June 10th, 2008 at 6:22 pm
Losing information is the most frustrating and devastating thing to lose. It can cause a business to lose money, cause families to lose valuable pictures and memories, all things that can be considered priceless. This is why it’s vital to make sure that all your data is stored in a safe place. Whether it be backed up in a safe place online, or in a fireproof safe, now there are even better options.
There’s a new hard drive by ioSafe that is specially designed to be fire and water-proof. The hard drive has special safety features that enable it to seal off in an event of a sudden fire, or flood.

June 3rd, 2008 at 4:30 pm
Are you sick of receiving ‘Return to Sender’ stamps on the mail you send out because of an address error? Well, CDYNE Web Service 2.0 provides a unique address verification service that standardizes addresses to match up with the USPS certified addresses. It’s a great service that helps prevent fraud and saves users time and money. Check out their other services useful services too at CDYNE.com.
June 3rd, 2008 at 4:30 pm
Now that you actively use the internet, is it possible to keep all your information private and secure, especially from sites like Intelius and People Finder. A subscription service called MyPrivacy launched by Fertik last fall, to help people pull their information off sites like the ones mentioned above, who are selling your information to people who most likely you don’t want find you.
MyPrivacy’s approach being finding all the sites that are invading your privacy, and hanging them out for you to see, then when possible, taking your data off their site, and out of their database.
So far, the only thing MyPrivacy has proved is that its pretty much impossible to have privacy on the internet. They have met multiple problems in their efforts, and have been stonewalled by many of the data businesses. Meaning, even with all their hard work, they have hardly made a dent in the vast amounts of personal information online.
There are about 230 of these database sites found to date, most of them having an option to “opt-out” of their site. What Fertik was trying to do was create a one stop opt-out service such as the do-not-call list, which 73% of Americans have taken advantage of. With unresponsive sites such as Intellius, WhoWhere.com, People Search, and Meta Crawler who ignore all requests, it makes it really difficult to salvage your privacy.