The price of the shares was published in the russian newspaper 'Pravda'
The last advertised price for the original issue of biletov in Pravda was on 28 July 1994, when Mavrodi was trying to sustain the value of his shares. The MMM advertisement stated the day’s price for the biletov as 1,340 rubles (sell) and 1,250 rubles (buy), while projecting the price for 2 August to be 1,500 rubles (sell) and 1,350 rubles (buy).

This were the values of the first round, first series of biletov 'notes' who were issued in july 1994.

The 1 set has 7 banknote-like ‘notes’ going from one bilet to 1000 biletov (one-hundredth of an MMM share to 10 MMM shares).

1st series (1994)
1, 10 and 20 bilet(ov)
back of a 10 biletov, similar to 1 and 20
50, 100 and 500 biletov
back of a 500 biletov (similar to 50, 100 and 1000)
1000 biletov (10 MMM shares)
Although they aren't banknotes, some security features can be found on the notes :

1. embedded fluorescent fibres (1 and 10, 50 and 100 biletov)
2. micro-printing is used on all notes, repeating ‘MMMBILETOV’ in Russian


3. a yellow MMM logo appears to the right on the front of the note when the note is submitted to ultra-violet light. (1 to 100 biletov)


4. MMM logo turns pink under a UV light (500 and 1000 biletov)
5. serial number turns green under UV light (50, 100, 500 and 1000) as well as the prefix (500 and 1000)


6. gold, bronze and silver (50 to 1000 biletov)

to be continued...

Microstates : 18a MMM (fake)

Banknote collectors have encountered some banknotes that they can't always localise.
This goes for the MMM-notes of Sergi Mavrodi.
MMM-logo
MMM stands for : Sergei Mavrodi, his brother Vyacheslav Mavrodi, and Olga Melnikova.
Sergei Mavrodi
It all started around 1989, when the MMM's started a company that imported computers and office equipment. However, they were accused of tax evasion. He needed funds to finance his operations and switched to the financial sector. At first he was not successful at all.
Until  1994, when he created a 'succesful' Ponzi scheme.

A Ponzi scheme is a faudulent investment operation that pays returns to its investors from their own money or the money paid by subsequent investors, rather than from any actual profit earned by the individual or organization running the operation. It was named after Charles Ponzi a a jewish-Italian business man who used the technique for the first time on big scale in the 1920's in the United States.
 
Charles Ponzi after his arrestation
Ponzi however didn't invent it, since Charles Dickens's 1857 novel Little Dorrit already described such a scheme. Ponzi's operation took in so much money, that it became know throughout the States as the Ponzi's scheme.

In fact, it is quite similar to a pyramid game or pyramid scheme. Although there are differences.
In a pyramid scheme, one has to find a number of people who want to join the scheme.
Imagine you have to find 6 participants.
Each of them have to give you something, one Euro, one Dollar, one token ...
So in your first action, you will get 6 Euro. Now the 6 people who are new in the game, have to search each of them 6 new people. They will give each of them 1 token, so the second generation will receive each 6 tokens, although the only invested 1 token to the 1st generation.
The second generation now has to look each of them for 6 new people... this involves already 216 people.

So far, not much 'damage' is done...
Imagine now that you don't get paid by the 'generation' that you generate, but you only get paid after 5, 6, 7, ... generations. The new generation pays the top person in the pyramid and take him off the list, so everyone moves up one generation.
Briefly said, if the scheme holds on for 5 generation, you'll get 7,776 tokens; if you are paid after 6 generations, you'll receive 46,656 tokes. Not bad for a 1 token investment.
However .... this involes already 46656 + 7776 + 1296 + 216 + 36 + 6 = 55980 people!
By the time the 6th generation has reached level one ... (and start to receive the tokens), already 2 billion 'new' people are needed and over 2,6 billion people are involved.


Chain letters are also an example of piramid schemes.

A ponzi scheme is slightly different.
As in the pyramid scheme you have to look for 'successors' yourself, the revenue is depending on the succes of the newly added participants.
In a ponzi scheme, you get a fixed percentage of profit and the "owner" is adding investors to the system.
As a small investor, you get a high profit, without having to do anything yourself.

If a pyramid game becomes 'impossible', a ponzi scheme in fact is just a rip-off.
Investors get paid with the investments of new contributors. Or with their own invested money.

