Sunday, March 31, 2013

5 Places Where You Should Never Give Your Social Security Number


Every time you go to a new doctor or dentist and they give you a clipboard brimming with documents to fill out and sign, notice how they always ask for your Social Security number? Do you dutifully give it up? Did you ever wonder if they really need it?
I once asked a doctor why he wanted it. His response: “I don’t really know. I guess it’s because we’ve always asked for it.” (In actuality, most doctors ask in case your insurance doesn’t pay the entire invoice and/or to fill out a death certificate if you die. Offer a next of kin who knows the number instead, and your phone number for billing issues.)
Almost every day somebody asks for your Social Security Number and, like the Grand Marshal of a parade throwing rose petals or candy to the crowd, you probably give it up without giving it a second thought — because that’s what you’ve always done.
So, the next time someone asks you for your Social Security number, reflect on this: In December, the Army announced that hackers stole the Social Security numbers of 36,000 visitors to Fort Monmouth in New Jersey, including intelligence officers. Cyber activists took control of the CIA’s website. The private information, including some Social Security numbers, of celebrities and political leaders including FBI Director Robert Mueller and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were exposed.
The sensitive data of First Lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Attorney General Eric Holder, recently were posted on a website for the world to see.
Hackers even listened in on a phone call in which the FBI and Scotland Yard were discussing the criminal investigation against those very same hackers!
And, these incidents are only the crumbs on top of the coffee cake when you consider that hackers and thieves have improperly accessed more than 600 million consumer files since 2004.
Monty Python had it right
The moral to these horror stories is that if your Social Security number is stored on any computer anywhere, hackers will find a way to access it, or a compromised or disgruntled employee may well walk out the door with it. If your doctor, gym, or child’s grade school claims otherwise, that their security systems can protect your private data better than the CIA, FBI and Scotland Yard, to quote Monty Python: “Run away!”
Your identity is your biggest asset, and your Social Security number is the key to your personal kingdom. With it an identity thief can wreak havoc, hijacking your old credit accounts, establishing new ones, buying cars and houses, committing crimes, even obtaining medical products and services while pretending to be you, endangering not just your credit and your reputation, but also your life.
Consumers whose Social Security numbers are exposed in a data breach are five times more likely to become fraud victims than those who aren’t, according to the latest identity fraud report by Javelin Strategy & Research.
Just say no
For better or worse, you are the gatekeeper. The person most responsible for shielding your Social Security Number is you. Therefore, your mission is to limit, as best you can, the universe of those who gain access to it.
Here’s a short list of companies and organizations that have absolutely no business requesting your Social Security number:
1. Anyone who calls or sends you an official-looking email, who texts you a link to any site or designates a number to call where you are asked to confirm your SSN. If they call, check the credit or debit card that is the subject of the communication, call the customer service number listed on the back, and ask for the security department. If they email or text, do the same, or go directly to the institution’s website (provided you know who they are). Make sure you type the correct URL, and make sure that the page where you are asked to enter your information is secure. Only provide personal information if you’re the one who controls the interaction.
2. Public schools: Your utility bill confirms your address. Your email and phone number give them channels to contact you in an emergency. Asking for your Social Security number is overkill.
3. Little League, summer camp and the like: For the same reasons as school, a Social Security number should never be required by these groups. If they ask for your child’s birth certificate, show it to them, don’t leave it with them unless they can prove they will protect it. And even then, can you really believe them?  If you use credit to pay for the activity, the organization may need your Social Security number. If you pay for it upfront or with a direct debit to your bank account or credit card, they don’t. Period.
4. Supermarkets: A frequent shopper card is neither a loan, nor a bank account. It’s merely a tool grocery stores use to track your purchases, primarily for marketing purposes. Regardless, many supermarket chains request customers’ Social Security numbers on their application forms. Refuse.
5. Anybody who approaches you on the street, whether it’s a cell phone company salesman offering a free T-shirt or someone running a voter registration campaign: Never, ever give your SSN. If you want an ill-fitting T-shirt festooned with corporate logos, buy one. If you want to register to vote, go to your county board of elections in person.
This is the short list. There are plenty of other organizations that should never get your Social Security number, and if you know one that I’ve left out, please leave it in the comments.
Don’t just hand it over
Once you realize how often you are asked for your Social Security number, you may be surprised. It happens literally all the time. So, the next time someone does, as they inevitably will, here’s how to handle it:
1. Take a minute and think. Maybe they ask for SSNs blindly, because everyone else does, or because that’s how they’ve always done it. Maybe they actually need it. See if their reason sounds legitimate.  (Update: For example, Credit.com’s Credit Report Card does ask for your SSN in order to generate your credit score and credit report summary — an industry standard – but the information is fully encrypted with a bank level authentication process.)
2. Negotiate. There are many different ways to identify you without a Social Security number, including your driver’s license or account number. Fight to use those instead.
3. If you must share your Social Security number, do so, but make sure the people taking it down have strong security measures in place to protect it. That said, you only have their assurance and frankly, in light of the mistakes people make and the sophistication level of hackers, who really knows if they can protect it?
Overcoming the addiction
If all this sounds like a giant pain in the neck, you’re right. It is. In the midst of our busy lives, we shouldn’t be the only ones concerned with protecting our most valuable identity asset, but it is what it is. Until somebody creates a Silver Bullet for identity theft, we are forced to take matters into our own hands.
Don’t be passive; ask the companies and nonprofit groups with which you do business how they plan to protect you. Do they password protect and encrypt all the personal information they collect? Do they have strict controls on who has access to computers containing your Social Security number, and do they keep this sensitive data off laptops, tablets and hard drives that are easy to steal or lose?
Like the doctor I met, many companies collect Social Security numbers they don’t need because they’re operating on autopilot. They’ve always done it, and their colleagues at other companies do it, so the practice continues and spreads on the strength of simple, dumb inertia. I believe that we are smarter than that. By demanding that companies do a better job protecting our personal information, and refusing to hand out our Social Security numbers like candy at a parade, we can force them to get smarter, too. And if they don’t think we’re serious about this and the government doesn’t finally force them off their Social Security number addiction, it is highly likely that the ultimate regulator of the American economic system, class action attorneys, will be knocking on their doors.

