Online Merchants Now Have New Weapon To Help Reduce Fraud

Telecentrex LLC, a leading provider of virtual telecommunications services has launched a new website, ReduceFraud.com, that aims to help online merchants reduce the number of fraudulent transactions occurring on their websites.

Yorba Linda, CA (PRWEB) November 13, 2007 — Telecentrex LLC, a leading provider of virtual telecommunications services has launched a new website, ReduceFraud.com, that aims to help online merchants reduce the number of fraudulent transactions occurring on their websites.

News Image

Tim Paulino, Co-Founder and CEO of Telecentrex said, "With $3 billion dollars in online revenue being lost due to online fraud in 2006, as well as over $200 million lost by consumers, reducing Internet fraud benefits everyone. Everyone except the crooks, that is."

Among the services that ReduceFraud.com offers is a televerification solution that allows online merchants to confirm that the telephone number that a user provides is a legitimate, working telephone number before they can complete their transaction. Brandi Cummings, Co-Founder and Chief Content Officer of Telecentrex, stated, "Thieves are leery about providing a legitimate phone number that can be traced back to them. This solution weeds out fraudulent users before they get a chance to do any damage."

Other services offered on ReduceFraud.com include a two factor verification solution for an extra layer of security for access to online confidential information, phone identification that will determine the type of phone, carrier and location of a telephone number, as well as SMS marketing solutions. Visitors to the site can experience live demos, see the technology at work first hand, learn more about televerification for fraud protection, and set up a free account.

About Telecentrex, LLC
Telecentrex markets a suite of advanced hosted telephony services that provide both front- and back-end services to existing telephone infrastructures. Services include virtual PBX phone systems, which allow small businesses to sound bigger and more professional, call capture hotlines, which provide real estate professionals with the ability to automatically generate leads 24/7, Internet fax services which enables anyone with a computer to send, receive and manage fax traffic without a fax machine, and televerification fraud protection solutions for online merchants. For more information, call 1-800-494-4641 or visit our web sites.

http://www.freedom800.com
http://www.realtyone800.com
http://www.fax800.com
http://www.reducefraud.com

DynDNS.com Releases DynDNS Updater v. 2.0 for Macintosh

DynDNS.com today announced the immediate availability of version 2.0 of the DynDNS Updater for Macintosh, its flagship free Dynamic DNS Update client, featuring full Leopard compatibility, tight integration with platform-specific services, a brand new code base and a revamped interface.

Manchester, NH (PRWEB) November 13, 2007 — Dynamic Network Services Incorporated today released version 2.0 of the DynDNS Updater for Macintosh, its flagship free Dynamic DNS updating software.

The DynDNS Updater unlocks the full power of Dynamic DNS by allowing users to constantly connect to their servers and machines, even when their IP address changes. In effect, it turns virtually any home or small business Internet access into a connection suitable for the publication and sharing of data.

By monitoring changes in the network setup and immediately notifying the DynDNS.com servers, the Updater ensures that a single domain name always points to the right web site or server, regardless of most changes in network topology. Changes are instantly propagated through the Internet thanks to DynDNS.com's top-tier DNS architecture.

Version 2.0 of the DynDNS Updater features an entirely rewritten code base for increased stability, resiliency and integration with popular Mac OS X services such as Sparkle (for self-updating) and Growl (for faster notifications). Its brand new interface makes it a snap to set up and use, for beginners and system administrators alike.

With its refined look and bullet-proof foundation, the DynDNS Updater sets a new standard of platform integration and ease of use in personal networking software. It enables an ever increasing number of users to freely communicate, publish and access content on the Internet, without the traditional technical and financials barriers.

The DynDNS Updater for Mac is immediately available as a free download from http://DynDNS.com It is released as a Universal Binary. It requires an always-on Internet connection and Mac OS X v. 10.4.10 or later, including the just-released Mac OS X Leopard (v. 10.5). The DynDNS Updater is compatible with both DynDNS.com's free and paying Dynamic DNS offerings as well as with the company's Recursive DNS service.

