Erase My Background by Name Shield.com (elon musk reading list txt) 📖
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hacker, they can see every single thing you've done on that computer and they don't even have to know much about technology to accomplish such a feat. By simply using one of many common software applications available online, almost anyone can retrace every computer move you've ever made.
First, does your PC have an anti-spyware program installed? Does it have the latest updates and pattern files? Spyware (malware) are much worse than virus, their goal is to steal your personal information and take advantage of you. Make sure you have installed a good anti-spyware software program. A spyware can steal sensitive information stored on your PC or hijack your Internet activities.
Second, have you joined any social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, Myspace or other social networks? You may have the public know too much information about you. These days, people are spending more and more time on tweaking Facebook or tweeting Twitter. People are updating their status and checking friends' tweets constantly. That's all well and good if you have time to spend, of course, on the flip side, the amount of personal information you share in real time with others, and the level of trust implicit with the social networking sites, do pose particular personal security and privacy problems.
According to a recent investigation conducted by the Wall Street Journal, "tens of millions" of applications on Facebook transmit varying amounts of personal identifying information to their own ad servers, even in cases when users' profiles were set to completely private.
Have you posted personal information you don't want public to see on your personal profile? Make sure you have provided your private information as little as possible on your personal profile at these social networks. To checkout your profile, logout your account and check it as a regular visitor or another user. Some social networking websites DO expose and disclose your email address, name, and location information to the public by default. Very often, your personal information was published to Internet unintentionally.
In a recent study from security firm Sophos, they found that Facebook users reveal more than adequate personal information to new friends, including ones they really don't even know or have never met in the past. Using fake profiles, Sophos sent out friend requests to 100 random Facebook users, more than 40 percent users blindly accepted the requests, giving the company access to their birth dates, e-mail addresses, phone number and addresses-- quite private information you don't want strangers to know.
The openness of Twitter--anyone can follow anyone else, and posts are indexed in search engines--makes it a nirvana for spammers and privacy intruders. You probable heard someone was tweeting from the start of vacation and during the vacation - telling the world include the theft where he is about, by the time the family got back from vacation, guess what happened? Not quite smart to tell your personal information on Tweeter.
Third, some websites use techniques to trick users to register their personal information.. Some users want to save a few dollars and provided their personal information. They don't aware these information in turn were sold by data brokers at hundreds of dollars. These data brokers sell the same information to hundreds of people search databases. Save a few dollars could cost you hundreds of dollars later. Removing personal information from hundreds of Internet databases is not an easy task.
In a recent news reported by CNN, one of the popular social websites - Classmates.com is selling your credit card numbers and personal information to other credit card companies and businesses without telling you. You should not give any personal or financial information to classmates.com, for these have enrolled to classmates.com and paid their premium services, you should be aware what personal information you have given out to them.
Are these personal information obtained legally?
Several years back, only organizations could access to your personal information were federal government agencies, police departments, and licensed private investigators. Thanks for Internet and newly passed laws such as Open Public Records Act or Public Records Act from different states, databases such court records, county property records, state records are open to public to search online. People search databases obtained your data from OVER 20,000 publicly available government records and commercial data sources, the information obtained is from legal sources. As a result, anyone can investigate and locate private information LEGALLY on anyone - potential job applicants, newl dates, neighbors, relatives, celebrities, coworkers, friends, and of course, on yourself too.
How to Remove Information from State and City Records?
Varies depends on the state and city rules and polices on personal records
Interestingly enough, most sensitive personal information can be found from online public records in various states and counties.
How to remove information from public records in the states and counties? Some states and counties would allow you to remove/block some personal records from showing in the public through legal process.
In most cases, it would require a court order to stop showing your private information from state or county public records.
I have collected all necessary information on how to remove your sensitive personal data from each state. Because this report is growing bigger as more information is added, I have to dedicate a separate lens. It is very lengthy, each state treats the situation differently, I've to list all 50 states.
Meanwhile for more information on state records, please read:
(1) Report from NASS.ORG, it contains very detailed information on how the states put public records on the Internet, and they have proposals to the state on how to protect sensitive information.
