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March 14 2008 COOLSITES Newsletter #156 by Mark Donaldson

 
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luem42




Joined: Aug 02, 2003
Posts: 243



(Msg. 1) Posted: Sat Mar 15, 2008 8:32 am
Post subject: March 14 2008 COOLSITES Newsletter #156 by Mark Donaldson



This is what the COOLSITES Toolbar looks like. Click here for more info: http://luem42.com/toolbar.html Click here to get it: http://luem42.OurToolbar.com



I have published the March 14 2008 COOLSITES Newsletter #156 by Mark Donaldson.

The following is an excerpt from this weeks newsletter. To see the full newsletter with all of the COOLSITES links please click and bookmark this link: http://luem42.googlepages.com/coolsites.html and check it each week. Thank you. Mark.


March 14 2008 COOLSITES Newsletter #156 by Mark Donaldson

Attention Subscribers

Remember to check your spam/junk folder if you don't receive this newsletter. If you find it there please click the "Not Spam/Junk" button. If you did or didn't receive it make sure and add the following addresses into your contacts/addresses list folder in your email account and in Outlook/Outlook Express or whatever email client you use so you will continue or start receiving it. Your newsletter will be sent from one of these addresses. Here are the addresses:

luem42.DeleteThis@gmail.com luem42a.DeleteThis@gmail.com luem42b.DeleteThis@gmail.com luem42coolsites.DeleteThis@gmail.com luem42scoolsites.DeleteThis@gmail.com


Thank you, Mark.

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Semper Gratis (forever free)

Wherever you go if you see the user name LUEM42 that's me

COOLSITES is a list of safe, fun, useful, informative and just plain cool websites and programs that are FREE, FREE and FREE. All of the programs and websites I list are free. If I list anything that is so good but isn't free I will list the price with it.


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Pirillo's Picks for February 13 2007

"And if you think that's a lot of links, you should see how many http://luem42.com/ collects every day. It's enough to make you wanna never leave the house again as long as you live" Yours Digitally, Chris Pirillo http://chris.pirillo.com/


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Clif Notes Newsletter, Feb 2007 http://freewarewiki.com/ClifNotes

"The COOLSITES Newsletter - find the coolest links here. This fella named Mark Donaldson has been sending out his lists of cool sites since 2003. I'd never heard of him before last week. One day I was Googling myself to see who was posting links to my newsletter, and I found his website. I guess he's mentioned my newsletter at least 3 times. I like the COOLSITES website too, but I think it could use some reformatting to make it a bit easier to read. What I really like is the content there. Mark must really read a lot of stuff on the web and he takes the best links then tells you about them." http://freewarewiki.com/CoolSitesNewsletter


Welcome to Clif Notes Newsletter
March 9, 2008

Hi Everyone. I'm sorry, there's no newsletter this week.
Stay tuned and I'm sure I'll be able to dig up something for next week

Last week's Newsletter http://freewarewiki.com/ClifNotesNewsletter080302
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Security News

"National Cyber Alert System Cyber Security Alert SA08-071A Microsoft Updates for Multiple Vulnerabilities Original release date: March 11, 2008 Source: US-CERT Systems Affected * Microsoft Office * Microsoft Office for Mac Overview: Vulnerabilities in Microsoft Office and Office for Mac could allow an attacker to gain control of your computer. Solution: Install updates Microsoft has released updates to remedy critical vulnerabilities in Microsoft Office and Office for Mac. Updates for Microsoft Windows are available on the Microsoft Update site. We also recommend enabling Automatic Updates. Description: Vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows may allow an attacker to access your computer, install and run malicious software on your computer, or cause your computer to crash. More technical information is available at: http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/techalerts/TA08-071A.html "

