[Abel-tasman] Recapture The Feeling

Ashley Madison Affiliate AshleyMadisonAffiliate at wmhosingsho.us
Tue Nov 12 19:40:35 CET 2013


World's leading married dating service for discreet encounters

http://www.wmhosingsho.us/3021/167/362/1374/2817.10tt62883642AAF11.html






Unsub- http://www.wmhosingsho.us/3021/167/362/1374/2817.10tt62883642AAF12.html











This Dec. 6, 2012 photo shows Robert Hoffman, a 20-year veteran who 
retired last year as a petty officer first class, leaving U.S. District 
Court in Norfolk, Va. A federal jury convicted the former sailor of 
attempted espionage on Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013 for trying to pass secrets 
to people he believed worked for the Russian government. Hoffman faces the 
possibility of life in prison when he's sentenced in December. (AP Photo/The 
Virginian-Pilot, Steve Earley)A federal jury has convicted a former sailor 
of attempted espionage.Retired Petty Officer 1st Class Robert Hoffman faces 
the possibility of life in prison when he's sentenced in December. Hoffman 
was convicted in a Norfolk courtroom on Wednesday.Prosecutors said Hoffman 
gave classified information about tracking ships to what he believed were 
Russian spies.Hoffman spent much of his 20-year Navy career on submarines. 
After a trip to Eastern Europe in 2011, the FBI sent Hoffman 
a letter purporting to be from Russian intelligence officers asking him 
to provide "technical expertise." Hoffman made three drops in all, including 
one in which he provided information about how to track American submarines.Hoffman 
then approached the FBI in Norfolk and gave agents a diary and 
other evidence.
 you feel like. This can lead people 
to share things like what they had for breakfast. Detailed relationship 
woes are another favorite. How about the fact you're out of town 
for a while? Thieves love that one.But a recent study from the 
University of Birmingham found oversharing is more complex. It seems sharing 
too many photos - even if they're nice photos - can damage 
your real-life relationships and cost you friends.Of course, "too many" 
is relative, but there are a few guidelines. If you like to 
post "selfies," or shots featuring just you, dial it back to important 
events, like a new haircut.Also, photos of you with certain friends tend 
to turn off your friends and family who weren't there. Photos of 
immediate family and significant others, however, seem to be OK.3. Include 
too much information in photosThis is similar to oversharing, but carries 
more risk. Smartphones and some newer standalone cameras can embed GPS information 
into photos.Anyone who knows how to read this can see where your 
photos were taken. That means they can find your house, kids' school 
or other important locations.So before you upload a photo, make sure it's 
clean.In Windows you can right click a photo and choose Properties. In 
the Details tab, click the "Remove Properties and Personal Information" 
button. Mac users, and Windows users who want to clean a bunch 
of photos at once, can use a program like XnView.On a smartphone, 
you can turn off GPS when you're
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20131112/9632378c/attachment-0001.htm


More information about the Abel-tasman mailing list