| |
 |
Monday, November 18, 2002 |
www.netcrimes.net and Misdemeanors is the latest book I have taken a look at. It is written great! Each chapter is a mixture of stories of real problems for real people, showing us what it is to be a victim of out-of-control: cyber-stalking (get help via www.haltabuse.org if you a victim of this); identity-theft (more kinds than I knew about, which means I need to say more in Identity Protection than what was implied by Stop Identity Theft because my Banking Stories may have distorted my vision as to where the greatest threats come from, www.cybersnitch.net has advice how not to become the next such statistic); hostile people out there posting stuff that pretends to be from you; spam; hoaxes; all sorts of frauds; what you ought to do about it, with tons of useful links. Some of these connections will be making their way onto my web site in future postings. Some have already come here, although with a somewhat different spin than that of www.jahitchcock.com J. A. Hitchcock. Here are some wonderful starting points.
- www.trf.k12.mn.us/lhs/shutthedoor.html = safety brochure to help schools and law enforcement understand about anonymous e-harrassment and what can be done about it
- If you want spam or want more than you already getting, then sign up at www.iwantspam.com
- If you sent $ in the mail to some place to buy something that was communicated to you via the Internet, and you now think you have been cheated, prompt contact with postal inspectors can put a scammer in the slammer www.usps.gov/websites/depart/inspect
- Got questions about computers and the Internet? Check out http://whatis.techtarget.com and www.askanexpert.com
- Do you suspect that there are programs hiding on your computer that should not be there? I not talking viruses & trojans but spyware. Check out www.cexx.org/problem.htm and www.lavasoftusa.com
- Let's suppose someone might be impersonating you and behaving in a disreputable manner, you can keep track of yourself online by submitting your first & last name, or your e-mail address to www.tracerlock.com and they will e-mail you when it finds a match (I know I am in a LOT of places legitimately)
2:19:18 AM
|
|
Thanks to me checking my referers from time to time, I am finding many more links I want to check out than are humanly possible to do so.
Lots of links to Weblogs in Education from Edublogs by Sarah, and her thoughts on using weblogs as a writing / content / synthesis / collaboration Tool by Teachers. McGee has lots of great essays on Knowledge Management that includes Blogs in Education. Also check out my links from Blog Books and Blog Software stories.
Sébastien Paquet's weblog is Seb's Open Research & his great article, with an immense volume of heavy duty links for us to explore, should be occasionally reviewed on weblogs role in rise of personal knowledge publishing. Seb's Weblogs by Profession is a directory of professions active in weblogging, in which for many, but not all, he has links to directories for each of the professions that he lists.
- Educators and (old) Teachnology
- Journalists - I have found that Journalists sometimes do a great job of explaining technical stuff, when they themselves are also using that technology.
- Knowledge Management people
- Lots more
1:10:49 AM
|
|
© Copyright 2002 Al Macintyre.
|
|
|
|
|