How do I find my outgoing mail server?


What is an outgoing mail server?

Your Outgoing Mail Server is what you use for sending email in programs such as Outlook and Outlook Express.
The outgoing mail server you use for uploading to SportingPulse will depend on the ISP (Internet Service Provider) you are connected to the Internet through. If you use a laptop and connect to different ISP’s, depending on your location, you will need to obtain the outgoing mail server for the ISP you are connected to at the time you are uploading.

How do I find my outgoing mail server?

The easiest way to find your outgoing mail server is to contact your ISP. Most ISP’s provide their outgoing mail server in the Help/Support sections of their Websites.
If you have a working email program installed you can obtain your outgoing mail server from there. If you use Outlook or Outlook Express the following instructions will show you how to obtain your outgoing mail server:

Outlook and Outlook Express

  1. Open Outlook or Outlook Express

    Image:SWM_-_Find_SMTP_Outlook_logo.jpgImage:SWC_-_Find_SMTP_Outlook_Logo2.jpg
  2. Go to the Tools menu

    Image:SWC_-_Find_SMTP_Tools_menu.jpg
  3. Select Accounts

    Image:SWC_-_Find_SMTP_ToolsAccounts.jpg
  4. Click on the Mail tab
  5. Select your mail account
  6. Click on Properties

    Image:SWC_-_Find_SMTP_MailAccount.jpg
  7. Click on Servers

    Image:SWC_-_Find_SMTP_Servers.jpg
  8. The server you require is in the Outgoing mail (SMTP) field

    Image:SWC_-_Find_SMTP_OutgoingMailSMTP.jpg

Outlook (XP and 2003)

  1. Open Outlook

    Image:SWC_-_Find_SMTP_Outlook_Logo2.jpg
  2. Go to the Tools menu

    Image:SWC_-_Find_SMTP(XP)_Tools.jpg
  3. Select E-Mail Accounts

    Image:SWC_-_FindSMTP(XP)_Tools_Email_Accounts.jpg
  4. Select View or change existing email accounts


