You may recall the story of Lifelock, the company that heavily advertises its service which charges you $10/month to get services that you can get on your own for free from credit agencies.
This is the one where the CEO gives out his Social Security number in every advertisement to show how confident he is in the service.
Of course, what he leaves out is that Lifelock failed to stop identity fraud carried out against him (oops).
Oh yeah,...
Why you can't trust 'friends' on Facebook
If you're on Facebook, you've no doubt got a bunch of friends. And if you're like most Facebook users, you're certain those friends are exactly who they say they are. And you might be right....
RIAA Sued For Racketeering Yet Again
A few people have filed lawsuits against the RIAA for racketeering in the past, though these charges have always been dismissed. In one such case, where the filed charges were dismissed over...
Time To Step Up, Steve
Datamation: "What did Ballmer know and when did he know it? That's arguably the biggest question in the Microsoft "Vista Capable" class-action lawsuit being heard by a federal judge in a...
Dreamweaver CS3: The Missing Manual
Welcome to Dreamweaver CS3. This new version of the popular web design software offers a rich environment for building professional sites, with drag-and-drop simplicity, clean HTML code, and...
Plantronics Voyager 520 Bluetooth Headset (Black)
In the car, at the airport, or on the job - Plantronics Voyager? 520 delivers business quality audio performance. Noise-canceling microphone filters distracting background noise so you can be...
Post new comment