"Websense(R) Security Labs(TM) has discovered a high-risk zero-day vulnerability (MS08-014) within the widely-used Microsoft Office Excel. This vulnerability, discovered by Websense in November 2007, requires minimal user interaction. Exploit code can be embedded within Microsoft Excel files and launched upon opening an excel document. This could be launched over email, through a website or another less common method. Upon discovery Websense responsibly disclosed this important vulnerability to Microsoft and has since been patched. (http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms08-mar.mspx) Due to the fact that several targeted attacks have used Microsoft Office vulnerabilities in the past we recommend that users patch machines. Websense ThreatSeeker(TM) technology is actively searching for in-the-wild exploits and Websense will automatically protect customers upon discovery. Note: Microsoft Excel 2002 and earlier versions are affected. To show how this vulnerability could potentially be used in the wild we'e created a video, with a proof of concept exploit on a Windows XP machine running an unpatched version of excel. In this demo, the user receives an exploited Excel file via email. The user manually opens it, and is automatically exploited. For the purpose of visualization, our exploit executes Solitaire, but obviously a malicious exploit could execute arbitrary code. Proof of concept video: http://www.websense.com/securitylabs/images/alerts/ms08-014.mov For additional details and information on how to detect and prevent this type of attack: http://www.websensesecuritylabs.com/alerts/alert.php?AlertID=846 "


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Security Links

Debit danger at rental counter. Using a debit card here will actually lower your credit score: http://clarkhoward.com/shownotes/2008/03/04/#13296

Free ICE Sticker. Add ICE (In Case of Emergency) contact information to your cellular device in case emergency personnel or hospital workers need to reach a contact and you cannot provide that information: http://www.thocc.org/whatsnew/mailinglist.aspx

New. EAV Antivirus Suite Free Edition for all versions of Windows: http://www.download.com/EAV-Antivirus-Suite-Free-Edition/3000-2239_4-1...8025.ht

New. EAV Software-Anti-Trojans,Spywares,Viruses,Worms,Adwares: http://www.your-soft.com/

Pharming- How You Can Beat This Growing Threat. Scambusters.org: http://www.scambusters.org/pharming.html

RECALL WARNING Baby cribs sold under a variety of names and Sears kitchen ranges: http://clarkhoward.com/shownotes/2008/02/28/#13279

Tapping Into Homes With a Rreverse Mortgage Can Be Pitfall for the Elderly - New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/02/business/02reverse.html?_r=1&ex=...2114000

Two years after patch, another IE FTP flaw. Attack viable, but stars have to be aligned just right, security vendor says: http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/03/12/Two-years-after-patch-anothe...E-FTP-f

Update. Kaspersky Virus Removal Tool 7.0.0.180: http://www.kaspersky.com/removaltools

Update. Microsoft Malicious Software Removal Tool 1.39: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=ad724ae0-e72d...54-9ab3

Update. Simple Machine Protect 1.7.0: http://e-freshware.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&...70&

Windows Defender Update Error And One Possible Method To Fix It: http://www.lockergnome.com/windows/2008/03/07/windows-defender-update-...or-and-

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Today, Friday 3-14, Only

GameGiveaway of the Day - Rubicon
A famous recent puzzle is Rubik's cube. It did not really begin it's infamous popularity until 1981. Solving this puzzle involves both sides of the brain as you must be able to previsualize spatially the final result while you remember where you've been in the sequence of rotations. Though a very difficult puzzle, it is a good exercise for brain flexing whether you accomplish the final result or not. Game include classic Cube 3×3 and Cube 4×4. Also added Piramyd 3×3 and 4×4.

http://game.giveawayoftheday.com/rubicon/ 4.5 MB

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Windows Secrets Newsletter • Issue 144 • 2008-03-13

The following topics appear in the free version

TOP STORY How to fix that gizmo you dropped in the loo
What to do before you call the shop
First, the obvious: water and electronics don't mix
When is a repair job worth the money?

KNOWN ISSUES OEM licenses for XP are nontransferable
Not all copies of XP are licensed equally
Include the world in your driver search
Another shopping alternative for XP systems

WACKY WEB WEEK Hey, buddy, can you cc me on that?

http://WindowsSecrets.com/comp/080313

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Scum of the minute

Reprinted with permission from: The Skeptic's Dictionary Newsletter Volume 7 No. 3 March 11, 2007
To subscribe, send a blank email to newsletter-subscribe.DeleteThis@lists.skepdic.com
If you are a skeptic like me you will subscribe to this great free newsletter. Mark.



"A recurring scam seems to pull at some hardwired heartstring or gullibility gene buried in the depths of our pre-simian evolution. The scam has made its way to the Internet, which isn't surprising. This ancient con works even though it seems so blatantly moronic that you'd think all potential marks would have been picked off by natural selection by now.


