Despite three reminders, no body bothered, worse, they kept on asking the same information I have provided already.
I was annoyed and wanted to tell them that the conversations are being recorded,and instead using them to find faults with the Girls who makes calls(TeleCallers), the Organisation might listen to it for understanding the customer.
I ended up saying,
‘ ‘I know the conversation is being recorded. Instead of trying to find fault with the Call Girls,one might attend to understand the Customers!”
MOM’s understanding of Text.Farting?See you dead!Drugs?Orifice?Boobs?Perspiration?Poop or Pop?Dick, Nick or Flick?
Tom Cruise recalled this teenage days when he recollected that he was asked to leave a Seminary for stealing Alcohol.
Read On.
Tom Cruise
Recalling how he sneaked into a room with the alcohol was stashed and threw it down to Tom, the actor’s school friend Shane Dempler said: “I tossed about six, most broke, but we managed to get a couple and hide them in the nearby woods.
“The priests didn’t even realize until some of the other boys found out about our plan and snuck into the woods and got drunk. They were caught staggering down the road to the seminary and forced to confess.
“The school wrote a letter to our parents saying they liked us both, but would prefer if we didn’t return. So we weren’t kicked out, just preferred not to go.”
Shane – who studied alongside the 50-year-old star between 1976 and 1977 – says he and his pal were “really interested” in the priesthood, but feels they were too young to have made a serious decision about their careers.
“We went to Mass, spent time in the chapel and enjoyed hearing stories from the priests. We thought the priests had a great lifestyle and we were really interested in priesthood.
“In truth. we were too young to make that decision.”
And at the school, Tom showed early signs of his acting talent.
But, last week, the New Hampshire House of Representatives voted 222-128 to give Sullivan more time to write an amendment that begins a study of the issue.
Now you can sleep peacefully.
Story:
State Rep. Peter Sullivan has introduced legislation to allow the executor of an estate control over the social networking pages of the dead. Last week, the New Hampshire House of Representatives voted 222-128 to give Sullivan more time to write an amendment that begins a study of the issue.
The bill proposed by Sullivan, a Democrat from Manchester, would allow control of someone’s Facebook, Twitter, and other accounts such as Gmail to be passed to the executor of their estate after death.
According to Sullivan, passage of his bill would bridge a gap in policies of social media sites regarding posthumous users. He said his bill would protect residents who have suffered loss.
“This would give the families a sense of closure, a sense of peace. It would help prevent this form ofbullying that continues even after someone dies and nobody is really harmed by it.”
‘Nobody knows exactly when the 39-year-old, who went by the online moniker “Dare Dellcan,” took his life. Nobody knows why the normally cheery creative director anddesign company owner did it. And for the first couple of days, few people besides the police officers who found his body on July 16 knew he was dead.
The day after the discovery, a message appeared on Dowdell’s Facebook wall.
“I am a friend of Anthony’s. I wish I could call you all to inform you personally and this is probably a crappy way to find this out but our dear friend Anthony aka Ant aka Dare Dellcan has passed away. It is confirmed. I live around the corner and I have spoken with authorities this evening … I am only sharing this because if I was Anthony’s friend, I would want to know too. And I know that Anthony had friends all over the place.”
I received a message from my brother’s son yesterday.
“Please be careful: some hackers have found something new. They take
your profile picture and your name and create a new FB account. Then
they ask your friends to add them. Your friends think it is you, so
they accept. From that moment on they can say and post whatever they
want under your name. Please don’t accept a second friendship demand
from me, I have only one account. Copy this on your wall to keep
others informed”
I noted and bang came an email today from Facebook.
Image via CrunchBase
I scanned it.
Watch it.
Result.
Compared to in the past, when email was the key method for spreading viruses, our Virus Lab research shows that more than 80% of malware now spreads via the internet. More notably, only 1% comes from suspicious or ‘dodgy’ sites – the rest spreads via legitimate websites that have been hacked.
Yes, that was close, but relax…
avast! Free Antivirus is the minimum protection anyone should have against viruses and spyware. If you spend a lot of time online, however, you are naturally exposing yourself to greater threat. Fortunately, you can increase your security by adding more defensive layers.
The glasses are equipped with a near-infrared light source, which confuses the software without affecting vision.
Law enforcers, shops and social networks are increasingly using facial-recognition software.
Prof Isao Echizen said: “As a result of developments in facial recognition technology in Google images, Facebook et cetera and the popularisation of portable terminals that append photos with photographic information [geotags]… essential measures for preventing the invasion of privacy caused by photographs taken in secret and unintentional capture in camera images is now required.”
The near-infrared light “appends noise to photographed images without affecting human visibility,” he said.
Shop mannequins
Prof Echizen said the glasses, which connect to a pocket power supply, would be reasonably priced, but there are some simpler alternatives.
Heavy make-up or a mask will also work, as will tilting your head at a 15-degree angle, which fools the software into thinking you do not have a face, according to an online guide produced by hacktivist group Anonymous.
In September, following a review by Ireland’s data protection commissioner, Facebook suspended its facial-recognition tool that suggested when users in Europe could be tagged in photographs.
In November, it emerged some shop mannequins were collecting data on shoppers using facial-recognition software.
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