Incorporating.. Your Privacy Proxy
on the Net
"There is no privacy, get over it..."
- Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy
If you doubt this, take a look at these recent headlines relating
to Internet privacy from the nation's "paper of record," The
New York Times:
"E-Commerce Report;
Critics Press Legal Assault on Tracking Of Web Users"
"Health Web Sites
Fail to Keep Personal Data Private, Study Finds"
"Increasingly,
E-Mail Users Find They Have Something to Hide"
"Privacy Advocates
Fault New DoubleClick Service"
"Fearing Hackers,
Environmental Agency Halts Access to Web Site"
"PC's Vulnerable
to Security Breaches, Experts Save"
"Report Rings
Alarm Bells About Privacy On the Inernet"
"Personal Business:
When It's Nobody's Business But Your Own"
The
problem is real. The answer can be simple. If you're serious about
preserving your privacy on the Internet, the Inc. Plan (USA) Internet
Privacy Package is the most important first step you can take to
safeguard yourself in cyberspace. This package will help you avoid:
With this package
you can create a safe Internet identity (using an anonymous Delaware
corporation) which will allow you to escape your privacy being
compromised while you browse the Internet and use e-mail. In conjunction
with practices outlined in the valuable "Practical Privacy Strategies
for Windows 95/98" by well respected privacy expert Mark Nestmann
you can safeguard against your personal identity being ripped off,
and prevent, when you are on-line, rogue web sites and programs
from browsing and copying files on your PC.
Why
You Need the Internet Privacy Package Now!
America is having
a love affair with the Internet. Dazzled by the immediacy of pulling
down information, the ease of communication, the allure of shopping
at two in the morning, we've been lulled into forgetting that the
Internet is one of the biggest threats to our privacy around! The
fact is that the Internet is one small step from Big Brother at
its most intrusive, most frightening, most Orwellian! And unlike
other threats--there is no legal assumption of privacy for internet
users. So even the small protections to privacy the law may offer
do not apply here
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