(2) Open Government Guide - it contain information on every state's open records and open meetings laws. Each state's section is arranged according to a standard outline, making it easy to compare laws in various states.
Tips for Protecting Your Personal Information from FTC and Others Sources
Protect your privacy and protect your personal information - from the government and reliable sources.
FTC Privacy: Tips for Protecting Your Personal Information
From FTC.GOV - the FTC website has an excellent article on how to protect your personal information. This is a substract from the FTC article:
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) encourages you to make sure your transactions - online and off - are secure and your personal information is protected. The FTC offers these tips below to help you manage your personal information wisely on Internet, and to help minimize its misuse by others.From FTC:
(1) When you are buying online, before you reveal any personally identifying information, find out how it will be used and whether it will be shared with others. Ask about company's privacy policy - this is very important - how to use of your information and are they kept the information confidential?
(2) Read the privacy policy on any website directed to children. Websites directed to children or that knowingly collect information from kids under 13 must post a notice of their information collection practices.
(3) Put passwords on your all your accounts, including your credit card account, and your bank and phone accounts. Avoid using easily available information - like your mother's maiden name, your birth date, the last four digits of your SSN or your phone number - or obvious choices, like a series of consecutive numbers or your hometown football team.(3) Minimize the identification information and the number of cards you carry to what you'll actually need. Don't put all your identifying information in one holder in your purse, briefcase or backpack.
(4) Keep items with personal information in a safe place. When you discard receipts, copies of credit applications, insurance forms, physician statements, bank checks and statements, expired charge cards, credit offers you get in the mail and mailing labels from magazines, tear or shred them. That will help thwart any identity thief who may pick through your trash or recycling bins to capture your personal information.
(5) Consider ordering a copy of your credit report from each of the three major credit reporting agencies (CRAs) every year. Make sure it's accurate and includes only those activities you've authorized. CRAs can't charge you more than $9.00 for a copy and in some states, your credit report is free.
(6) Use a secure browser when shopping online to guard the security of your transactions. When submitting your purchase information, look for the "lock" icon on the browser's status bar to be sure your information is secure during transmission.
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First, does your PC have an anti-spyware program installed? Does it have the latest updates and pattern files? Spyware (malware) are much worse than virus, their goal is to steal your personal information and take advantage of you. Make sure you have installed a good anti-spyware software program. A spyware can steal sensitive information stored on your PC or hijack your Internet activities.
Second, have you joined any social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, Myspace or other social networks? You may have the public know too much information about you. These days, people are spending more and more time on tweaking Facebook or tweeting Twitter. People are updating their status and checking friends' tweets constantly. That's all well and good if you have time to spend, of course, on the flip side, the amount of personal information you share in real time with others, and the level of trust implicit with the social networking sites, do pose particular personal security and privacy problems.
According to a recent investigation conducted by the Wall Street Journal, "tens of millions" of applications on Facebook transmit varying amounts of personal identifying information to their own ad servers, even in cases when users' profiles were set to completely private.
Have you posted personal information you don't want public to see on your personal profile? Make sure you have provided your private information as little as possible on your personal profile at these social networks. To checkout your profile, logout your account and check it as a regular visitor or another user. Some social networking websites DO expose and disclose your email address, name, and location information to the public by default. Very often, your personal information was published to Internet unintentionally.
In a recent study from security firm Sophos, they found that Facebook users reveal more than adequate personal information to new friends, including ones they really don't even know or have never met in the past. Using fake profiles, Sophos sent out friend requests to 100 random Facebook users, more than 40 percent users blindly accepted the requests, giving the company access to their birth dates, e-mail addresses, phone number and addresses-- quite private information you don't want strangers to know.
The openness of Twitter--anyone can follow anyone else, and posts are indexed in search engines--makes it a nirvana for spammers and privacy intruders. You probable heard someone was tweeting from the start of vacation and during the vacation - telling the world include the theft where he is about, by the time the family got back from vacation, guess what happened? Not quite smart to tell your personal information on Tweeter.