The basics are simple. 1) The con, attractive of course, announces that he or she has made millions by figuring out a "trick" behind real estate investment, buying foreclosures, selling classified ads, investing in stocks, or some other business the mark is likely to be aware of but know little about. 2) The con announces that instead of continuing to make more money using the secret trick, he or she wants to share the secret with you, a total stranger, so you can enjoy the wealth and freedom the con enjoys. 3) All you have to do is buy the con's secret for a small fee and you are on your way to telling your boss to stuff it as you sail off on your yacht toward that around-the-world cruise you so richly deserve. That's basically it.


The enterprise that has triggered this little diatribe is offered by "Jean" at http://3500weekly.com/. I'll get to Jean and her promise of great wealth for little work and investment (at the expense of Google, Clickbank, and eBay) in a moment.


First, I want to express my wonder that anyone would fall for this pitch. Is greed or need so powerful a driving force in some people that they will completely block out that little voice inside their head that should be asking 1) Why would a total stranger give up continuing to make tons of money using the secret trick she's discovered? 2) Wouldn't being successful at getting people to buy the secret mean that there's going to be great competition for the prize at the end of the rainbow? 3) Isn't it likely that this person isn't rich but plans to get rich by selling this so-called secret trick to lots of suckers like me?


What kinds of mental blocks must a person put up to be fooled by such promises? I realize that greed is a great motivator, but there seems to be something else at work here. I reviewed my review of three books on persuasion for an answer.


Robert Levine's The Power of Persuasion explains how people persuade other people to do or believe just about anything, from buying Tupperware to joining a cult....


According to Levine, "it seems that most [persuaders] are reading from the same manual." The most important factor in most persuasion isn't the message, but the person doing the persuading and how he or she presents the message. "Research shows that three characteristics are related to persuasiveness: perceived authority, honesty, and likeability." Research also shows that Americans identify authority not only with titles, but also with clothes and luxury cars. Furthermore, if a person is physically attractive, we tend to like that person and the more we like a person the more we tend to trust him or her. Research also show that "people are perceived as more credible when they make eye contact and speak with confidence, no matter what they have to say."


Not just anybody using any pitch whatsoever will cause the greedy to stop thinking critically. The mark has to trust the schemer. We don't trust people we don't like. So, the con artist has to be likeable. Being attractive, exuding confidence, having titles, and demonstrating conspicuous wealth are qualities many Americans associate with likeability. Appearing to share the interests of the mark also builds trust. Think of the people who have scammed others using their association in the same church or other organization as a way to build trust. So does association with stars or celebrities, as is evidenced by their use to sell everything from aspirin to Scientology.


Social creatures can't exist without trust and most of the time our instincts about whom to trust are probably right. In fact, most people in our society can probably be trusted most of the time. If the majority of people in a society can't be trusted, that society is doomed. Even so, a critical thinker knows that not everybody can be trusted and it behooves us all to have a good baloney detector so we can tell with a high degree of probability when others are trying to deceive us. In any case, regardless of whether it is your natural tendency to trust others, it is probably a good rule of thumb to usually trust them until they give some sign that they are not to be trusted. (There are exceptions, as when traveling in places known to be dens of criminal activity by well-dressed strangers or when a stranger, however dressed, appears uninvited at your front door.) What are some of the signs we should note that indicate the odds of deception are high? One sign is that the source is a commercial, an advertisement, or a sales representative.


Your baloney detector should go into red alert whenever someone is trying to sell you something. Why? Sellers aren't motivated to tell you the whole truth. They don't mention potentially harmful consequences of buying their product or service unless they're required to by law and even then they will try to word things so obscurely that you won't understand the danger. Sellers aren't motivated to tell you that most people don't get rich using their scheme. They are not going to remind you that there are many products similar to theirs that are a better value. Need I go on? I'll mention just one more thing, one I've ranted about in many places, including my Skeptimedia piece about the seller of the Q-Ray bracelet (Why woo always wins) and in my Dictionary entry on Kevin Trudeau. People like Que Te Park, Kevin Trudeau, Silvia Browne, Benny Hinn, and Peter Popoff rarely get prosecuted or punished for their activities. If the deceivers of the world were sent to prison for ripping off their marks, maybe people would be more skeptical of similar people making similar claims.


