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<strong><center><a href="http://www.faeotoadala.us/3643/174/380/1411/2938.10tt62883642AAF1.php"><H3>Cordless outdoor motion sensor light</a></H3></strong>
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                                <a href="http://www.faeotoadala.us/3643/174/380/1411/2938.10tt62883642AAF2.php">Light Angel — The Motion Activated Stick Up LED Light</a>
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<center>This email was intended for abel-tasman@coredump.buug.de
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ast thousands of devotees in
an open-topped vehicle, a plan that would put the thousands of police
and soldiers dispatched to protect the pope on high alert and require
more plainclothes security.Brazil's justice and defense ministers, along
with a top army commander, urged the pope to use an armored
popemobile instead, but the Vatican has responded that Francis likes to
jump in and out of his vehicle to greet the faithful, which
wouldn't be possible in the more protected vehicle."The bulletproofing would
lessen our worries, it'd be better if he had it," said Gen.
Jose Abreu, the top officer overseeing the military's role in the security
scheme. "It's a personal choice and we'll respect it, but it's not
remotely pleasant for security forces."On the top of everyone's minds are
the massive and sometimes violent anti-government protests that swept this
continent-sized country last month. They've continued, albeit with fewer
people, less than a week before Francis' arrival Monday.Last week, a small
protest in Leblon, one of Rio's poshest neighborhoods, erupted into looting
and destruction, with demonstrators smashing storefronts, defacing street
signs and setting piles of garbage on fire.A handful of protests are
planned. If violence breaks out near the pope, the world may once
again see images of demonstrators enveloped by clouds of tear gas, stun
grenades ricocheting off stately buildings and rubber bullets whizzing through
the air.Jose
APAn obscure little State Department agency whose work is called "critical
to the Department's information security posture" has been in a shambles
for years, and is still in chaos, according to an audit report
by the department's inspector general released yesterday.As one result of
all the bumbling and inaction, the security checks that the agency is
supposed to perform and subsequent approvals for use that it is supposed
to bestow every three years on 36 of those State Department systems
have lapsed entirely, meaning that they are operating, in effect, illegally.Some
of the lapses have gone on for two years; in at least
a couple of cases involving information systems that the audit calls "primary
general support systems," the lapses have gone on since 2007.One of the
systems that is operating without a current license, known as iPost, was
given an award two years ago for "significantly improving the effectiveness
of the nation's cyber security." According to the inspector general's report,
auditors couldn't find any documentation to back up how the award-winning
system was created or maintained, nor any source code for the information
it was supposed to track.There is more -- much more -- concerning
the 22-person agency, known as the Office of Information Assurance of the
State Department's Bureau of Information Resource Management (IRM/IA), which
among other things certifies the security status of more than 170 information
systems i
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