About Dynamic Network Services Incorporated:
Founded in 1998, originally as a free DNS service for the open source communities, DynDNS.com has grown quietly and steadily to become one of the Internet's largest and most reliable providers of domain, zone and email solutions, through its innovative, obscenely-well supported services. Still offering its signature free service, the company today plays a key role in keeping the Internet's DNS infrastructure at large running smoothly and stays faithful to its core values of engineering excellence.
DynDNS.com is a registered trademark of Dynamic Network Services Incorporated. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

 

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Carbonite

Carbonite is  an online backup service. The service requires installation and download of backup software. The company offers a 15-day free trial. Service is $4.16/month or $49.95/year.

Carbonite offers an affiliate and partner program for resellers.

 http://www.carbonite.com

Carbonite
334 Boylston St – 3rd floor
Boston, MA 0211

 877-665-4466

international callers 617-587-1100

weekdays between 9am and 5pm EST.


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IDrive-E

IDrive-E is an online backup service with encryption. The free version allows backup/restore from home PCs and servers without backup, restore, or file type restrictions and bandwidth limits.

IDrive E Basic – 2GB – FREE

IDrive E Pro – Unlimited (read terms) – $4.95/month or $49.95/year.

IDrive-E has a partner program for resellers.

http://www.idrive.com  

Pro Softnet Corp.
IBackup Division
21300 Victory Blvd Suite 690
Woodland Hills CA 91367

Tel: (818) 594 5972 # 107
Fax: 1-800-787-2595

Sales and Billing Support
1-866-748-0555 ext 201

Technical Support
1-866-748-0555 ext 202

 

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Mozy Reseller Program

Mozy is an web based data backup and storage service.

https://mozy.com/registration/reseller

contact sales@mozypro.com or call 1-877-MozyPro (669-9776)

  Berkeley Data Systems, Inc.
774 East Utah Valley Drive
American Fork, UT
Phone: (801) 756-2331
Fax: (801) 756-2576 Info: info@mozy.com
MozyHome Support: homesupport@mozy.com
MozyPro Support: prosupport@mozy.com
MozyPro Sales: sales@mozy.com

Mozy

Mozy is an web based data backup and storage service.

Home Unlimited Plans start at $4.95/month per PC.

Mozy Pro Licenses are $3.95/month each and $.50 per GB.

Mozy has an affiliate and reseller program.

www.mozy.com  

Berkeley Data Systems, Inc.
774 East Utah Valley Drive
American Fork, UT
Phone: (801) 756-2331
Fax: (801) 756-2576 Info: info@mozy.com
MozyHome Support: homesupport@mozy.com
MozyPro Support: prosupport@mozy.com
MozyPro Sales: sales@mozy.com

 

US Government to Eliminate Competition in the Sale of Epson-Compatible Inks

'The public needs to be made aware of a very anticompetitive, anti-consumer action about to be taken by the U.S. government' writes Mr. Roark, a Retired Federal Trade Commission attorney, in his Op-Ed article.

 

(PRWEB) November 9, 2007 — 'The public needs to be made aware of a very anticompetitive, anti-consumer action about to be taken by the U.S. government' writes Mr. Paul Roark, a Retired Federal Trade Commission attorney, in his Op-Ed article.

"It appears the fate of competition in the market for Epson-compatible inks is in the hands of the U.S. Trade Representative, if she does not act to stop the implementation of International Trade Commission (ITC) matter 337-TA-565," says Mr. Roark who uses specialty black and white inks in his color EPSON printer that are manufactured by a small innovative company in America. "The ability of other companies to sell ink to consumers of Epson inkjet printers may be blocked by the U.S. government and this would in effect, subsidize Epson's efforts to monopolize Epson-compatible ink sales by excluding inkjet cartridges from importation into the U.S.," warned Paul Roark.

The prices of Epson inks in its cartridges are vastly higher than the competing ink options. In addition to the pre-filled, competitive cartridges, many use easily-refillable, third-party cartridges or continuous flow ink systems and buy ink in bulk, such as 4 oz. bottles. When bought in bulk, the prices for competing inks are about 1/10th that of what consumers pay for Epson inks.

In addition to the huge price differential, the competitive options that allow the use of bulk inks do not cause the environmental problems associated with consumers throwing the small cartridges into our landfills. These options also will likely be eliminated by this ITC action.

