Tuesday, July 19, 2011

TERMS AND CONDITIONS | shawcapitalmanagementscaminfo.com : Latest Headlines


TERMS AND CONDITIONS
Disclaimer
This disclaimer contains our obligations to you regarding our blog. Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management strongly advises that you read this disclaimer in full before proceeding to use this blog. Using the Website implies that you accept the terms of this disclaimer. We do occasionally update this disclaimer so please refer back to them in the future.
1. USE OF WEBSITE
1.1       You are permitted to use our Blog for your own purposes and to print and download material from this Blog, provided that you do not modify any content without our consent. Material on this Blog must not be republished online or offline without our permission.
1.2       Subject to paragraph 1.1, no part of this Blog may be reproduced without our prior written permission.
2. VISITOR CONDUCT
2.1       With the exception of personally identifiable information, the use of which is covered under our Privacy Policyhttp://latest.shawcapitalmanagement-headlines.com/ any material you send or post to this Blog shall be considered non-proprietary and not confidential. Unless you advise to the contrary we will be free to copy, disclose, distribute, incorporate and otherwise use such material for any and all purposes.
2.2       When using this blog you shall not post or send to or from this Blog any material for which you have not obtained all necessary consents, is discriminatory, obscene, pornographic, defamatory, liable to incite racial hatred, in breach of confidentiality or privacy, which may cause annoyance or inconvenience to others, which encourages or constitutes conduct that would be deemed a criminal offence, give rise to a civil liability, or otherwise is contrary to the law;
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3.1       We take all reasonable steps to ensure that this Blog is available 24 hours every day, 365 days per year. However, websites do sometimes encounter downtime due to server and, other technical issues. Therefore we will not be liable if this blog is unavailable at any time.
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4.1       Any links to third party websites located on this Blog are provided for your convenience only.  We have not reviewed each third party website and have no responsibility for such third party websites or their content.
4.2       If you would like to link to this Blog, you may only do so on the basis that you link to, but do not replicate, any page on this Blog and you do not in any way imply that we are endorsing any services or products unless this has been specifically agreed with us.
4.3       If you choose to link to our website in breach of Paragraph 4.2 you shall fully indemnify us for any loss or damage suffered as a result of your actions.
5. EXCLUSION OF LIABILITY
5.1      Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management all reasonable steps to ensure that the information on this Blog is correct. However, we do not guarantee the correctness or completeness of material on this Blog.  Neither we nor any other party (whether or not involved in producing, maintaining or delivering this Blog), shall be liable or responsible for any kind of loss or damage that may result to you or a third party as a result of your or their use of our website. This exclusion shall include servicing or repair costs and, without limitation, any other direct, indirect or consequential loss.
6. LAW AND JURISDICTION
This Legal Notice shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the law. Any dispute(s) arising in connection with this Legal Notice are subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of  Shaw Capital Management
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Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management
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PRIVACY POLICY | shawcapitalmanagementscaminfo.com : Latest Headlines

Privacy policy
Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management do not collect any information from our visitors other than the normal information that our website statistics automatically gathers . The following is just a standard Privacy Policy agreement.
We strive to safeguard the privacy of our website guests; this policy sets out how we will treat your personal information.
(1) What information do we collect?
We may collect, store and use the following kinds of personal data:
(a) data about your visits to and use of this blog;
(b) data that you gave us for the purpose of registering with us and/or subscribing to our website services and/or email notifications.

(2) Information about website visits
We may collect data about your computer and your visits to this blog such as your IP address, geographical location, browser type, referral source, length of visit and number of page views. This information may be used in the administration of this site, to improve its usability, and for marketing purposes.

(3) Using your personal data
Personal data submitted on this blog will be used for the purposes specified in this privacy policy or in relevant parts of the blog.
In addition to the uses identified elsewhere in this privacy policy, we may use your personal data to:
(a) improve your browsing experience by personalizing the blog;
(b) send information (other than marketing communications) to you which we think may be of interest to you by post or by email or similar technology;
(c) send to you marketing communications relating to our business which we think may be of interest to you by post or, where you have specifically agreed to this, by email or similar technology (you can inform us at any time if you no longer require marketing communications to be sent by email in latest@shawcapitalmanagement-headlines.com us.
(d) provide other companies with statistical information about our users – but this information will not be used to identify any individual user. We will not without your express consent provide your personal information to any third parties for the purpose of direct marketing.

