[Vtigercrm-commits] vtigercrm-commits, can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?

OmegaK Heart Attack Fighter OmegaKHeartAttackFighter at p4samuljiti.com
Mon Aug 12 09:20:51 UTC 2013


Can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?

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 Washington Post was an order to Verizon, says that access to 
phone "metadata" is restricted to "authorized personnel who have received 
appropriate and adequate training."At the same time, a footnote says the 
court understands that "technical personnel responsible for NSA's underlying 
corporate infrastructure and the transmission" of the data "will not receive 
special training."The order goes on to describe how a "store" of information 
is created, and how trained personnel can query the data using certain 
criteria and search for "valid foreign intelligence purposes."That information, 
the order says, can be shared among properly trained NSA analysts. And 
from there, top officials including the NSA director can authorize certain 
information be shared outside of the NSA with other "Executive Branch personnel," 
provided it is "related to counterterrorism" and sharing it is necessary 
to understanding that information. This would include federal security agencies 
like the FBI.This information, according to the court order, includes "U.S. 
person identifying information" -- and can be stored for five years.The 
document lays out a series of steps that are supposed to be 
taken to ensure that access to the database remains limited.But a separate 
document released Wednesday by the DNI reported that "there have been a 
number of technical compliance problems and human implementation errors" 
in programs that collect both bulk phone and email records.No 
Giuseppe "Joe" Giudice, 43, left, and his wife, Teresa Giudice, 41, of 
Montville Township, N.J., walk out of Martin Luther King, Jr. Courthouse 
after a court appearance, Tuesday, July 30, 2013, in Newark, N.J.APThis 
Sept. 13, 2009 file photo originally released by Oral-B Pulsonic shows "Real 
Housewives of New Jersey" stars, Teresa Giudice, left, and her husband Joe 
Giudice at the Caravan Fashion Show in New York. Teresa and Giuseppe 
Joe Giudice were charged in a 39-count indictment handed up Monday, July 
29, 2013, in Newark, N.J.APJoe Gorga, left, Teresa Giudice, center, and 
Jacqueline Laurita.BravoTeresa Giudice and husband Giuseppe Joe Giudice 
may not be the only ones losing sleep over their latest trouble 
with the law: their costars on Bravos Real Housewives of New Jersey 
and the network itself could get wrapped up in their legal woes.Because 
Bravo is an entertainment network -- and not a news agency -- 
it likely does not maintain any First Amendment privileges, meaning execs 
and personalities from the network may be called to court, New Jersey-based 
attorney Darren Del Sardo told FOX411s Pop Tarts column.Employees filming 
for Bravo can certainly be called as witnesses to establish that the 
Giudices were perhaps making large purchases in cash during the time of 
the bankruptcy, he explained. The network could also be called as a 
witness to support an increase of anticipated income paid by Bravo to 
Teresa that was not disclosed in her 

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