Just one more thing before I get to Jean and her scheme for making thousands a month off Google, Clickbank, and eBay. We should never forget Bob Steiner's mantra: anybody can get taken. There is no foolproof method for detecting deception that the average person can use, at least not yet. Someday there may be some technology that anybody can use to ferret out the liars and cheats from the honest folk. (Few of us will attain the ability, or work under the conditions, of a Mark Salem or a Banachek, mentalists who have developed a very useful skill: they seem to be able to tell when people are telling the truth and when they are not.)


Now, on to Jean and her scheme. The first thing you see when you go to her website is a picture of an attractive lady with arms folded across her belly as she looks right at you. There is a large banner that reads:


Let Me Help You Make $5,000 or More Monthly with Google & Clickbank Using a Simple System Which I Will Create for You!


The fact that this is an ad that uses an attractive person who says she wants to create a simple system for you so that you can make lots of money should set off about five chili peppers in your obscenity bank. Why bother to go on to try to determine whether this is on the level? I don't know, but I had one reader who wrote me about this scheme. He said he'd been scammed before in emails telling him he'd won the Google or Yahoo lottery. He didn't want to get taken again. He at least recognized that there was something fishy about Jean's pitch. Still, he needed reassurance that what looked like a false promise was indeed a false promise.


Beneath Jean's picture is the caption: Sit back and let me help you make money on the internet with a secret system that I use to make people big cash on the internet daily!


What a sweetheart! She's going to do all the work with her secret system and give me a heap of cash for her troubles. Unbelievable! Yes, it is.


In case the mark wants some evidence that Jean is legit, there is banner ad at the top of her page that tells you that her Internet secrets were featured in "the number one home based business magazine in the nation," Entrepreneur Magazine. Never heard of it? She's probably banking on your ignorance. She doesn't tell you what was said about her secrets in the magazine, however. I wonder why? Did she take out an ad in the magazine and count that as being featured in it? Did the magazine criticize her "program." I don't know and Jean's not offering any details.


When you open Jean's site, a window slides in from the left and plops down in the center of the screen. It says :


Do you want to Make [sic] $30,000 Monthly!


Subscribe Now [sic] and I will show you a new system created by my Son [sic] who gets paid an average of $30,000 monthly!


This Program ROCKS!


She must love her son to capitalize the word. Anyway, now we learn this is a family operation. Her son created the system and she helps people use it to get rich. Once you've filled in your name and email address the window vanishes and you can now read her letter to you, dated on the day you access the site:


Dear Friend,


No games, tricks, or schemes, I am going to personally help you make an excellent monthly income on the internet with the help of Google and Clickbank.


I've decided to share an Amazing Secret that is making thousands of people Rich on the internet everyday with Google and Clickbank! I am not pulling your leg! I am physically going to work for you and do all I can to help you receive a monthly income from $5,000 to $10,000 month after month from a combination of Google and Clickbank!


I am going to show you a program that Google and Clickbank has opened to the public that is making a tremendous amount of people a lot of cash on a monthly basis, within 4-16 weeks from a system I have Mastered!


If you are not already familiar with Google's Adsense Program and Clickbank or you're aware of it but just don't know how to really profit from it, then you have come to the right place. I will do everything Step by Step to help you make thousands of dollars every month on the internet with Google and Clickbank.


None of the claims in the letter ring true with me except what she says in the last paragraph. If you are not familiar with Adsense or don't know how it works, you've come to the right place. I take this to mean, if you know how Adsense works, you know I'm full of rubbish.


I'm an Adsense affiliate and know something about the program. I'd never heard of Clickbank before but a check of their website advises those who are signing up to be an affiliate: "Accounts associated with network abuse (including unwelcome email, crossposting, mousetraps, or respawning windows) will be suspended without notice." Wikipedia defines mousetrapping as "a technique used by some websites (usually pornographic websites) to keep visitors from leaving their website, either by launching an endless series of pop-up ads—known colloquially as a circle jerk—or by re-launching their website in a window that cannot be closed (sometimes this window runs like a stand-alone application, and the taskbar and the browser's menu become inaccessible). Many websites that do this also employ browser hijackers to reset the user's default homepage." Is this Jean's "secret"? I have no idea.