  5. Click on the Next button
  6. Select an email account
  7. Click on Change


  8. The server you require is in the Outgoing mail server (SMTP) field



Common Mail Servers

This list below is in no way an up-to-date or accurate listing of outgoing mail servers, but merely a guide, which may be of assistance when trying to find your outgoing mail server. If you cannot find your mail server in this list or by looking it up in Outlook or Outlook Express, then you will need to contact your ISP to obtain your outgoing mail server.
Australia
Internet Service ProviderMail Server
Alphalinkmail.alphalink.com.au
Bigpond (Dial Up)mail.bigpond.com
Bigpond (ADSL)mail.bigpond.com
Bigpond (Cable)mail.bigpond.com
Connexusmail.connexus.net.au
Dodosmtp.dodo.com.au
Hotkeymail.hotkey.net.au
iHugsmtp.ihug.com.au
iiNetmail.m.iinet.net.au
iPrimussmtp.iprimus.com.au
Netspacesmtp.netspace.com.au
Oceanmail.ocean.com.au
Optusmail.optusnet.com.au
Ozemailsmtp.ozemail.com.au
SprintOnlinemail.sprint.net.au
Swiftel (WA)smtp.per.swiftdsl.com.au
Swiftel (NSW, VIC)smtp.swiftdsl.com.au
Swiftel (QLD)smtp.bri.swiftdsl.com.au
Swiftel (SA)smtp.ade.swiftdsl.com.au
TPGmail.tpg.com.au
TSNmail.tsn.cc
VICNETmail.vicnet.net.au
Westnetmail.westnet.com.au

New Zealand
Internet Service ProviderMail Server
Xtrasmtp.xtra.co.nz
Ihugsmtp.ihug.co.nz

Friday, March 29, 2013

Pole dancing champ talks about Olympics

Cane

Juan Mabromata/AFP/Getty ImagesAustralian Felix Cane, who has been world champ, thinks pole dancing is more art than a sport.
Now that the 2012 Olympics are over, it's time to ask the big question: Will pole dancing make the cut and be an Olympic sport in the future? That's what the International Pole Sports Federation would like. Australian Felix Cane, who was named Miss Pole Dance World 2010, wrote for Playbook about the sport's potential selection. 

I definitely believe that pole dancing can be performed to extremely high athletic standards. Certainly the elite members of the pole dance community would train and prepare for pole dancing competitions in much the same way that the Olympic athletes prepare for the Games. To perform pole at a high level, you need extreme strength, flexibility and control. Personally, I do not feel that it is a sport but rather an art much like dance. However it can be performed in a very sanitized gymnastic style, which is more about the difficulty of the tricks rather than the performance as a whole, and perhaps making it more Olympic-friendly. 





Pole dancing is a performance incorporating a pole as an outside apparatus much like you would see a gymnast do with beam or parallel bars. It has grown and evolved so much over the past decade. Unfortunately, most people incorrectly assume that pole dancing is something that only striptease artists perform in strip clubs, but there is a vast difference between pole dancers and strippers. Part of the difficulty of pole is that your apparatus is made of metal and very slick -- having fabric of any kind between your skin and the pole will cause slipping and possible injury. To have more skin available to utilize on the pole, it is performed usually in a bikini-style outfit very similar to what is worn for women's beach volleyball. It takes strength and endurance to keep your whole body weight up off the ground and great flexibly and skill to perform the transitions, flips and tricks. A lot of the feedback that I receive from people who have never seen pole dancing before is disbelief. The majority of people cannot even conceive the feats that are possible on the pole. 

I started pole dancing after my mother allowed my little sister, who was 14 years old at the time, try out a pole dancing class. I was appalled. I, like most people, thought pole dancing was for only strippers! My mom turned to me and quite nonchalantly replied, "Oh, open your mind. It's not what you think." So, after that I decided that I couldn't be out-cooled by my own mother and I enrolled in a pole dancing class. After the first lesson, I was hooked. At the eight-month mark, I won my first Australian pole dancing title. After two years, I was approached by Cirque du Soleil to work in their show "Zumanity." That same year I won my first World Pole Dancing Championship. I have since won the Australian Championships three times consecutively and the worlds twice. I was also asked to join Cirque du Soleil's"Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour," which is where I perform my pole dancing solo act now. 

