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Freedom, Privacy and Prosperity in the Offshore World
Frustrate Snoops Who Consider Your Life Their Business
November 22, 2001



Dear A-Letter reader,

Your personal computer is spying on you.

Forget the "Code Red" or "W32.Nimda" computer "worm" that has crashed PCs worldwide --I'm talking about something far more threatening.

I know that's probably an astonishing thing for you to read. But it's true.

Just think: If someone was able to secretly stand behind you and monitor everything you've done on your PC, say, for the last six months, what would that person discover about you that you would prefer to keep private?

Thanks to new surveillance techniques, that's an appropriate comparison of the threat you face unless you take advance precautions that my new report describes.

It's amazing what your PC can reveal about you.

For instance, did you realize that when you press the "delete" key in Windows, the file you've highlighted isn't really deleted? Only the reference within Windows to that file is deleted. The data in the file remains forgotten on your hard disk unless it is written over by another file.

Just think. That love letter you wrote-but never sent-and thought was safely deleted? What about the AOL chat you were in the other nightwhat if your spouse found out?

Do you want an intruder to be able to read your diary? Or browse through your financial records-electronic checkbooks like Quicken, tax returns prepared by programs like TurboTax.

If you're a typical home or business PC user, you have lots of programs like this running on your PC. And unless you take precautions to protect this data from inadvertent compromise, you're a sitting duck.

Fortunately, it's possible to take some common-sense precautions to protect yourself. When you do, not only will you find yourself better protected than the average PC user, most "hackers" that would otherwise target your PC will pick on easier, less well-defended targets.

Want to find out more?

Just click on the link below to learn more about my blockbuster new report that describes, step-by-step, how you can protect your PC privacy, "Practical Privacy Strategies for Windows 95/98/2000."

Andre Bacard, author of The Computer Privacy Handbook, says "Mark Nestmann's 'Practical Privacy Strategies' will frustrate snoops who consider your life their business."

In my free report that you'll receive as a bonus when you purchase "Practical Privacy Strategies for Windows 95/98/2000", you'll learn:

--What information is "hidden" on your PC and how to remove it
--The best ways to restrict access to your PC
--The most secure storage media for your PC
--How to securely delete files so they can't be recovered
--Six steps to prevent laptop theft
--Why your children may be the biggest risk to PC privacy you face


Just click here to learn more.

Sincerely yours,


Mark Nestmann
Author, Practical Privacy Strategies for Windows 95/98/2000
Editor, The Sovereign Individual

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THE SOVEREIGN SOCIETY Ltd., 5 Catherine St., Waterford, Ireland. TEL: 353-51 844 068 FAX: 353-51 304 561. Copyright (C) 2001. All domestic & international rights reserved.



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