Jean goes on. "Once you take me up on my offer and let me put it to work for you, you may decide to walk into your current employer's office and tell them you QUIT!!! Take my word on it!" But why would I take the word of a stranger who is trying to sell me something? Because Jean can be trusted. How do we know? It's her duty to make you rich, she says. "Now that I have figured out how to make people an excellent monthly income on the internet with Google and Clickbank, it's now my duty to prove to you this is Real! Note: I have seriously been pushed to reveal this hidden information that truly works, to the thousands of people interested in making money on the internet. I want to help others fulfill their dreams of financial freedom. I am giving to you what took me one year to learn....It's just not fair for people who have figured out how this is done to be entirely selfish or so afraid that if they reveal this secret, the market may become dangerously over flooded. IT'S NOT TRUE. There is enough business to go around for everyone to succeed."


Deep into the ad you find out that to take advantage of Jean's secret she's going to have to build several websites for you. Others would charge you $5,000 for this service, but not Jean.


If you're still questioning her motives, consider why she is so generous:


I like helping people make money on the internet as it makes me feel really good, plus Google rewards me when your [sic] start making money with them! This takes nothing away from you because Google also makes money when I help build your 300+ pages and people start clicking on the google [sic] ads from your site. So you see, it's a Win-Win Deal for You, Me and Google. As far as Clickbank goes, I just added them in for you as an added bonus even though they don't reward me for doing so!


What a humanitarian! But, in case you still don't trust her, she has some hard evidence for the skeptic: she has posted what she says are screen shots of her AdSense account, one which shows her making about a thousand dollars a day. She also posts AdSense reports for friends who are identified by numbers. Most of the numbers are too blurry to make out, except for the alleged amount earned. One, however, is clear enough to read. Friend #6 shows 19,339 page impressions, 520 clicks, and $100.62 Earnings for a single day. I just checked my AdSense account and today (March 7 at about noon) I have had 4,773 impressions, 53 clicks, and have earned $4.44. Yesterday, I had 12,764 impressions and 168 clicks. I earned $18.83. I must be doing something wrong. Or right. Jean doesn't say what kind of site she's going to open for you, but if it's pornographic and uses mousetrapping and respawning windows, you might not be pleased.


Jean also posts a copy of a check from Google to Friend #8 for $901,733.84. I suppose you are to drool over it and dream that you too will get a big check in the mail. Maybe Ed McMahon will deliver it personally.


In case you still don't trust her, Jean also provides a few glowing testimonials from alleged satisfied customers. (Would these people lie? Jean vouches for them and they vouch for Jean. Why so skeptical?) What is most interesting is that Jean does not mention how much you are going to have to pay her for her work. As a bonus, Jean has a link to another page where she will reveal her "credit secrets" that will show you how you can repair a bad credit check. A further bonus is a link to a page where she will reveal the secret to making tons of money on eBay. Jean has more secrets than The Secret! However, there is no link to buy Jean's secret. There is an "affiliate program" link that takes you to a page where you can download a few "free" books and buy advertising. (Offering something "free" to buyers is a common ploy, aimed, I think, at making the mark feel obligated.) However, when you click on the link that reads Click Here for the Best Banner Adverting Deal on the Internet it takes you to another page that proclaims that an unidentified "I" will help you make $5,000 a month from Google free of charge. When you click on the Click here link, it takes you back to the page from which your started. I'd call this a circle jerk even if that's technically incorrect.


How does Jean make money? She has Google ads on her pages and makes some money from click-throughs. She sells banner ads. The allegedly free books have the name Michael Rasmussen listed as the author and the note that Jean and Michael Rasmussen are the source of the free books. (Is Michael the son she mentions? I have no idea.) These books are not available from Amazon, but you can click on Michael's name and be taken to a page with a pasted up letter testifying to his prowess as a Clickbank agent. The letter is signed by Jennifer Johannsen, Operations Manager of something or other. All you have to do is give him your email address. Michael and Jean swear that "We will NOT rent, trade, or release your information to any third party for any reason - ever. We respect YOUR email privacy and hate spam with a passion." This must be true since they vouch for each other.


I gave them my first name (that's all they wanted) and my email address. I finally got to the page where they ask me for money. It was a lot of work but finally I got to a page where I heard a voice message as I was reading it. The voice told me that I was being given incredible books and other stuff on e-marketing but that if I did not sign up right now the offer would not appear again. This is the old "hurry while supplies last, for a limited time only" pitch. Anyway, I was surprised to find that Jean's offer to build my web pages isn't mentioned and I'm asked to send Michael $19 with the advisory: "This is a one time offer and may be pulled at any time without warning."