"While some have claimed that third party inks are inferior, this is simply not true in many cases," said Mr. Roark. "In the small black and white, monochromatic ink market where I am most active the non-Epson inks are superior to Epson options", he added. "Epson makes no product that can equal the image quality, stability and lightfastness of the carbon inks I use for my fine art, black & white photographic prints, and the inks I use are far cheaper," he commented. U.S. companies have for years made very lightfast pigmented inks available for entry level printers where Epson sells only fast-fading dyes. In short, there are small, innovative U.S. companies that sell superior products for less. These companies are at risk of being put out of business by the combination of Epson's anticompetitive practices and the U.S. government.

The ITC Epson inkjet cartridge matter, now pending before the U.S. Trade Representative, is part of Epson's attempt to prevent others from entering into aftermarket ink sales for its printer base. Mr. Roark opined, "Epson is using its patents over the interface between the inks and printers to accomplish this." He added, "Even assuming these inkjet cartridge patents are valid, this is, in effect, an illegal "tying agreement" that ties subsequent sales of inks to the sale of the printer." Tying agreements have been prohibited by the antitrust laws for many years, although the burden of proving an illegal tying agreement has been made much more difficult in recent years. Realistically, small competitors and consumers simply cannot afford the legal fees and years of litigation such matters now involve. Nonetheless, where a government agency is called on to exercise discretion, the fact of the likely illegal conduct and the larger competitive picture should be considered. Sadly, the plight of competitors and consumers who were never parties to this action may never have come to the attention of the decision makers. "The U.S. Trade representative needs to consider these factors when she makes her decision," said Mr. Roark.

"From a legal standpoint, there are cases that deal with these concepts," said Mr. Roark. "The Ninth Circuit Federal Court of Appeals in Image Technical Services v. Eastman Kodak (125 F.3d 1195 (1997)) addressed for the first time the relationship of intellectual property rights and the antitrust laws," he added. The court held that a monopolist who has achieved a dominant position through its patents and copyrights can nevertheless be held in violation the Sherman Act by exploiting that dominant position to attain a monopoly in another market. As a subsequent court noted, "Properly viewed within the framework of a tying case, (Image Technical Services) can be interpreted as restating the undisputed premise that the patent holder cannot use his statutory right to refuse to sell patented parts to gain a monopoly in a market beyond the scope of the patent." (CSU v. Xerox, 203 F.3d at 1327) Also in Atari Games Corp. v. Nintendo of AM., Inc.: "(A) patent owner may not take the property right granted by a patent and use it to extend his power in the marketplace improperly, i.e., beyond the limits of what Congress intended to give in the patent laws." (897 F.2d 1572, 1576 (Fed. Cir. 1990)) In the full text if his Op/Ed published on hios website Mr. Roark urges interested individuals to read the excellent article on this subject by Nicholas Economides and William Hebert that can be found through a link on the full text of his op/ed.

"Most consumers as well as many businesses use printers that might be affected and they need to be aware of the problem and convey their concerns to the policy makers involved" said Mr. Roark. "Using dubious patents to monopolize adjacent markets, and having the ITC help in this effort is not what Congress had in mind when these legal regimes were put in place" he added. "Susan Schwab is the US Trade Representative who's signature is required on or before December 19, 2007 to enact this law" said Mr. Roark who is urging consumers and small businesses that may be affected to contact her with their concerns. "Her office is at 600 17th Street, N.W., Washington D.C. 20508 (202) 395-3063," he added.

Mr. Roark believes strongly that consumer opinions in this matter may make a difference and urges anyone who is potentially affected to read his entire op/ed which can be downloaded at http://paulroark.com/Epson-ITC-Draft-Letter-2.zip

Paul Roark is a former US Federal Trade Commission antitrust attorney residing in Solang, CA where he is known today as a photographer assisting other interested photographers in using carbon based inkjet inks in EPSON printers. His work can be seen at http://www.PaulRoark.com

 

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The Internet’s Most Expensive Advertisement

Internet Entrepreneur Aaron Davison is selling what he believes is the Internet's most expensive ad space. It's a crazy idea that might actually work.

Chicago, IL (PRWEB) November 10, 2007 — Aaron Davison, an Internet entrepreneur and musician, has recently launched a new website called "The Million Dollar Advertisement.com". The goal of Aaron's site is to attract one advertiser to pay one million dollars to advertise on his site permanently. Why would anyone do this? Well as Aaron states, "this idea is so freaking stupid that if it actually works there will be an immense amount of publicity for myself and the advertiser."

