| Anonymizer Anonymous Surfing
Note: This download includes the entire Anonymizer Safe Surfing Suite, which consists of Anonymous Surfing, Anti-Spyware, Nyms, and Digital Shredder Lite. You can activate the trial for one or all the included applications. At the end of the trial period, pay for only the parts you wish to keep. --Preston Gralla .
New Cymphonix Network Composer Version 7 Released
Network Composer Version 7, a smart network appliance, solves the problems when users, applications, and threats fight for network resources. Version 7 includes network monitoring tools for groups. This allows organizations to enforce policy while keeping their network fast. The Anonymous proxy guard prevents users from surfing the internet anonymously with programs like Torpark. Sandy, UT (PRWEB) October 4, 2006 -- Responding to small-to-medium-sized business' (SMB) need for network performance and speed, Cymphonix announces Network Composer Version 7. Network Composer provides computer and network security by giving companies control and visibility of their internet connection. Network Composer surpasses other web filtering devices by adding advanced features and functionality.
Anonymous Browsing, Offshore Banking and Money Laundering Myths ...
New Web site Power Privacy offers insight into the latest challenges facing financial and personal privacy-seekers today. Houston, TX (PRWEB) May 3, 2006 –- A new Web site guides subscribers through the latest technologies and techniques to keep a low profile on the Internet and in one's financial holdings. Members of Power Privacy (www.powerprivacy.com) learn the little-known limitations of anonymous Web surfing, anonymous e-mail, anonymous proxy, remailers and encryption, and why privacy seekers can no longer rely on these technologies. Other new approaches are recommended. Innovative directions are given for setting up maildrops without fake ID, and for PayPal verification in any name. Likewise, the site details the #1 mistake people make that compromises their identity when setting up supposedly anonymous offshore holdings, and why complicated offshore structures rarely assure complete anonymity.
How to keep prying eyes away from your Web browser, e-mail, and IM.
Nearly a decade ago, Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy snapped out a warning to the worriers of the Internet Age: "You don't have any privacy. Get over it." McNealy's words look more prescient every year. In 2006, AOL unwittingly divulged the personal lives of 650,000 customers by publishing their search histories as research data. Despite AOL's attempts to anonymize the info, the New York Times quickly outed a 62-year-old lady in Georgia whose searches revealed her dog was wetting the upholstery. The Justice Department has subpoenaed Google, Yahoo!, MSN, and AOL for lists of search queries. More recently, Facebook employees were caught reading the customer logs. With more people putting more of their personal lives online every day, there's a huge potential market for the Web's privacy pushers.
Giuliani vote wager comes up snake eyes
My White House of Cards is crumbling before my eyes. I thought I had stealthily snapped up a bargain early on in my investing in the Iowa Electronic Markets, a presidential futures market that works like a stock market. Rudy Giuliani banked on skipping the early contests and emerging strongly in a crowded field coming out of Florida. I banked he was right, to the tune of 564 shares. The headline in this newspaper on Wednesday: "FLA. PROPELS McCAIN." Oh, and this one, too: "Giuliani expected to drop out." Whoops. So this is what it feels like to buy into a company's hype, only to sell in a fury when you learn that hype was hollow. At least I found a willing buyer for my entire Giuliani stake - at a juicy two-tenths of a cent per share.
A handmade home
To wash, one goes across the property to the bathhouse, where the solar-heated shower is a length of chopped hose but the windows are stained glass. A small plot with a low fence and a tin roof serves as the outhouse and smells fresher than most New York City restrooms. If a woman wishes to urinate, she finds an AstroTurf-free plot of ground and does so watchfully, given what happened to the dog. After the tour, Livant sits down in the Hippodome's kitchen, her daughter perched behind her on the free-form counter, and tells her story. She was 45 years old, married and living in Westport, Connecticut, when Kahn came into her life. Her husband was a psychologist named Saul Ader; there were two children, Wendy and Peter. They lived in an 18th-century house and owned a Volvo and a Saab.
|