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Bilderberg Group
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Infographic showing how members of the Bilderberg are connected to absolutely everything
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All the most shocking things about Scientology, according to Leah Remini's revealing show
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All the most shocking things about Scientology, according to Leah Remini's revealing show
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Twitter staff have been caught on camera revealing that the company has direct access to - and monetises - some of its users most private information. Hidden-camera conversations with Twitter engineers were conducted by the undercover journalism group 'Project Veritas'.
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The holidays are over, the New Year is here, and many of us are finding our wallets lighter and our pants tighter. The last thing we need is to “fix a problem we don’t have,” as ABC points out in its coverage of a new Better Business Bureau (BBB) report on tech support scams. Scammers apparently are more geared up than ever to take our money in exchange for "fixing" our already-functioning computers. If you think you’re insusceptible to the ruse, ABC disagrees, noting that the question is not whether, but when you will become a target of these widespread scams. So educate yourself for the inevitable: Read the BBB’s report on how scammers reach their victims (through pop-u…
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Scammers are all up in your businesses, so why make it easier for them to steal your personal information? That vacation photo you posted on Facebook or the snap of you posing in front of your home can pose a real privacy risk (as Kim Kardashian and Colts Long Snapper Matt Overton famously learned). Fortunately, the Consumer Federation of America created a new blog post with tips for protecting personal information, both in the online world and—you may still be familiar with this—the offline world. The article offers advice for the secure use of public Wi-Fi, as well as safe mobile app and social media use. It also gives real-world suggestions to help you keep thieves awa…
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If a loved one is hooked on opioids, you might be desperate to help ‘em wean off and stay off. Unfortunately, uncaring opportunists get referral fees (aka kickbacks) to send people (often with health insurance) to worthless, unlicensed “treatment programs” that don’t curb the cravings. Once the customer (or a loved one) realizes the program is trash, they may have already used up their insurance benefits or (god forbid) even mortgaged a home to pay for the costly (non)treatment! The problem is big in New York, Florida and other states. Here, a representative for New York’s Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services tells consumers what to look out for. He recommend…
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· Seattle-based writer Kelly Clay has reason to suspect Uber Eats drivers might be grazing on your greens. After placing a recent Uber Eats order, Clay waited for her Cobb salad to arrive, only to watch on the app as the driver passed her home without delivering it. When she approached Uber about the problem, she was told she would not receive a refund for the purchased food. This led her to wonder, can a delivery driver’s low pay, long drives and hunger make it more appealing to dash off and dine on your food than deliver it? Maybe. It seemed like the perfect crime, and Clay even found an online Uber driver forum where sticky-fingered deliverers discussed ways to…
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· We’ve always known scammers are sick; maybe that’s why they’re trying to get your health insurance information? Whatever the reason, they’ve increasingly been calling and pretending to be with Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance. When a target picks up the phone, they’ll say that they need to replace an insurance card, collect payment on a past-due bill or otherwise obtain personal information because there’s a “problem with the account” or they need to “update the records,” “confirm your address,” etc. We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: Never give your information to some rando on the other end of the line (no matter how convincing the pitch may seem). I…
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We’re of the mindset that clean water is safe water. Unfortunately, that can’t be said of those trying to make a buck by selling the “health conscious” on what they’re calling “raw water”: untreated H20 (often sourced from who knows where). While straight-from-the-spring water can be safe, experts point out that “the cleanliness of the water depends on things you can't see—whether herds of elk or moose or caribou have relieved themselves in a stream that you're drinking from and left it full of parasites” (that can cause a very unpleasant gut disease called giardia). Or “whether there has been groundwater contamination from naturally occurring elements such as arsenic, ra…
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This month it’s (drumroll please)…coffee enemas! The website promises that the $135 enemas will “supercharge your detox,” when in fact (super ouch!) they could perforate your colon. The Mayo Clinic notes that “coffee enemas sometimes used in colon cleansing have been linked to several deaths.”
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