U.S. Senators Send Joint Letter to FCC Chairman Genachowski on Call Completion

January 30th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in Telephone Services

Twenty-five members of the U.S. Senate sent a joint letter Jan. 18 to FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski to reiterate the problem of voice calls failing to complete on rural networks and urge that the Commission identify the cause of these call terminations.  The signatories include Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.), Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.), Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), Sen. Daniel Coats (R-Ind.), Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), Sen. Bernard Sanders (I-Vt.), Sen. John Tester (D-Mont.), Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Sen. Mark Udall (D-Colo.), Sen. Mike Johanns (R-Neb.), Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Sen. James Risch (R-Idaho).

Source: OPASTCO ( http://www.opastco.org/ )

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New telephone directories have been delivered

January 30th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in jamadots News

The new 2012 telephone directories were delivered earlier this month. If you have not received yours, or if you would like to request additional copies, please stop by or contact your local customer service center.

Continue reading for an interesting editorial by Eric Ernst of the Sarasota Herald Tribune:

In defense of the phone book

(Click on story title to be redirected)

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20111208/columnist/111209586?p=1&tc=pg

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E-MAIL WARNING! – Arm Yourself in the Battle Against Botnets

January 30th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in Technology

In a recent Microsoft Security Intelligence eport, the company warns that computers with older operating systems are more susceptible to infections from bot-related malware. What is a bot? The term is short for robot. It refers to what your computer becomes when criminals distribute malicious software that forces your computer to perform automated tasks over the Internet–without you knowing it. Large numbers of bots form a network called a botnet.

Criminals use botnets to send out spam e-mail messages, spread viruses, attack computers and servers, and commit other kinds of crime and fraud. It can be difficult to tell if your computer has become part of a botnet but there are warning signs including:

  • Your computer slows down and seems sluggish.
  • You receive mysterious e-mails accusing you of sending spam.
  • You find e-mail messages in your outbox that you didn’t send.

If you suspect your computer may be infected, you can visit https://consumersecuritysupport.microsoft.com and click on “I think my computer is infected” to access the online Safety Scanner.

To strengthen your computer’s defenses in the battle against botnets, Microsoft recommends the following:

  • Install antivirus and antispyware programs from a trusted source.
  • Keep all software up to date.
  • Use strong passwords and keep them secret.
  • Never turn off your firewall.

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Buyer and Seller Beware – Tips to Avoid Scams on Craigslist

January 30th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in Lifestyle

Craigslist, an online collection of location-based classified ads, can be great for finding sofas, apartments, and even jobs. But as with all online activities, there is the potential for misuse. Scammers can be found virtually everywhere, including Craigslist, and they’re out to get your money in any way they can.

Some popular tactics include listing items that don’t actually exist and getting you to pay for them; getting you to pay for your purchase through a phony escrow account; getting you to pay for items through Western Union or another service that doesn’t trace the receiver; getting you to reveal bank account or other financial information; and offering to pay more for an item that you’ve listed, then getting you to send a refund that reveals your banking information.

Craigslist offers several tips for avoiding these scams, but the #1 piece of advice that will prevent 99 percent of all scams is to deal only with local folks, and meet them in person. Here are a few more rules:

  • Never send funds via a wire service such as Western Union or Moneygram.
  • Beware of fake cashier’s checks and money orders.
  • Don’t believe any guarantees “from Craigslist,” since Craigslist is not actually involved in any transaction.
  • Never purchase an item or rent a living space you haven’t seen.
  • Refuse to submit to credit or background checks until you know the potential employer or landlord is legitimate.

Source: http://www.craigslist.org/about/scams

For added protection, trust your instincts. Be wary of ads that look as though they were written by someone who does not use English as their primary language (check for spelling errors and awkward usage). Also make sure you are really on Craigslist; it’s easy to make a typo and end up on a site that looks like Craigslist but is really a scammer site.

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Ex-U.S. Spy Chief says may take crisis for new cyber law

January 30th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in Technology

(Reuters) – U.S. intelligence agencies have unique capabilities that can help protect American companies from cyber espionage and attack, but it will probably take a crisis to change laws to allow that type of cooperation, a former spy chief said on Monday.

Intelligence agencies like the National Security Agency are authorized to operate abroad but generally are restricted from working within the United States,

“Until we have a banking collapse or electric power goes off in the middle of a snowstorm for eight weeks, or something of that magnitude, we’re likely just to talk about it and not do much,” Mike McConnell, former director of national intelligence, said.

The Republican-controlled House of Representatives and the Democratic-controlled Senate have separate efforts under way on legislation aimed at improving cybersecurity.

The House intelligence committee in December approved a bill that would allow U.S. spy agencies to share cyber-threat intelligence with private companies. Some critics worry that could lead to government surveillance of private data.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has said the Senate will take up “comprehensive” cybersecurity legislation this year.

