Can i sell stars




















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Create an Ad. Help Center. Your progress on this course. What Are Facebook Stars? Get Started With Facebook Stars. How to Add a Stars Goal. Going Live With Facebook Stars. This lesson will prepare you to: Understand the Stars program. Know how payments are received and disbursed. Articulate the benefits of Stars for content creators and their fans. Something Went Wrong.

Learn more. But at least you do not risk getting sick by paying for a star name, only losing money. A: It will be likely unique in that company's name list.

Otherwise you can probably sue them. But there are more than enough stars for everybody who wants to buy the name of one. However, no countries, authorities, or scientists in the world will recognize "your" name for the star. Nothing prevents your or any other dealer from selling "your" star to anyone else. A: Sorry, also not: The name you paid for can be ignored, forgotten, or sold again to anyone else by anyone at any time. Q: But the company says their name list is registered with the National Library - isn't that a guarantee for authenticity?

A: Sorry again: Anyone can in fact usually must send a copy of any published book to the National Library. Giving the book a number doesn't mean that the Library approves the contents or checks that no companies "sell" the same star to different people. A: Try to contact your lawyers. Chances are that they will either laugh their heads off or politely suggest that you could invest their fees more productively Q: But what about the companies that sell pieces of territory on the Moon and other planets?

Those are within reach, we know, so surely I own the piece that I have bought? A: See the answer to the previous question. As a minimum, we suggest that you defer payment until you can take possession of your property A: Sorry, much as we would like to, we are not under the illusion that the IAU can eradicate charlatanry: It has survived and thrived for countless centuries in many disguises - some far more dangerous than this particular example.

All we can do is warn the public and try to prevent the abuse of our name and scientific reputation to mislead well-meaning customers. Q: All this sounds negative and grouchy. What can I do? A: Lots! Go to your nearest planetarium or local amateur or professional observatory. They are staffed with people who feel just the same. They often have stores with books with wonderful astronomy pictures from the ground or from space, or fine astronomy magazines that all make great gifts.

They can also direct you to the local astronomy club or society where enthusiasts will be happy to show you and your friend! Maybe you'll get infected and end up buying a telescope yourself?

This allows you to browse through many hundreds of millions of stars on your home computer and print out a chart of any one that pleases you. These public digital maps are in fact the main database of at least some of the commercial star naming enterprises and cost about the same as the name of a single star.

So why pay a markup for buying your stars one at a time? Robert Naeye, editor of Mercury Magazine, a publication of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific , puts it in no uncertain terms: "The star names sold by the International Star Registry are not recognized by any professional astronomical organization.

The International Astronomical Union is the only scientific body authorized to name astronomical bodies. In other words, typing "Forever Tom" into the Hipparcos star data catalog will get you nothing but a The International Star Registry is not in the business of officially assigning star names; it is in the business of finding people willing to part with their money for a piece of paper that in a scientific sense means precisely nothing.

We may have planted a seed with people, educated them even slightly about astronomy, about the stars," said Rocky Mosele, vice president of marketing and advertising for ISR. I'm sure of it. I know because customers call again and again and again. Yet a significant number of people believe that the naming of a star is an official activity. Is ISR's star-naming business therefore a scam? No, not legally. The company promises to send you a piece of parchment, a booklet and a star map -- and it delivers.



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