MMM created its successful Ponzi scheme in 1994

They promised hughe profits to all investors within a short period of time. Profit rates of 1000% per month.
This led to an enormous rush to the MMM-banks who accepted the russian rubles in exchange for the MMM-shares (notes). At a certain moment, the company was taking in over 100 billion rubles A DAY !
(50 million USD). The cashflow was that enormous that money was no longer counted as money, but in 'rooms': 1 room of money, 2 rooms of money, ...

1 room of money ...
On July 22, 1994, the police closed the offices of MMM for tax evasion. For a few days the company attempted to continue the scheme, but soon ceased operations. At that point, Invest-Consulting, one of the company's subsidiaries, owed more than 50 billion rubles in taxes (USD 26 million), and MMM itself owed between 100 billion and 3 trillion rubles to the investors (from USD 50 million to USD 1.5 billion). In the aftermath at least 50 investors, having lost all of their money, committed suicide.

In August 1994 Mavrodi was arrested for tax evasion. However, he was soon elected to the Russian State Duma, with the support of the "deceived investors". He argued that the government, not MMM, was responsible for people losing their money, and promised to initiate a pay-back program. The amount ultimately paid back was minuscule compared to the amount owed.
In October 1995, the Duma cancelled Mavrodi's right to immunity as a deputy. In 1996, he tried to run for Russia's presidency, but most of the signatures he received were rejected. MMM declared bankruptcy on September 22, 1997.

He was placed under police custody in 2003, then was convicted of holding a fake passport and sentenced to 13 months in prison. While in custody he was also investigated over tax evasion and fraud charges that came to light in 1994 and 1995. Mavrodi tried to delay sentencing announcement of his criminal case. Court hearings on the fraud charges began in March 2006. On April 28, 2007, the Moscow court sentenced Mavrodi to four and a half years in a penal colony. The court also fined Mavrodi 10,000 rubles ($390).On May 22, 2007, Mavrodi left prison, serving full sentence.

In 2008 a similar fraude by a ponzi scheme was used by Bernard Madoff in the United States.
B. Madoff
In 2011 Mavrodi is back in business, having ideas for new MMM-investments, in Russia and Ukraine.

to be continued...

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Collecting : My collection 01 g

In my search, to make a complete (?) list of all countries, territories, and states, ... that have issued stamps, I came up so far with 375 different entries, plus about 50 for UN and European themed issues.
However, there are many items in my books that are bogus, not recognised, only partially recognised, pure fantasy stamps, cinderellas, and so on.
Unfortunatly, the list of those "countries" is way longer then the real countries.
In most collections however, those 'fakes' are present, but luckily only as a minority.
However, collecting (or better 'keeping') those cinderellas, can be fun too. Especially to see what moves people to print and emit stamps.
Some were made just for fantasy only, some were made in order to draw the attention to their battle for independency, some are political inspired, to protest against a gouvernment, some are really intended to be sold as 'real' and to mislead buyers and collectors, some are intended to harm official postal services (as being emitted privatly, but with the same layout as the real stamps)...

In fact 'bogus' or 'fake' stamps are in a way interesting as well.
I have noticed that previous entries on bogus stamps are quite well visited, so why not give my list of those all...
(all means : all I found so far)

How this list is built :
I started to number this category with (0)8
second number is given to each different existing country the issue is related to.
(0)801.. = AI (Anguilla)
(0)802.. = AO (Angola)
(0)803.. = AQ (Antartic Region)
the last 2 numbers refer to each different emission of that 'region'

Quite a list, right?
Didn't expect it would be that long, right?

(0)86702 (ZA -South Africa) is the last country with bogus issues in the list,
from ZB (0)89101 on, we're really talking about fantasy items, labels, private issues and so on.
so the story goes on ...

Mark, the list might not be complete, for example, "East Timor" has been recognised recently.
However, there are many bogus issues emitted under the name of "East Timor", sames goes for a certain number of Russian states, who aren't recognised yet, or only by some countries. (or like East-Timor, who has non-official issues, before they became recognised (O'zbekistan, ...)
What about Libya, who has an 'old' and a 'new' regime... will there be 2 kinds of stamps in the future...
This might be a never ending list.

Help is welcome ;-)
All help if possible with a link to a website or a copy of the stamp (see my address)