Third, some websites use techniques to trick users to register their personal information.. Some users want to save a few dollars and provided their personal information. They don't aware these information in turn were sold by data brokers at hundreds of dollars. These data brokers sell the same information to hundreds of people search databases. Save a few dollars could cost you hundreds of dollars later. Removing personal information from hundreds of Internet databases is not an easy task.
In a recent news reported by CNN, one of the popular social websites - Classmates.com is selling your credit card numbers and personal information to other credit card companies and businesses without telling you. You should not give any personal or financial information to classmates.com, for these have enrolled to classmates.com and paid their premium services, you should be aware what personal information you have given out to them.
Are these personal information obtained legally?
Several years back, only organizations could access to your personal information were federal government agencies, police departments, and licensed private investigators. Thanks for Internet and newly passed laws such as Open Public Records Act or Public Records Act from different states, databases such court records, county property records, state records are open to public to search online. People search databases obtained your data from OVER 20,000 publicly available government records and commercial data sources, the information obtained is from legal sources. As a result, anyone can investigate and locate private information LEGALLY on anyone - potential job applicants, newl dates, neighbors, relatives, celebrities, coworkers, friends, and of course, on yourself too.
How to Remove Information from State and City Records?
Varies depends on the state and city rules and polices on personal records
Interestingly enough, most sensitive personal information can be found from online public records in various states and counties.
How to remove information from public records in the states and counties? Some states and counties would allow you to remove/block some personal records from showing in the public through legal process.
In most cases, it would require a court order to stop showing your private information from state or county public records.
I have collected all necessary information on how to remove your sensitive personal data from each state. Because this report is growing bigger as more information is added, I have to dedicate a separate lens. It is very lengthy, each state treats the situation differently, I've to list all 50 states.
Meanwhile for more information on state records, please read:
(1) Report from NASS.ORG, it contains very detailed information on how the states put public records on the Internet, and they have proposals to the state on how to protect sensitive information.
(2) Open Government Guide - it contain information on every state's open records and open meetings laws. Each state's section is arranged according to a standard outline, making it easy to compare laws in various states.
Tips for Protecting Your Personal Information from FTC and Others Sources
Protect your privacy and protect your personal information - from the government and reliable sources.
FTC Privacy: Tips for Protecting Your Personal Information
From FTC.GOV - the FTC website has an excellent article on how to protect your personal information. This is a substract from the FTC article:
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) encourages you to make sure your transactions - online and off - are secure and your personal information is protected. The FTC offers these tips below to help you manage your personal information wisely on Internet, and to help minimize its misuse by others.From FTC:
(1) When you are buying online, before you reveal any personally identifying information, find out how it will be used and whether it will be shared with others. Ask about company's privacy policy - this is very important - how to use of your information and are they kept the information confidential?
(2) Read the privacy policy on any website directed to children. Websites directed to children or that knowingly collect information from kids under 13 must post a notice of their information collection practices.
(3) Put passwords on your all your accounts, including your credit card account, and your bank and phone accounts. Avoid using easily available information - like your mother's maiden name, your birth date, the last four digits of your SSN or your phone number - or obvious choices, like a series of consecutive numbers or your hometown football team.(3) Minimize the identification information and the number of cards you carry to what you'll actually need. Don't put all your identifying information in one holder in your purse, briefcase or backpack.
(4) Keep items with personal information in a safe place. When you discard receipts, copies of credit applications, insurance forms, physician statements, bank checks and statements, expired charge cards, credit offers you get in the mail and mailing labels from magazines, tear or shred them. That will help thwart any identity thief who may pick through your trash or recycling bins to capture your personal information.
(5) Consider ordering a copy of your credit report from each of the three major credit reporting agencies (CRAs) every year. Make sure it's accurate and includes only those activities you've authorized. CRAs can't charge you more than $9.00 for a copy and in some states, your credit report is free.
(6) Use a secure browser when shopping online to guard the security of your transactions. When submitting your purchase information, look for the "lock" icon on the browser's status bar to be sure your information is secure during transmission.
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Publication Date: 09-15-2011
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