“There are unique things that the government can do. For example code-breaking. The private sector out there does not do code-breaking,” McConnell, a former National Security Agency director, told Reuters in an interview.

“How would you harness that capability and then make it available to the private sector in a way that their infrastructure could be better protected?”

A U.S. intelligence report last year pointed the finger at China and Russia as using cyber espionage to steal U.S. trade and technology secrets.

McConnell gives an example that if NSA, which conducts electronic eavesdropping to detect foreign threats, observed a cyberthreat against the U.S. private sector, “NSA is powerless to do a thing other than issue a report.”

He said in the area of cyber exploitation, such as reading an adversary’s mail without leaving fingerprints, the United States, Britain and Russia are probably the best.

The United States also has the ability to conduct cyber attacks, which would be to degrade or destroy an adversary’s computerized system, and has used it.

Has the United States used its cyber attack capability? “Yes,” McConnell said. Did it work? “Yes.”

McConnell, now vice chairman at the Booz Allen Hamilton consulting firm in charge of cyber activities, did not elaborate on the use of a cyber attack capability.

“Do we have the ability to attack, degrade or destroy? Sure. If you do that, what are the consequences? That is the question,” he said.

McConnell said the priority is to protect the country’s critical infrastructure such as the financial sector, the electric power grid and transportation from cyber attack and stop the theft of intellectual property through cyber espionage.

“There will be a thousand voices on what is the right thing to do,” and it will probably require a crisis to reach consensus, he said.

“All I’m arguing is the government has unique capability, figure out a way to harness the capability in the defense of the nation.”

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Super Bowl Ad Tracker: Sneak Peeks From Coke, Audi, Cars.com, Suzuki

January 30th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in Lifestyle

The huge pricetag for Super Bowl advertisements keeps all but the biggest and boldest brands away. But with inventiveness, other brands are finding ways to ride the Big Game zeitgeist without having to fork over Big Game prices.

Suzuki, for example, in the past has proven adept at skirting the expensive national spots in the Super Bowl in favor of a regional strategy, and the Japanese auto brand is doing the same thing this year — even bigger.

Instead of joining the cacophony of national car ads at $3.5 million a pop, Suzuki will focus its regional buy in 21 core cold-weather markets for ads to run in locally allocated slots during the game. Suzuki will highlight the all-wheel-drive version of its Kizashi sport sedan in a slush spot (titled “Sled”) which you can watch below — along with Super Bowl 46 sneak peeks from Audi, Coca-Cola and Cars.com.

Super Bowl Sunday is huge for restaurants and CPG brands, as well, and because of the massive nationwide consumption of snack foods, many of them do whatever they can to tie in. Pizza Patron, for example, a Dallas-based chain of about a hundred restaurants, has introduced just in time for the game four new combos of wings, pizzas and QuesoStix.

Big brands, meanwhile, keep on teasing their Super Bowl 46 spots. One of the more amusing sneak peeks broke today — Audi’s spot featuring vampires vs. the daylight-simulating properties of the Audi S7′s headlights:

While NBC is broadcasting the game as part of the Super Bowl rotation year-to-year, that hasn’t stopped rival networks from stealing some business on the edges. ABC, for instance, scored Volkswagen’s Super Bowl teaser ad last week starring a pack of dogs barking out the Star Wars theme. ABC was able to grab VW’s spot because of a mega-placement of the new Volkswagen Passat in a mid-January episode of the network’s popular sitcom, The Middle. Not only did the show’s Heck family spend the entire episode driving, living in and extolling the virtues of the neighbors’ new sedan, but also the episode was Super Bowl themed: The Big Game actually will be played in Indianapolis, and the show is set in Indiana.

Less mightily, PETA also is tapping into Super Bowl fever with billboards in and around Boston, New York and Indianapolis — the three key cities for this year’s game, in case you didn’t get the connection — pleading with carnivores passing by to forgo their favorite Big Game foods. The message, beside a photo of a couple of little chicks, is, “Let them keep their damn wings for one day, OK?” And the “small print” offers “Vegan Super Bowl” recipes at the PETA website.

In other Super Bowl animal-watching, Coca-Cola is preparing two versions of its Super Bowl spot, featuring the brand’s iconic polar bears, according to AdAge.com. Executives will choose the spot during the game, with cokepolarbowl.com pointing to Facebook as its social viewing party hub for the promotion. The spots:

Meanwhile, Cars.com is getting Super Bowl exposure the old-fashioned way — buying an ad during the game, once again. And true to one Super Bowl tradition, the commercial — featuring what Adweek cheekily dubs an “excitable appendage” that recalls How to Get Ahead in Advertising (and Men in Black) — turns out to be a head-scratcher. Cars.com paid $3.5 million for this? Well, you be the judge:

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Snow Plow Parade

January 30th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in Videos

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Michigan Ice Fest – February 4th in Munising

January 17th, 2012 | No Comments | Posted in Uncategorized

More information >>HERE<<

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