What inspired Aaron's crazy idea? "I'm a musician and I've been looking for creative ways to finance my music career." said Aaron, " I read about a website called the Million Dollar Homepage where the web designer sold tiny ads for one dollar a pixel. There were one million pixels in all and he sold all of them! I thought it was a brilliant idea, but the ads were so small that you could barely see them. My concept is far superior because I'm only selling one ad, so it will be totally visible."

To advertise on Aaron's site, or for more information, visit http://www.themilliondollaradvertisement.com/

Association of Computer Repair Business Owners (ACRBO)

Founded in 2007 as NACRBO, The Association of Computer Repair Business Owners (ACRBO) is a trade association of Computer Repair Business owners, dedicated to the advancement of the Computer Repair Business through the building of trust and professionalism of its members. Every association member pledges to adhere to the Code’s standards as a condition of admission and continuing membership in the Association.

NACRBO is dedicated to raising awareness through communities that those in the Computer Repair Industry are professionals in a field that requires expertise.

The typical Computer Repair Business Owner typically has a difficult time getting discounts on some of the products of the trade, due to not being able to buy in volume. At ACRBO we are continually getting members discounted priced on things such as data recover, web hosting, remote software, and more.

 

Contact:

www.acrbo.com

10513 Big Horn Drive

Fredericksburg, Va 22407

540-786-1144

 


IPCop Installation Guide

IPCop Installation Guide
-Eric J. Vititoe

IPCop “is a complete Linux distribution whose sole purpose is to protect the networks on which it is installed”.  It is very easy to install.  It is very easy to configure.  And, best of all, it is FREE.

IPCop and its add-ons include DHCP routing, VPN capabilities, anti-spyware, anti-spam, anti-virus, proxy, URL filtering, and much more.

IPCop is able to run on hardware that we would normally think of as being obsolete.  I have personally never installed it on a machine with anything slower than a 700MHz CPU, but others have installed it on 200-233MHz machines with only 32Mb RAM.  Even at slower speeds, it is very robust.

Today, I will show you how to set up a basic configuration of IPCop.  My example configuration assumes:
    a) you have a static IP from your ISP
    b) you need to use DHCP for your LAN
    c) you need VPN capabilities for roaming users
    d) that the users above have Windows
    e) that you know a little bit about computers and networking

The rig I am using is a 1.3GHz AMD with 256Mb of RAM and a 20Gb hard drive.  I have two network cards installed, one for the WAN, and another for the LAN.  The computer also has a floppy drive and CD-ROM.

Section 1 – Installing IPCop

Go to www.ipcop.org and download the ISO image.  It’s approximately 45Mb in size.  Use your favorite burning software to put the ISO to CD and load it into your CD drive.

Turn your machine on and we’ll begin the tutorial.  I will walk you through the install, step by step.  Keep in mind that your mouse will not function with IPCop.  You will use the tab, space, and enter keys to move the cursor and select an item.

Note: Connect the LAN cable, but do NOT connect the WAN interface cable yet.  I will let you know when to connect the WAN cable.

1) The first menu is the boot menu.  Simply press enter to boot.

2) Select your language, move to and select OK.

3) The installation will erase all information on your hard drive.  If this is OK, move to and select OK.  Not selecting OK will cancel the installation.

4) Since we burned a CD for installing, we will select the CD-ROM as our installation media.  Move to and select OK.

5) You are now at the disk prep dialogue.    Select OK to continue.

At this point, you will see several dialogues appear and disappear, such as partitioning, installing log file system and root file system, installing files, swap space, etc.  Just be patient.

6) The next step asks if you would like to make a backup.  I see no need to backup yet, so I just skip this step.  You can backup if you like.

7) Now we are going to configure our green interface.  The green interface is going to be used on the LAN, or local, side of the IPCop box.   To configure the green interface, move to and select Probe.  It will detect which network interface is connected and use that one for your green interface.  Select OK after it has been detected.

8) Enter your green interface IP address.  Normally, you would enter 192.168.1.1 as this is going to be acting as our new router, as well.  You could enter a different address for now and change it later, in case your new IPCop box isn’t going live just yet.  Select OK.

9) At this point, the installer will install GRUB bootloader and then eject the install CD.  Place the CD in a safe location.