It is a great honor for me to have the opportunity not only to perform my art as my career but also to have the opportunity to introduce pole dancing to hundreds of thousands of people across the globe each year. It is my belief that the best way to show the public what pole dancing really can be is simply to show them. Whether the world is ready for pole dancing to be in the Olympics in 2016, I am ever hopeful that the public will learn to shake the stigma that pole is fundamentally wrong and dirty. After starting pole dancing only six years ago, this phenomenal workout has changed my life forever and for the better. 

Funny videos


Mystery Booms, Monarchs, & Gobekli Tepe:

On Thursday's show, investigative reporter Linda Moulton Howe discussed the loud mystery booms that are persisting with intensity, the Monarch butterflies annual migration numbers declining and their possible extinction, and speculation that the function of the strange, 'alien' Gobekli Tepe excavation has to do with the recycling of souls.
 

In just five days between March 13 and March 17, 2013 hundreds of loud "bone-rattling, house-shaking" boom reports were made by residents to 911 and other local authorities in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Alabama, southern California, southern Illinois, Idaho and Kentucky. Then on the afternoon of March 19, in New Jersey's Atlantic, Cape May and Cumberland Counties, "multiple earthquake-like tremors rattled homes and offices," but USGS said there was no seismic event recorded. She spoke with Louisville, KY resident Eddie Lashley who described a March 17th event in which he experienced a sound unlike he'd ever heard before that knocked picture frames off the wall, and sent his dogs running for cover under the bed. After the incident, he received phone calls from friends as far as 50 miles away who'd also experienced the boom. Anna Hoaglan of Woodland Hills, CA talked to Linda and described an odd explosive sound like glass breaking that she hea rd at her home on March 7th, yet there was no broken glass anywhere. Linda shared an email from a retired electronics engineer who suggested that the sounds being heard are coming from the Earth itself, and reflect changes deep inside the core.
 

Since 1994, there has been a steady decline of Monach butterfly migrations, and this winter of 2012-2013, scientists reported the lowest number of monarchs in Mexico on record - only 2.9 acres. And it is Mexico where the butterflies need to lay their eggs on milkweed for their young larvae to eat before changing into Monarchs. The unthinkable is now possible: Monarch extinction. She interviewed Professor of Biology, Chip Taylor, the Founder and Director of Monarch Watch. He told her that Canada, the U. S. and Mexico have expanded GMO corn and soybean acreages filled with herbicides that kill milkweed and consequently kill the natural cycle of Monarchs. Prof. Taylor is working with other scientists to get the three nations to create milkweed sanctuaries in home backyards, city parks and national forests to save the Monarchs.
 

In a two-part report, she spoke with UK author Andrew Collins who recently published the article Gobekli Tepe: Its Cosmic Blueprint Revealed. The mysterious excavation at Gobekli Tepe, in southeast Turkey, has revealed a temple complex built some 7,000 years before Stonehenge and the Great Pyramid. Collins suggested that certain large standing stones in the complex are linked by one specific circular wall that aims at the brightest star Deneb in the Cygnus Constellation, which sits at the opening of the Dark Rift in the Milky Way Galaxy. This has provoked him to speculate that the function of the temple complex has to do with the recycling or transferring of souls. One of the startling discoveries at the site is a carving of a vulture-like bird with a wing outstretched toward a circle. Later used in Egypt, the symbol of the vulture and circle related to stripping flesh from the bones of the dead and the recycling of souls from Earth to the afterlife and back again.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Alien Spacecraft and Alien Moonbase found on the Dark Site of the Moon !




NASA`S TOP SECRET MOONMISSION - Alien Spacecraft and Alien Moonbase found on the Dark Site of the Moon !

Conspiracy vid shows 'shapeshifter alien' who guards the White House




So maybe you've seen this insane conspiracy video (which has amassed a shocking number of page views in one week) that accuses the White House of using "a shapeshifter alien humanoid working for the powers that be." Also, there are Zionists involved. Anyway, the real fun of the story came when the National Security Council was contacted. "I can't confirm the claims made in this video, but any alleged program to guard the president with aliens or robots would likely have to be scaled back or eliminated in the sequester," spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said. "I'd refer you to the Secret Service or Area 51 for more details." We're not hearing a "no." [Source]