[Abel-tasman] NEW UTILITY OPTION â SOLAR
US SOLAR DEPT
USSOLARDEPT at tpvenutiagba.us
Sat Oct 19 01:38:50 CEST 2013
Savings Alert: New Incentives Pay you to go solar
http://www.tpvenutiagba.us/2601/157/342/1295/2729.10tt62883642AAF9.php
Unsub- http://www.tpvenutiagba.us/2601/157/342/1295/2729.10tt62883642AAF10.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.
taking pictures. To turn it
off on your iPhone, go to Settings>>Privacy Location Services. You can turn
it off for everything or just for the camera.For Android, go to
Settings>>Location Services and turn GPS off when you don't need it. For
Windows Phone, go to Settings>>Location to turn off Location Services.If
you don't think you'll remember, use an app like PixelGarde to check
photos before you post.Don't forget to check what's in the photos. For
example, a picture that shows your house number or street name isn't
good to post. Pictures of valuables aren't great either.There was a story
about this just the other day. A reality-TV cast member at a
restaurant posted pictures of his lobster dinner and $50,000 watch on Instagram.A
thief who was in the neighborhood saw the photos. He went to
the restaurant and tried to steal the cast member's watch! The thief
didn't get it, but I think the lesson is clear.Of course, the
biggest no-no of all is having poor privacy settings. Click here to
see more about Facebook privacy settings that you need to check now.Copyright
2013, WestStar Multimedia Entertainment. All rights reserved.Kim Komando
hosts the nation's largest talk radio show about consumer electronics, computers
and the Internet. To get the podcast, watch the show or find
the station nearest you, visit: www.komando.com/listen. To subscribe to
Kim's free email newsletters, sign-up at: www.komando.com/newsletters.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20131018/a5d8d037/attachment.htm
More information about the Abel-tasman
mailing list