10) “Congratulations!”  The initial setup is almost complete.  Select OK.

11) Choose your keyboard layout and select OK.

12) Now, select your time zone and select OK.

13) For host name, just use “ipcop” (without the quotes).  That will make it easy to remember.  Select OK.

14) Unless you know what you are doing, just use the default domain name and select OK.

15) Most do not use ISDN, so select disabled.

16) Now, we are at the network configuration menu.  For this example, we will choose “Green + Red”.  Select OK.  IPCop will now push down the local network.

17) Choose Drivers & Card Assignments, then select OK when prompted to change settings.  IPCop will once again push down the network.

18) IPCop will prompt that it has found an unclaimed network card and will ask if you want to assign it to the red interface.  Select OK to assign it.  It will prompt that All cards have been successfully allocated.

19) Back at the menu, choose address settings, then green interface and OK.  Read the warning, change numbers if needed, and choose OK.

20) Select red interface.  Input your settings for DHCP, static addresses and select done.

21) Now, select DNS & Gateway settings.  Input parameters and select OK.

22) Choose DHCP Server Configuration, input settings, and select OK.

23) The next few dialogues will prompt you for various passwords.  For simplicity, you can enter them all the same.  However, if you have more than one network admin, you may want to use different passwords for each.  You will have to enter each twice, but won’t be able to see what you are typing.

24) Now, you can connect your WAN interface cable.  Choose OK to reboot.  After IPCop has rebooted, do not touch anything at the boot menu.

Now that IPCop has been set up, you can remove the keyboard and mouse from the computer.  IPCop can now run headless. *Exception: if you entered a different IP address in step eight, you will need to run setup locally again from the IPCop machine to change the address.

From another machine on your LAN, open your web browser and visit https://192.168.1.1:445 (or whatever address you entered in step 8).  Notice we’re using secure http.  If you prefer, you can use the unsecured address http://192.168.1.1:81.

Enter the admin username and password when prompted.  From the drop down menu, you need to enable SSH.  Click system > SSH Access then check SSH Access.  Now click on Save.

You have now configured your IPCop router.

Section 2 – Installing VPN

If you want to take things even further, you can now install Zerina as your VPN server to give roaming users the ability to see and use local resources remotely, while keeping your data secure.

To install Zerina from a Windows box, you will first need to download a few things.  

First is Zerina itself.  Download Zerina from http://www.zerina.de/zerina/?q=download .  

Secondly, download WinSCP from http://winscp.net/eng/index.php .  

Last, download Putty from http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/download.html .  

If one or more of these addresses no longer work, simply search for them using your favorite internet search engine.

A great animated installation guide for Zerina can be found at http://www.zerina.de/zerina/files/flash/ZERINA-Install.htm .

Section 3 – Configuring Your VPN Server

Once you have installed Zerina, you will need to create the host certificate.  From the menu, go to VPN > OpenVPN.  Click the box called “Generate Root/Host Certificate”.  Enter all information and click generate.  This may take a few minutes.

Now, we can create certificates for your VPN users. From the OpenVPN menu, under client status, click add.  Select host-to-net VPN > add.  Now, fill in all relevant information, including password, and click save.  After a moment, you will now see that user’s account.  Repeat for all VPN users.

NOTE: Be sure to click the “enable VPN on red” check box on the OpenVPN menu.

Section 4 – Installing and Configuring Your VPN Client

As a client, you will need to download OpenVPN’s client software from “http://openvpn.net/download.html”.  Install using all default options.  If you are using Windows XP, you will receive a prompt that the drive has not passed Microsoft testing.  Just click continue anyway.  The client is now installed.

To configure the client, we need to download the PKCS12 file that was generated from the server.  Browse to the IPCop GUI > VPN > OpenVPN.  Locate the user’s file.  It is the blue button to the right of the user name labeled “O VPN”.  Click on this button to download the user’s package file.

Once downloaded, transfer the package file to the client machine and unzip.  It should contain two files.  Both of these files should be moved to the “C:\Program Files\OpenVPN\config” directory on the client machine.

To connect the client to the remote VPN, click on the OpenVPN GUI from the program menu.  You will see a new network icon with two red screens in your system tray.  Right click on that icon, then left click on connect.  You will be prompted to enter your password.

You are now connected!

Good luck and happy installing!