I'm the judgment matchmaking expert who writes a lot. Those old-school computer privacy-related and safety guidelines all remain very good ideas: Keep track of and protect your passwords, change your passwords once in a while, back up your computer don't click on unknown links, and do not visit crazy web sites, or download or open suspicious looking file attachments coming from anyone. Some folks go a few levels more, and use software applications such as I2P or TOR, trying for increased privacy opportunities. I would bet that if any conversation, web site, or password-protected web site interests any government entity, or gets hacked; nothing is private. Are you aware that every word of all emails and conversations, is currently getting stored? Not a thing in our electronic/internet world is private. It all begins somewhere, and it goes to your screen. As middleman, are companies and/or government entities that save everything transmitted in emails, blogs, forums, text messages, private messages, faxes, telephone calls, voicemails, and every other form of digital communication. I wouldn't be surprised if the government can see right through "secure" TOR and I2P sessions. Starting sometime in September of this year, the National Security Agency (NSA)'s data center in Utah, will be running. The center will probably cost taxpayers about 2 billion, and its purpose is to capture, decipher, store, and analyze; vast swaths of our world's communications when they travel through satellites, and underground or undersea cables of worldwide and domestic networks. Running into the routers and servers at NSA and then saved in almost unlimited database storage, will be every kind of communication. This will include the entire contents of personal e-mails, cell telephone calls, and web search results, along with all sorts of private parking receipts, data trails, bookstore purchases, travel itineraries, etc. That is going to become close to the "total information awareness" program started at the time of the first term of the Bush administration. This program had been stopped by Congress, in 2003; after it started an outrage because of its potential for invading Americans' privacy. The new NSA server network is described at: http://nsa.gov1.info/utah-data-center/index.html. The storage capacity of the new NSA Utah Data Center is measured in "yottabytes". A yottabyte is a thousand zettabytes, or 1,000,000,000,000,000 gigabytes. A zettabyte is a thousand exabytes. A petabyte has a thousand terabytes. An exabyte has a thousand petabytes. A terabyte has a thousand gigabytes. Certain folks will try anything to try to preserve their privacy online. Some internet stores selling privacy-related items, try to take precautions to help keep their customer's info more secure. Some host their web servers in Iceland, which has very strict privacy laws. The FBI once traveled to Iceland on a fishing expedition, trying to investigate WikiLeaks, and was ordered to leave the country. Certain vendors do not take orders over the internet, and shred their customer's information and shipping labels, after all orders are mailed. Mark D. Shapiro of: http://www.JudgmentBuy.com - The easiest and fastest free method of finding the best expert to recover or buy your judgment.
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