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jj1

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About jj1

  • Birthday 06/02/1983

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    its a secret...
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    07 Honda VT1100c2, 05 GSXR 1000

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  1. where do they set up downtown durning the games to buy tickets or where b the link for online purchase?
  2. wow, thats a cool place and a good day for a bike night
  3. its not,"beat to shit" Camera is not working and the Only pics that I currently have are when the bike was dirty.
  4. Please see Craigslist ad http://columbus.craigslist.org/mcy/1821408906.html thanks for looking
  5. weather Permitting I should be there
  6. (CBS) At a warehouse in New Jersey, 6,000 used copy machines sit ready to be sold. CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian reports almost every one of them holds a secret. Nearly every digital copier built since 2002 contains a hard drive - like the one on your personal computer - storing an image of every document copied, scanned, or emailed by the machine. In the process, it's turned an office staple into a digital time-bomb packed with highly-personal or sensitive data. If you're in the identity theft business it seems this would be a pot of gold. "The type of information we see on these machines with the social security numbers, birth certificates, bank records, income tax forms," John Juntunen said, "that information would be very valuable." Juntunen's Sacramento-based company Digital Copier Security developed software called "INFOSWEEP" that can scrub all the data on hard drives. He's been trying to warn people about the potential risk - with no luck. "Nobody wants to step up and say, 'we see the problem, and we need to solve it,'" Juntunen said. This past February, CBS News went with Juntunen to a warehouse in New Jersey, one of 25 across the country, to see how hard it would be to buy a used copier loaded with documents. It turns out ... it's pretty easy. Juntunen picked four machines based on price and the number of pages printed. In less than two hours his selections were packed and loaded onto a truck. The cost? About $300 each. Until we unpacked and plugged them in, we had no idea where the copiers came from or what we'd find. We didn't even have to wait for the first one to warm up. One of the copiers had documents still on the copier glass, from the Buffalo, N.Y., Police Sex Crimes Division. It took Juntunen just 30 minutes to pull the hard drives out of the copiers. Then, using a forensic software program available for free on the Internet, he ran a scan - downloading tens of thousands of documents in less than 12 hours. The results were stunning: from the sex crimes unit there were detailed domestic violence complaints and a list of wanted sex offenders. On a second machine from the Buffalo Police Narcotics Unit we found a list of targets in a major drug raid. The third machine, from a New York construction company, spit out design plans for a building near Ground Zero in Manhattan; 95 pages of pay stubs with names, addresses and social security numbers; and $40,000 in copied checks. But it wasn't until hitting "print" on the fourth machine - from Affinity Health Plan, a New York insurance company, that we obtained the most disturbing documents: 300 pages of individual medical records. They included everything from drug prescriptions, to blood test results, to a cancer diagnosis. A potentially serious breach of federal privacy law. "You're talking about potentially ruining someone's life," said Ira Winkler. "Where they could suffer serious social repercussions." Winkler is a former analyst for the National Security Agency and a leading expert on digital security. "You have to take some basic responsibility and know that these copiers are actually computers that need to be cleaned up," Winkler said. The Buffalo Police Department and the New York construction company declined comment on our story. As for Affinity Health Plan, they issued a statement that said, in part, "we are taking the necessary steps to ensure that none of our customers' personal information remains on other previously leased copiers, and that no personal information will be released inadvertently in the future." Ed McLaughlin is President of Sharp Imaging, the digital copier company. "Has the industry failed, in your mind, to inform the general public of the potential risks involved with a copier?" Keteyian asked. "Yes, in general, the industry has failed," McLaughlin said. In 2008, Sharp commissioned a survey on copier security that found 60 percent of Americans "don't know" that copiers store images on a hard drive. Sharp tried to warn consumers about the simple act of copying. "It's falling on deaf ears," McLaughlin said. "Or people don't feel it's important, or 'we'll take care of it later.'" All the major manufacturers told us they offer security or encryption packages on their products. One product from Sharp automatically erases an image from the hard drive. It costs $500. But evidence keeps piling up in warehouses that many businesses are unwilling to pay for such protection, and that the average American is completely unaware of the dangers posed by digital copiers. The day we visited the New Jersey warehouse, two shipping containers packed with used copiers were headed overseas - loaded with secrets on their way to unknown buyers in Argentina and Singapore http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/04/19/eveningnews/main6412439.shtml
  7. jj1

    OR bike nights 2010

    well I am glad I stated this thread to get some ideas, if anyone of the events team or a mod wants to take lead. By all means... the has been fun to this point. and to the comments that it is only march.... well that is actually kinda late to be thinking about this anyways. Most of the places that are having bike nights start advertising them first of march to get business ready, and most of them start next week. there is a lot that goes into getting a Bar/restaurant ready for a big passionate group of people and providing entertainment for them. If we don't get an OR bike night this year somewhere than that is what it is, but we could always find a place that has one set up that isnt that popular yet and make it our own thing. With that said I would suggest RoadHouse 66 http://www.roadhouse66.com/ they have bike nights wed and thurs night.
  8. i used canyon dancers when i took 4 bikes in my trailer to Daytona for bike week... not a single loose bike....
  9. I rock two monitors with a pretty cool screen saver http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=1236524267949
  10. some one should ask this question to Tomcat0403..........
  11. jj1

    OR bike nights 2010

    Do we have one? Has anyone been working on anything that they could use some help? or do we just plan for a different bike night on different sides of town each week? I would prefer that what ever we do we try to make it a Tuesday or Thursday night gathering. Lets see what ppl think!!
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