The terminals at 2 of my local Kroger now require me to use chip + pin. I know they haven't rolled out to all locations (even here in Cincinnati where Kroger is headquartered) but it's coming.
Jungledisk uses the Amazon S3 cloud for storage and offers full encryption (including option for your own key for exclusive control.) The Jungledisk software (Linux/Mac/Winbloze) will mount remote bucket as a drive (or mount point) and works fine with rsync.
While the exact duties of a Notary Public vary slightly by state in the US (because you are acting as an officer of the state and regulated by state law, in my case Ohio) we generally have two responsibilities.
1) Perform signature acknowledgements (verify a document is signed by the person it says it was by requiring the personal appearance of such person with proper ID. A common example of this is real estate mortgages as you alluded. 2) Administer oaths for sworn statements (jurat/affidavit). A common example of this is sale of a vehicle where you are required to swear that the information on the ownership title is correct.
Some additional duties can include: administering the oath of office for elected officials, making certified copies of documents that are not subject to public recording, etc.
Re:That's just the company
on
SCO Loses
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· Score: 1
With that kind of credibility, now they will go to Washington DC and get a nice cushy government job.
I think it will be trivial for the typical/. reader to bypass any detection methods they employ. As for whether the MAC address is visible or not, don't some cable systems use PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE)? If so, then it would be visible and cloning or other obfuscation would be in order.
> 2. The USA (and elsewhere) will become a corporate-financed police state.
Well, we are halfway there (police state) and the corporations are making plenty of progress. It's not actually the lawyers fault, it's the US government's for getting in bed with corporate America.
The actions reported so far are a horrible tragedy, and unfortunately not the last in all probability. But a more ominous tragedy will follow soon behind, this is the end of privacy in America. We have watched Europe implement vastly sweeping regulation over encryption and other privacy technologies, now watch the US legislators jump into action over the next few weeks.
The terminals at 2 of my local Kroger now require me to use chip + pin. I know they haven't rolled out to all locations (even here in Cincinnati where Kroger is headquartered) but it's coming.
Another recommendation for Linode.
Jungledisk uses the Amazon S3 cloud for storage and offers full encryption (including option for your own key for exclusive control.) The Jungledisk software (Linux/Mac/Winbloze) will mount remote bucket as a drive (or mount point) and works fine with rsync.
www.jungledisk.com
It may be stupid, but it's not a new buzzword by any means. A quick search shows its usage on usenet as far back as 1995.
http://groups.google.com/group/soc.culture.french/browse_thread/thread/b0e16ec1a7b5ec01/bf80a2a9224524c8?lnk=st&q=netizen#bf80a2a9224524c8
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Netizen since 1991
While the exact duties of a Notary Public vary slightly by state in the US (because you are acting as an officer of the state and regulated by state law, in my case Ohio) we generally have two responsibilities.
1) Perform signature acknowledgements (verify a document is signed by the person it says it was by requiring the personal appearance of such person with proper ID. A common example of this is real estate mortgages as you alluded.
2) Administer oaths for sworn statements (jurat/affidavit). A common example of this is sale of a vehicle where you are required to swear that the information on the ownership title is correct.
Some additional duties can include: administering the oath of office for elected officials, making certified copies of documents that are not subject to public recording, etc.
With that kind of credibility, now they will go to Washington DC and get a nice cushy government job.
PPPoE Info
> 2. The USA (and elsewhere) will become a corporate-financed police state.
Well, we are halfway there (police state) and the corporations are making plenty of progress. It's not actually the lawyers fault, it's the US government's for getting in bed with corporate America.
The actions reported so far are a horrible tragedy, and unfortunately not the last in all probability. But a more ominous tragedy will follow soon behind, this is the end of privacy in America. We have watched Europe implement vastly sweeping regulation over encryption and other privacy technologies, now watch the US legislators jump into action over the next few weeks.