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Spammers
Beware! |
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Scatter Creek InfoNet Subscriber |
Spammers
Beware! - First U.S. Felony Conviction For Spam Law Violation
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Last
month's conviction in Leesburg, Virginia, of a 30-year-old Raleigh,
North Carolina, man and his sister was the first ever felony conviction
for violation of anti-spam laws in the United States. The jury found
Jeremy Jaynes and his sister, Jessica DeGroot, guilty on three felony
charges and recommended a nine-year prison sentence for Jaynes.
The recent nine-day trial shed light on the Jaynes' operation. Using
many aliases, including Jeremy James and Gaven Stubberfield, Jaynes
sent out at least ten million e-mail messages a day using sixteen high
speed Internet lines. Despite making money on only one in every 30,000
or so e-mail messages, the business raked in up to $750,000 per month.
Although Jaynes constantly tweaked and rotated his bogus product
offerings, the trial centered around software, work-at-home, and
pornography scams. Prosecutors alleged that Jaynes amassed a fortune of
twenty-four million dollars through his scam/spam operation.
So how do you keep from getting scammed by spammers? Here are two
common sense tips that will protect you:
If you receive an e-mail from someone you don't know, don't open the
e-mail message. Simply delete it. Opening the message may validate to
the spammer that your e-mail account is "active" which then only
encourages the spammer to send you even more spam e-mail messages.
Spammers can't stay in business if nobody buys from them. NEVER
purchase a product from or give a credit card number to a
person/company that you first heard about through a spam e-mail
message. The chances are very high that the company operates a scam
operation.
Seasons
Greetings - From Our Families To Yours
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Our entire organization joins in saying thank you for your business and best wishes for a wonderful holiday season and a very happy new year.
Ask The Help
Desk - Are There Any Alternative Web Browsers To
Microsoft's Internet Explorer?
Question: With
all of the vulnerabilities, spyware, pop-ups, and viruses that seem to
plague Internet Explorer, are there any other programs that I can use
to browse the Internet?
Answer: Yes. There are good, free alternatives to Internet
Explorer. Netscape
7.2 and Opera 7.54 are good Mozilla-based
options that don't suffer from Internet Explorer's vulnerabilities.
However, an alternative that has many people talking right now is a Web
browser called FireFox 1.0. This is another browser based on Mozilla
software. The updated release was made available just last month. It's
a free download at http://www.getfirefox.com/. Over
eight million people already use FireFox. Plus, it works on both PCs
and Macs.
Some of the features within FireFox 1.0 include pop-up blocking,
privacy tools to combat spyware, and "tab browsing" which allows you to
click on tabs instead of opening new windows for each web page. FireFox
is also purported to be noticeably faster than Internet Explorer. For
more information, including downloading instructions, go to http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/.
Great Sites To
Check Out This Month
Take A
Virtual Tour Of America's Largest Home
http://www.biltmore.com/ -
In 1895, George Vanderbilt completed the construction of and celebrated
Christmas with his family in his new home. He called his new 250-room
chateau, which sat on 125,000 acres, the Biltmore Estate. The home
included 34 bedrooms, 43 bathrooms, and 65 fireplaces. The Biltmore is
still America's largest home totaling 175,000 square feet -- that's
four acres of floor space. It took 484 employees to run the estate in
1895. Today, more than 1,500 people work at the Biltmore. Visit this
website for information on tours, lodging at the estate's inn, or
ticket reservations to the Candlelight Christmas Evenings taking place
at the Biltmore during the holidays. If you can't work the Biltmore
into your busy holiday schedule, take a virtual tour by typing "virtual
tour" into the site's search tool.
The History Of Toys And Games
http://historychannel.com/exhibits/toys/ -
Games and toys have been around since early civilization. The
Babylonians were playing a board game in 4000 B.C. that was probably an
ancestor of chess and checkers. Marbles were first used in Egypt around
3000 B.C. Kites appeared in China in 1000 B.C. Playing cards were first
used in Asia in 969 and roller skates were invented in 1759. To learn
more about games, toys, and their inventors, check out this interesting
site.
Answers To Your Turkey Cooking Questions
http://butterball.com/en/index.jsp -
If you're looking for a new turkey recipe this holiday season or
cooking your first-ever bird this month, this site is for you.
Butterball, the number one selling brand of turkey in North America,
has what it calls its "Butterball Turkey Talk-Line." The Turkey
Talk-Line consists of more than 50 specialists including dieticians,
nutritionists, and home economists who give expert advice on thawing,
cooking, carving, and even making leftovers. You can speak directly to
a Turkey Talk-Line representative during business hours or e-mail your
question anytime and receive a personalized response within 48 hours.
Cassini-Huygens Spacecraft Nears Saturn's Largest Moon
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/home/index.cfm -
The Cassini-Huygens spacecraft's plunge into Saturn's outer orbit last
summer resulted in brilliant photos of the planet's mysterious rings.
The images were at least five times better than those from the 1980-81
Voyager missions that flew past Saturn. This month the Cassini Orbiter
detaches and sends the European Space Agency's Huygens probe to Titan
-- the largest of Saturn's 31 known moons. (Titan is almost a planet in
its own right at a size larger than Mercury.) After a 22-day decent,
the Huygens probe will parachute into Titan's atmosphere. Check out
this site for daily updates and amazing photography.
Start Training For The 2005 Ironman Triathlon World Championships
http://vnews.ironmanlive.com/ -
It's only ten more months until the Ironman Triathlon World
Championships in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii (October 15, 2005). This site
provides a listing of qualifying races, lots of training tips, bios on
triathletes, and recent race results from across the globe. Qualifying
for this championship race gets more difficult every year so the
organizers also select an additional 200 race participants via a
lottery system. Applications are due February 28, 2005. Remember, it's
a 2.4-mile ocean swim, 112-mile bike race and a 26.2-mile run -- so get
busy training today!
Short Tutorial - Reducing
The File Size Of Digital Photos Before E-mailing Them
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Have you
ever taken a digital photo at high resolution for printing purposes
only to find out that the image was then too big to send by e-mail?
That's happened to most of us. During this holiday season, many people
are going to be sending photos as e-mail attachments. Many of them will
be too large and may jam the inboxes of intended e-mail recipients.
There are, however, some simple steps you can take to insure your
photos are easy to open by your intended recipients.
Since most Windows-based programs include Microsoft Paint as a standard
program, many people use it to adjust the size of photos before
e-mailing the images. To find Microsoft Paint, click your cursor arrow
on the START menu at the lower left side of your screen and click on
"All Programs." Through subsequent menus and submenus, locate
"Accessories" and then "Paint." Click your cursor arrow on "Paint" to
open the program. Here's how to reduce the size of a picture:
Additional Notes:
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We hope
you found this newsletter to be informative. It's our way of keeping
you posted on the happenings at our shop. If, however, you'd prefer not
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Thanks for your business!
Best regards,
All
of Us at Scatter Creek InfoNet
©2004
Cornerstone Publishing Group Inc.
Trademarks: All brand names and product names used in this eNewsletter
are trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of
their respective owners.