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 OnlinePrivacySoftware.com: Privacy Protection
Online Privacy Software Specialists
  

 

Are you being spied?

If you think the answer is no one you may be surprised to learn the truth!

Since the horrific events on 9/11, the Government has installed sophisticated "snooping" software right on your computer to the Internet... your ISP (Internet Service Provider). The very second you connect to the Internet, your every move is monitored and recorded. Sure, their main purpose in doing this is to catch terrorists and prevent potential acts of aggression, but don't think for a minute that all other information gathered is ignored and discarded.

And remember, the most frightening part is that devious programmers have likely used numerous "keyloggers" and other "hacking" techniques to infest your hard drive with unimaginable and often illegal spyware and programs, without you even knowing about it! ...but try and explain that to Big Brother.

How about your employer? Think you have nothing to worry about at work? If so, then you could not be more wrong. There is a strong and growing trend among employers to monitor and record everything an employee does that involves a computer... and it's perfectly legal for them to do so! As a matter of fact, a recent survey showed that 77% of all major U.S. companies record and review employee communications and Internet surfing habits.

Without professional protection you are absolutely defenseless against hackers, employers, friends, spouses and anyone you has the ability and knowledge to infect your PC with spyware. Never mind your actual surfing habits and personal e-mails and chats, just think for a second how easy it would be for a co-worker or even a third party to place monitoring software on your computer without you ever even realizing it.

Speaking of your spouse, your significant other is more likely than ever to monitor your computer time. Imagine your husband or wife being able to see every website you've visited and every keystoke you typed. What if he or she was able to read every e-mail you've sent and received, as well as view every detail of every chat session you've participated in... even if you think you're save your not!

And don't be naive enough to think your spouse would never do such as thing. The number of broken relationships and divorces continues to climb, and the frequency in which computer records are used has "evidence" in such cases has dramatically increased. When obtaining these "hidden" and "deleted" records is as easy as buying a piece of software, even the most technically-challenged spouses are able to do so with relative ease.

The bottom line? ...You ARE being watched! Whether it's your spouse, employer, or the Government, your Internet habits are being recorded and closely scrutinized. That's just the plain and simple fact. There literally is no way to prevent your computer from recording and storing this information, however, thankfully there is a way to permanently erase it. As a matter of fact, it's the ONLY way that you can be 100% certain you are safe and your privacy is protected.

Remember, deleting files on your computer will not protect you against spyware of spy software that tracks, records and saves events as they are happening!. Some of these spyware applications are intelligent enough to send the logged information remotely without you even knowing



Your Privacy Is Being Stripped Away from You

Here are just a few out of the hundreds of independent news stories and articles highlighting the frightening trend of computer monitoring and surveillance.

American Management Association reports that 77 percent of major U.S. companies record and review employee communications, including e-mail, Internet connections and computer files. ...The 77 percent figure is double what it was when the AMA did its first such survey in 1997"!

ABC News reports: “It’s becoming more and more common to see evidence from computers used as proof of adultery,” said Family Court Judge Stephen Bartlett who has issued numerous orders impounding computers.

CNN reports: "A study of human-resources professionals at 722 companies, found 74 percent saying they monitor workers' Internet use at work; 72 percent said they check on employees' e-mail..."

Divorce Support / About.com reports: "...cyber cheating can have a disastrous impact on your marriage whether it remains strictly cybersex or whether it moves to a physical affair.

The Standard reports: "Corporate snooping software finds an unexpected market: Husbands and wives hoping to catch cybercheaters in the act."

Statewatch reports: "Under the guise of tackling "terrorism" the European Union's Justice and Home Affairs Minister decided on 20 September 2001 that the law enforcement agencies needed to have access to all traffic data (phone-calls, mobile calls, e-mails, faxes and Internet usage) for the purpose of criminal investigations "in general."

The Washington Post reports: "...New Justice Department guidelines to be unveiled today will give FBI agents latitude to monitor Internet sites, libraries and religious institutions without first having to offer evidence of potential criminal activity, officials said yesterday."

The Washington Post reports: "...for a month he (her husband) watches her, dropping hints here and there that suggest he knows something, telling her he just has a "feeling." For the longest time, she can't figure out how he knows so much. By the time she does, well, it really doesn't matter. The marriage is over."

Wired News reports: "Experts say companies are under increasing pressure to monitor employees electronically, and workers should assume they are being watched. New products allow companies to monitor absolutely everything passing over their network, from e-mails to instant messages, in any language without the end user's knowledge."

Wired News reports: "The New York Times Company fired 23 employees in Virginia Tuesday for violating its e-mail policy..."

ZD Net reports: "You participated in creating an FBI file on me and all the rest of your customers, loyal Americans who have done nothing wrong and who now face the process of increased surveillance by virtue of the fact that we did business with you," Cohn wrote in a letter to the Southern California-based divers association."

ZD Net reports: "In the year that has elapsed since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the world's governments have moved to restrict privacy, boost surveillance and increase linking of databases, according to a survey released by a pair of advocacy groups on Tuesday."


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