(4) Other disclosures
In addition to the disclosures reasonably necessary for the purposes identified elsewhere in this privacy policy, we may disclose information about you:
(a) to the extent that we are required to do so by law;
(b) in connection with any legal proceedings or prospective legal proceedings;
(c) in order to establish, exercise or defend our legal rights (including providing information to others for the purposes of fraud prevention and reducing credit risk); and
Except as provided in this privacy policy, we will not give your information to third parties.

(5) International data transfers
Information that we collect may be stored and processed in and transferred between any of the countries in which we operate in order to enable us to use the information in accordance with this privacy policy.
(6) Security of your personal data
Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management will take reasonable precautions to prevent the loss, misuse or alteration of your personal information. Of course, data transmission over the internet is inherently insecure, and we cannot guarantee the security of data sent over the internet.

(7) Policy amendments
We may update this privacy policy from time-to-time by posting a new version. You should check this page occasionally to make ensure that you are aware of the latest changes.

(8) Third party websites
The blog contains links to other websites. Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management is not responsible for the privacy policies (or content) of third party websites.

(9) Contact – You can contact us by email
latest@shawcapitalmanagement-headlines.com

Shaw Capital Management Scam Info: Judge rules against trial in lawsuit by victim of $588K cyber heist


Computerworld – A Maine judge’s ruling in a case involving a business that sued its bank after losing $345,000 in a cyber heist could set a precedent about how diligent companies must be in protecting their assets online.
Patco Construction Company, a family-owned business in Sanford Maine, sued Ocean Bank in 2009 after cyber crooks broke into the company’s online account and siphoned out nearly $589,000 via unauthorized Automated Clearing House (ACH) transfers.
About $243,000 worth of transfers were successfully blocked by the bank after the fraud was discovered. However, Patco was left on the hook for the remaining $345,000 — plus interest charges on more than $100,000 the bank used from Patco’s credit line to cover the illegal transfers.
In its lawsuit, Patco charged Ocean Bank with negligence and breach of contract for failing to spot and stop the unauthorized ACH transfers.
The bank put the blame for the loss on Patco. The bank noted that it was only because Patco allowed its online banking credentials to be compromised that thieves were able to log in and steal money in the first place. Ocean Bank insisted that it processed the ACH requests in good faith after it verified that the proper IDs, passwords and answers to challenge response questions.
Patco claimed that the bank should have spotted the illegal transfers because they were out of character with previous transactions it had made. Patco also blamed Ocean Bank for not implementing stronger authentication mechanisms such as token-based authentication and out-of-band verification, which a large number of banks were using at the time.
According to Patco co-owner Mark Patterson, the unauthorized transfers to out-of-state bank accounts did trigger warnings inside Ocean Bank, just no action. “Alarms were going off all over the place, but the unfortunate part is that the bank was not watching them,” he said in an interview Tuesday. “It’s not their problem. They’re not responsible for security.”
The hackers apparently installed the Zeus password stealing malware on a Patco computer and then used that information to log into the online Ocean Bank account, Patterson said. “Somehow somebody opened up the wrong spam email or whatever, and Zeus malware was put on our computer.”
After waiting for the account to fill up, the thieves quickly began moving cash out of Patco’s account to money mules all over the U.S. By the time Patco realized what had happened, the thieves had been moving about $100,000 per day for several days.

    Shaw Capital Management Scam Info: Don’t fall for ‘First Exposure: iPhone 5′ Facebook scam

    Facebook users are being duped into unwittingly spreading spam by clicking on what looks like a link to news entitled “First Exposure: iPhone 5.”
    A version of the scam, exploiting peoples’ interest in the next-generation iPhone, went around Facebook earlier this month, and it’s back today with minor changes.
    The scam starts when you see someone in your social network comment on a link in a post that looks like it leads to a news story about the iPhone 5 at a Web address of “greatlakesnews.info.” Clicking on the link takes you to a different Web page, which provides a captcha window where you’re asked to verify a word, ostensibly to prove that you are not an automated bot.
    Once you click to verify, a message is posted to your Facebook stream notifying all your friends that you commented on the item and providing them with the bogus iPhone 5 link, in a type of attack known as “clickjacking.” Then you’re asked to choose from a list of items that then lead to a survey which is really marketing, according to this M86 post.
    Clickjacking can be a problem on any Web site, but social networks are particularly susceptible because people share so many links. Facebook’s advice to not click on strange links even if they are from friends would cut out many of the legitimate links people share on Facebook.
    It’s good idea to try to avoid getting news from sources that aren’t known news sites. But a big red flag is the captcha window–legitimate sites don’t typically make you prove you’re human to read a news item.

