London. Home of Buckingham Palace, double decker buses and an e-mail sent from Covington's Kelly Ronning telling her friends that someone had stole her cash while vacationing in the English capital.. "It was saying, I myself was stranded in London and was mugged and needed money and to please send it," she said. London has Big Ben, that e-mail we'll call the Big Lie. See, someone had hacked into Kelly's Hotmail account and used her address book in the hope her friends would fish out $2,400 and send the chips to them. "I wanted to get in there and get access to my account, delete it or whatever I needed to do to get the hacker out," Kelly said, but she couldn't. It seems the hacker changed all of Kelly's passwords and personal information. The other problem, she just sent an e-mail with her tax return attached to get her kids a college scholarship. The link for this article located at King5 News is no longer available. . Blocked in Berlin, an intruder mimics Jake, siphoning off his savings. Discover effective ways to recover your account securely.. Email Recovery, Cybersecurity Tips, Personal Account Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Someday a stranger will read your e-mail, rummage through your instant messages without your permission or scan the Web sites you. Who would watch you without your permission? It might be a spouse, a girlfriend, a marketing company, a boss, a cop or a criminal. Whoever it is, they will see you in a way you never intended to be seen The link for this article located at MSNBC is no longer available. . Apprehension mounts as diverse parties encroach upon individual confidentiality without approval, ranging from partners to offenders.. Personal Privacy, Surveillance Risks, Digital Threats, Cybersecurity Awareness. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The legislation began as an effort to protect people like Amy Boyer, a New Hampshire woman who was slain by a man who tracked her down after buying her Social Security number on the Internet.In May, Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.) proposed . . . . The legislation began as an effort to protect people like Amy Boyer, a New Hampshire woman who was slain by a man who tracked her down after buying her Social Security number on the Internet.In May, Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.) proposed a law to sharply limit the sale of the identifying numbers, which often serve as hooks for electronic dossiers about the whereabouts, credit histories and lifestyles of millions of Americans. The link for this article located at Washington Post is no longer available. . The legislation began as an effort to protect people like Amy Boyer, a New Hampshire woman who was s. legislation, began, effort, protect, people, boyer, hampshire, woman. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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