I have to give Jean and Michael points for creating a labyrinth bound to confuse Internet tyros. Trust me, you can learn all about Google AdSense by going to the Google AdSense page and it won't cost you a penny. If you are not based in the United States, there is a dropdown menu with links to many other countries at the top of the page.


Well, I never heard from Jean, even though I sent her my email address. I did hear from Michael, though, but he didn't send me the promised free books. In fact, he didn't even mention them. But he did send me the following note:


Bob, this email contains an important update about the Sky High Auctions product. I just negotiated some extra bonuses for you, as well as a special discount (everyone else will have to pay more, but not you). Read this entire email right away.


What a swell guy. I haven't given him a dime yet and he's already working hard for me! He then proceeds to a very long pitch with three links to this Sky High Auctions page. Each pitch can be reduced to the following one:


This isn't some crappy "eBay for idiots" guide. This is a comprehensive video course that contains the combined wisdom of 15 of eBay's top powersellers. These guys do a combined 11 million dollars per year. I don't know about you, but I'd say that they're worth listening to.


That's right. He wants to sell me a video course that will show me how to make a ton of money on eBay. And even though Jean allayed my fears that if everybody followed her advice the competition would be stiff and we'd be reducing our chances of making tons of money, Michael says he has only 19 copies left of this video course. He claims he made only 75 copies to begin with! The page includes a bunch of testimonials and a YouTube video of a picture of two wankers and a talkover about how they are making tons of money on eBay. Finally, Michael offers to take some real money from me: the program costs $167.


The thing is, Michael, I couldn't sleep last night so I got up and turned on the TV. Guess what? Some swell-looking fellow is telling an attractive lady that he has found the secret to making tons of money on eBay and he'll sell his program for some ridiculously low price because he just likes to help people. I forget his name, but it wasn't Michael. He, too, had several folks give their testimonials. One guy says he's used the secret system for only three weeks and has already made $175,000. I think his name was Bill or Joe.


These scummers are banking on not just greed and trust, but on ignorance as well. Some of you are probably thinking that I mean stupidity, not ignorance, but I don't. To think that only stupid people get scammed (and, of course, we're not stupid so we can't be taken) is wrong and a defense mechanism. Sure, some people who get conned are people with low cognitive skills who are taken advantage of by unscrupulous thieves. Anybody can get taken! The ignorance these folks bank on is the lack of knowledge regarding advertising laws and the sociological facts regarding obedience of those (or any other) laws. You've probably seen the ad (I think it is for some diet product) in which a nice looking lady says "We couldn't say it on TV if it wasn't true!" That's not true. You can say things that aren't true on TV ads. It's illegal to mislead people and defraud them, but very few advertisers are prosecuted for this crime.


Years ago a famous TV personality, Danny Thomas, did TV commercials for Instant Sanka Coffee. He was asked one time if he drank it himself. "Hell no," he said. "Have you ever tasted it?" Squeaky clean Pat Boone, he with the smooth voice and white clothes who used to baptize people in his southern California swimming pool, got into trouble for doing commercials and ads with his lovely daughters. They were claiming that their perfect skin was due to using some facial cream or acne medicine, which they did not need or use. The people who testified to how much money they made in real estate on the infomercial with former TV Highway Patrolman Eric Estrada were actors who were paid to give their testimonials.


The simple rule is: don't go to advertisements or commercials for information. Or, don't trust people who are trying to sell you something, no matter how trustworthy they seem. Are ads always false and misleading? No, of course not. But you are wasting your time trying to ferret out the truthful ones from the deceivers.


Finally, if you want to learn about making money on eBay, Clickbank, or Google, contact them directly or talk to people you know who have experience with the program you are interested in. For info on eBay, click here. For info on Clickbank, click here. Let me know if you make $5,000 a month. I'll pass on your secret."

Subscribe today, send a blank email to newsletter-subscribe.DeleteThis@lists.skepdic.com


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COOLSITES 127 cool links

I harvest what I believe to be the best links from the best sources that are safe, fun, informative, useful and just plain cool. I categorize them and edit their descriptions for clarity.

To see the full newsletter with all of the COOLSITES links please click and bookmark this link: http://luem42.googlepages.com/coolsites.html and check it each week. Thank you. Mark.
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