    LATEST WORLD HEADLINES : SHAW CAPITAL MANAGEMENT

    The Shaw Group Inc. was founded in 1987 as a fabrication shop in Baton Rouge, La., by Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer J.M. Bernhard Jr. and two colleagues. Driven by leaders with bold vision and a strong entrepreneurial spirit, the company has evolved into a diverse engineering, construction, technology, fabrication, environmental and industrial services organization with 27,000 employees in strategic locations around the world.

    Shaw Capital Management Scam Info : Shoppers fume over Sears’ $69 iPad ad mistake


    DATE: MON July 18, 2011
    AFP – Getty Images
    By Suzanne Choney
    A online Sears ad that mistakenly advertised the 16-gigabyte, Wi-Fi-only iPad 2 for $69 — and got shoppers’ hopes up and orders placed — was retracted by the retail giant, which blamed a third-party seller of Apple’s popular tablet for an advertising typo. That model iPad 2 is normally sold for $744.99 by the third-party seller, GSM On Sale.
    “They should honor those prices and eat their mistake,” fumed Linda Tanner on Facebook, where hundreds of others weighed in, responding to Sears’ statement on the social networking site about the ad goof.
    “Unfortunately …  one of the Marketplace third party sellers told us that they mistakenly posted incorrect pricing on two Apple iPad models on the Marketplace portion of the website,” Sears said on its Facebook page.
    “If you purchased either of these products recently, your order has been cancelled and your account will be credited. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.”
    The other model of iPad 2 that had been listed by GSM On Sale was a 32 GB, Wi-Fi version for $179.
    Apple’s retail price for the 16 GB, Wi-Fi only iPad 2 is $499, and its 32 GB, Wi-Fi iPad 2 is $599. (It’s not clear why GSM On Sale’s 16 GB iPad 2 would cost more than Apple’s same model, although some of Sears’ third-party retailers include other accessories with the iPads they sell.)
    Still, with tablets high on the list of some parents and students starting their back-to-school shopping, consumers were frustrated.
    GSM On Sale, as well as third-party sellers in general, were skewered on Sears’ customer review page over the weekend. “This is just another example of why third party sellers on a retailers website is a bad idea,” wrote one customer. “When I go to sears.com I want to be shopping at Sears. It is a name I trusted.”
    Unhappy customers also took to Twitter, where some had initially posted the news Friday that $69 iPads were available.
    GSM On Sale’s website appeared to be out of commission Sunday. “Our online store is currently closed for maintenance. Please visit us again soon,” was the brief message on the site.
    Not everyone was angry about the pricing error. Some had a more measured view.
    “This goes to show that the Customer is NOT always right,” wrote Rachel JimĂ©nez on Facebook. “The Customer — as witnessed in a lot of entries here — may only have THEIR OWN best interest in mind. Sears may be a big company, but it’s not fair to cheat them out of a profit because of a mistake like this.”
    —Via Tech Crunch

    Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management | Oops: Microsoft accidentally reveals secret social project


    DATE: MON July 18, 2011
    Microsoft, Socl, Tulalip
    Microsoft is working on a social/design project called Tulalip, according to details from a splash page that was accidentally published to Socl.com recently.
    As of Thursday, Microsoft has taken down the splash page and replaced it with a message acknowledging the project.
    “Thanks for stopping by. Socl.com is an internal design project from a team in Microsoft Research which was mistakenly published to the web. We didn’t mean to, honest,” the message states.
    While I believe that publishing the splash page was an accident, I don’t believe Tulalip is simply an “internal design project”.
    The splash page (pictured above) describes the Tulalip service as a way for users to “find what you need and share what you know easier than ever”. There are options to connect the service with both Facebook and Twitter. The page also contains two rows of images that look very similar to the “Tiles” interface design found on Microsoft’s new Window’s Phone 7 operating system.
    Also, the splash page’s domain name is shorthand for “Social”.
    I think it’s obvious that Microsoft is planning to do much more with Tulalip than it’s letting on. The company was unavailable for further comment on its plans for Socl.com at the time of publication.
    If you’ve got a theory on what Microsoft is up to, please sound off in the comment section.
    Update: A Microsoft spokesperson responded with the following statement: “Socl.com is an internal design project from one of Microsoft’s research teams which was mistakenly published to the web. We have no more information at this time.”
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