Monday, June 6, 2011
Blogging is Dying
But wait, people still write them and read them! Yes, Virgina that is true. Some do. But of the past 6 blogs I have read by syndicated or semi-professional writers, 4 of them were not actually well thought out articles of pith or merit, they were a paragraph and a link to a video, not even one of their own - so they do not qualify as Vblogs. So for all you entrepreneurs looking to get rich of your blogs, for all of you branding experts that say nothing new or of interest but just bandy around the buzz word of the day and rehash another blogger's words. For those of you who have muddied the waters of coherent thought, new ideas and opinion with your me too or empty prose to get public attention - you can stop now.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Professional Editing
At a friend's request I started the Dresden series by Jim Butcher. I recommend it and am addicted However I could not help but notice that the editing in the paperback editions at least is atrocious. There are typos, misspellings, and just poor sentence structure all over. Is this the result of poor editing, of leaving it all to word processors or poor typesetting; if that is is even done anymore?
Friday, May 13, 2011
Phone scams are getting out of hand
Ok if you don't not know about this one read this article. This is not the only company to do this nor is it likely to be the last. However. at this point I have to say it is time people started putting pressure on lawmakers to crack down on these scams.
Why you ask? Why should I care? I am not stupid enough to enter my cell phone number in a site like that. Most of us are not. However my daughter's phone has been hit twice by these now. We conjecture one of 2 things happened. Her number was entered by someone who knows it or someone entered her number by pure dumb luck on one of these when entering random numbers and it found its way to a list somewhere.
Either way, it stands she did not enter her number, she did not take one of the IQ tests, yet her phone was charged. There was no verification process to ensure that the number entered matched the person taking the "test".
What is the worst place for these? Facebook. Does Facebook care? No, they will take anyone's money. They do not care if their users get scammed or slammed. So, the onus is upon the victims to stop the predators once again.
First WATCH YOUR PHONE BILLS. If you get a text from a service you did not sign up for or a text saying you can now renew your subscription, find out who the company is and CALL them immediately. It may be they are a legitimate company that made a mistake. It maybe someone put in your number trying random numbers without reading the fine print, in my daughter's case one is refunding her money. That is fine and to most of us it shows they are a legitimate operation. The other says there is nothing they can do.
So for the second type of company here is the thing I suggest, start by finding out where their home offices are. If in The US contact the Better Business Bureau, the Chamber of Commerce and any other local business association. Inform them of the practices of that company. If they feel they cannot do anything, then contact their local paper, the next largest city's paper and you own city's paper - most have a consumer column of some sort. Spread the word on Facebook, MySpace, DIGG, Twitter. Contact Facebook and report the advertiser and the application. Write your state representative and your federal. If congress can waste time asking companies to explain how they could allow hackers to steal their data (As if anyone allows things to be stolen.) They can damn well spend some time asking these companies how they can justify stealing money from people based on a string of numbers not verified.
Last, NEVER enter your cellphone number on an unsecured page. Treat it like your social security, your bank account or any other important number. Do not post it anywhere, do not give it out on IRC or post it on resume online. Start asking companies online WHY they want the information they do. Tell them you are not comfortable that all transmission points are secure. Because ten to one they are not, your end may be secure, their end may be but t has to go from one place to another and with All the wireless technology today, interception may be possible. In the end you are responsible for protecting your information and therefore your money.
Why you ask? Why should I care? I am not stupid enough to enter my cell phone number in a site like that. Most of us are not. However my daughter's phone has been hit twice by these now. We conjecture one of 2 things happened. Her number was entered by someone who knows it or someone entered her number by pure dumb luck on one of these when entering random numbers and it found its way to a list somewhere.
Either way, it stands she did not enter her number, she did not take one of the IQ tests, yet her phone was charged. There was no verification process to ensure that the number entered matched the person taking the "test".
What is the worst place for these? Facebook. Does Facebook care? No, they will take anyone's money. They do not care if their users get scammed or slammed. So, the onus is upon the victims to stop the predators once again.
First WATCH YOUR PHONE BILLS. If you get a text from a service you did not sign up for or a text saying you can now renew your subscription, find out who the company is and CALL them immediately. It may be they are a legitimate company that made a mistake. It maybe someone put in your number trying random numbers without reading the fine print, in my daughter's case one is refunding her money. That is fine and to most of us it shows they are a legitimate operation. The other says there is nothing they can do.
So for the second type of company here is the thing I suggest, start by finding out where their home offices are. If in The US contact the Better Business Bureau, the Chamber of Commerce and any other local business association. Inform them of the practices of that company. If they feel they cannot do anything, then contact their local paper, the next largest city's paper and you own city's paper - most have a consumer column of some sort. Spread the word on Facebook, MySpace, DIGG, Twitter. Contact Facebook and report the advertiser and the application. Write your state representative and your federal. If congress can waste time asking companies to explain how they could allow hackers to steal their data (As if anyone allows things to be stolen.) They can damn well spend some time asking these companies how they can justify stealing money from people based on a string of numbers not verified.
Last, NEVER enter your cellphone number on an unsecured page. Treat it like your social security, your bank account or any other important number. Do not post it anywhere, do not give it out on IRC or post it on resume online. Start asking companies online WHY they want the information they do. Tell them you are not comfortable that all transmission points are secure. Because ten to one they are not, your end may be secure, their end may be but t has to go from one place to another and with All the wireless technology today, interception may be possible. In the end you are responsible for protecting your information and therefore your money.
Labels:
cell phones,
Facebook,
identity theft.,
IQ test scam,
security
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