adsense, google

January 22, 2008

clipped from www.bloggingtips.com
clipped from www.bloggingtips.com

The google adsense referral program was never that good in my opinion. The conditions for getting a qualified referral were tough and the payouts were poor. Nevertheless, they got hundreds of thousands to sign up to refer new users to Google Adsense.
Today Google announced that they are removing the Google Adsense referral program
Hello,
We […]

Written by Kevin Muldoon from System0 on January 14, 2008 | 0 Comments

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SEO, Search Marketing Geek

January 22, 2008

clipped from piloseo.com

10 Signs You Are a Search Marketing Geek

Title says it all. As I become more and more immersed in the world of SEO and search marketing I am noticing that it is creeping into every aspect of my life. The following are by no means comprehensive of search taking over your life but they are the most common and prevalent signals that you may be living the life of a Search Geek.

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iPhone

January 21, 2008

clipped from technorati.com

iPhone 1.1.3 update leads to problems?

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TechStars

January 21, 2008

clipped from www.techstars.org
get $

How much funding do TechStars companies receive?
You get $5,000 per founder, up to 3 founders. So at most, you’ll 15,000 for the summer. We think that this is plenty of money to survive for the summer and to crank out a substantial prototype so you can get to the next level. You also get a free server hosting, a nice place to work if you want to, legal services, and more. Finally, there is immeasurable value in the connections and advice that you’ll receive when you start your company with TechStars, and also in the opportunity to pitch to angel investors and venture capitalists at the end of the summer during our Investor and Demo Day.

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delicious new feature

January 21, 2008

clipped from www.techcrunch.com

I just got word that Yahoo is testing the integration of Delicious user generated bookmarks into Yahoo search results pages (Yahoo acquired Delicious in late 2005). Some users will see the Delicious icon as part of their normal search results, which tells them how many people have bookmarked those pages, as well as the tags people have supplied for those pages.

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backdoor threat

January 21, 2008

backdoor threats
clipped from www.microsoft.com
Win32/Sinowal is a family of password-stealing and backdoor Trojans. The Trojan may try to find a cryptographic certificate on the infected computer and install a certificate on the computer to mislead users in Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Web transactions. The Trojan may also capture user data such as banking credentials from various user accounts and send the data to Web sites specified by the attacker. Some Win32/Sinowal components may also open a backdoor on a TCP port. Win32/Sinowal may try to perform certain operations from the context of a trusted process such as explorer.exe in order to bypass local software-based firewalls.
Malicious Software Encyclopedia: Win32/Sinowal
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clipped from en.wikipedia.org
The Card Security Code is located on the back of MasterCard, Visa and Discover credit or debit cards and is typically a separate group of 3 digits to the right of the signature strip.

The Card Security Code (CSC), sometimes called Card Verification Value or Code (CVV or CVC), is a security feature for credit or debit card transactions, giving increased protection against credit card fraud.

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about Credit Card

January 20, 2008

clipped from en.wikipedia.org

A credit card is a system of payment named after the small plastic card issued to users of the system. A credit card is different from a debit card in that it does not remove money from the user’s account after every transaction. In the case of credit cards, the issuer lends money to the consumer (or the user) to be paid to the merchant. It is also different from a charge card (though this name is sometimes used by the public to describe credit cards), which requires the balance to be paid in full each month. In contrast, a credit card allows the consumer to ‘revolve’ their balance, at the cost of having interest charged. Most credit cards are the same shape and size, as specified by the ISO 7810 standard. The most common credit card size, known as ID-1, is 85.60 � 53.98 mm.
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