[8347] in linux-announce channel archive
Bad Credit or No Credit is Not a Disqualifier
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Sales)
Mon Oct 21 13:04:15 2013
From: "Sales" <Sales@uibyiz.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@uibyiz.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Mon, 21 Oct 2013 10:04:14 -0700
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Bad Credit or No Credit is Not a Disqualifier
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April 3, 2013: Bitcoin tokens at 35-year-old software engineer Mike Caldwell's
shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints physical versions of bitcoins, cranking
out homemade tokens with codes protected by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP
Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer,
looks over bitcoin tokens at his shop in Sandy, Utah. Caldwell mints
physical versions of bitcoins, cranking out homemade tokens with codes protected
by tamper-proof holographic seals.AP Photo/Rick BowmerApril 3, 2013: Mike
Caldwell, a 35-year-old software engineer, poses with bitcoin tokens at
his shop in Sandy, Utah.AP Photo/Rick BowmerNEW YORK With $600 stuffed
in one pocket and a smartphone tucked in the other, Patricio Fink
recently struck the kind of deal that's feeding the rise of a
new kind of money -- a virtual currency whose oscillations have pulled
geeks and speculators alike through stomach-churning highs and lows.The
Argentine software developer was dealing in bitcoins -- getting an injection
of the cybercurrency in exchange for a wad of real greenbacks he
handed to a pair of Australian tourists in a Buenos Aires Starbucks.
The visitors wanted spending money at black market rates without the risk
of getting roughed up in one of the Argentine capital's black market
exchanges. Fink wanted to pad his electronic wallet.In the safety of the
coffee shop, the tourists transferred Fink their bitcoins through an app
on their
RIO DE JANEIRO Public transit vans like the one in which
an American student was gang raped last month were banned Thursday from
Rio de Janeiro's touristy South Zone neighborhoods.The measure was floated
late last year as a way to help ease the city's chronic
traffic jams but gained urgency as a safety measure in the wake
of the March 30 attack on the American woman and her French
companion, who were attacked by a van driver and two other young
men who brutalized them for about six hours inside the vehicle.Under a
decree published Thursday in the local government's Official Journal, the
vans will be prohibited from operating in high-rent neighborhoods including
Ipanema and Leblon beaches, as well as Copacabana, where the two foreigners
boarded the van to travel to a nightlife hotspot in downtown. Exceptions
will be made for vans serving two "favela" hillside slums sandwiched between
high-rent South Zone neighborhoods, according to the decree, which takes
effect on Monday.Without the vans and with a key metro station closed
pending the extension of the subway, residents and workers in the South
Zone will need to rely on buses, taxis and private vehicles to
get around.The 12-seat vans are seen as a quicker alternative to buses
and largely travel the same routes. They will continue to ply the
poor, sprawling suburbs that ring this city of 6 million.Thursday's decree
was the second safety regulation for public vans put in place since
the
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.uibyiz.us/2635/82/261/775/1572.10tt71675797AAF15.php"><H3>Bad Credit or No Credit is Not a Disqualifier</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">A drawing of ruling party candidate Nicolas Maduro with a bird on
his fist with an inflatable doll of the late Hugo Chavez in
the background is held up as supporters move to the site
of Maduro's closing campaign rally in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday, April
11, 2013. Maduro, Chavez's hand-picked successor, assured last week during
a campaign rally that Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez's spirit appeared
to him in the form of a little bird that flew around
his head inside a wooden chapel to give him his blessing. He
is running for president against opposition candidate Henrique Capriles
in the presidential election set for Sunday, April 14. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)The
Associated PressVALENCIA, Venezuela It's just after nightfall and the power
is out again in untold hundreds of thousands probably millions
of Venezuelan homes. If the government knows how many,
it's not saying. It hasn't issued reports on problems in the public
power grid since 2010.In Venezuela's third-largest city, Pedro Martinez
dons a shirt for visitors drawn by the flicker of candles inside
his one-story, cement-block house in a middle-class district. The Caribbean
heat is sticky thick inside. A mesh hammock hangs by the front
door."This happens nearly every day," Martinez says of the blackout, holding
a candle close so a reporter can take notes. It's the day's
second outage. The first struck just after noon.It's been like this for
five years, pretty mu
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., left, and
the committee's ranking Democrat, Rep. C.A. "Dutch" Ruppersberger, D-Md.,
participate in a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington in late
2012. House lawmakers finalized legislation Wednesday that would give the
federal government a broader role helping banks, manufacturers and other
businesses protect themselves against cyberattacks.AP Photo/J. Scott ApplewhiteWASHINGTON
A House panel voted overwhelmingly Wednesday in favor of a new
data-sharing program that would give the federal government a broader role
in helping banks, manufacturers and other businesses protect themselves
against cyberattacks.The bill, approved 18-2 by the House Intelligence Committee,
would enable companies to disclose technical threat data to the government
and competitors in real-time, lifting antitrust restrictions and giving
legal immunity to companies if hacked, so long as they act in
good faith. In turn, companies could get access to government information
on cyberthreats that is often classified.It's a defiant move by pro-business
lawmakers who say concerns by privacy advocates and civil liberties groups
are overblown. But even while the panel's approval paves the way for
an easy floor vote next week, the legislation has yet to be
embraced outside the Republican-controlled House. Last year, a similar measure
never gained traction and eventually prompted a White House veto thre
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