Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
Donald Trump Hits Back on Investment School $40M Suit
http://gma.yahoo.com/donald-trump-hits-back-investment-school-40m-suit-143506323--abc-news-topstories.html?vp=1
Donald Trump Hits Back on Investment School $40M Suit
By LINZIE JANIS, GERRY WAGSCHAL and SHARIAR RAHMANZADEH | Good Morning America – 11 hours agoRELATED CONTENT
- Play VideoTrump Calls Attorney General a 'Political Hack'2:47
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New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has filed a $40 million civil suit against Donald Trump, accusing "The Apprentice" TV star of defrauding thousands of people through Trump University by selling expensive iseminars based on false promises.Trump fired back at Schneiderman today, calling him "political hack from beginning to end."
"We have a school that's a terrific school. It did a fantastic job and I've never even heard of this, it had a 98 percent approval rating from students," Trump told George Stephanopoulos on "Good Morning America" this morning.
The suit, filed Saturday, alleges Trump and other defendants operated an elaborate bait and switch, even advising some students to raise their credit card limits for the next level of programs. Schneiderman claims the real estate mogul helped run a phony university that persuaded 5,000 people that they would become rich using real estate-investing techniques used by Trump himself. Instead, the lawsuit says, they were steered into useless seminars and failed to deliver promised apprenticeships.
"The complaint speaks for itself," Schneiderman told ABC News. "It was a lie from beginning to end. The only person who is guilty of a cheap publicity is America's leading expert on cheap publicity stunts -- Donald Trump."
Schneiderman is suing the program, Trump as the university chairman, and the former president of the university in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. He accuses them of engaging in persistent fraud, illegal and deceptive conduct and violating federal consumer protection law. The $40 million he seeks is mostly to pay restitution to consumers. The suit covers complaints dating to 2005 through 2011.
"They were fleeced. They were taken," Schneiderman says of the people who enrolled in Trump's program. "They were convinced by very persuasive motivational speakers and videos of Trump that they were going learn how to make money in real estate. They didn't get anything."
Trump says the lawsuit has no merit and he blasted Schneiderman.
"He comes up to my office looking for campaign contributions. He tells me lots of unflattering things about Obama. He tells me lots of unflattering things about Gov. Cuomo," Trump said of Schneiderman. "He was very upset with the fact that we didn't help him. He thought we should have helped him much more."
Schneiderman responded, saying Trump is trying to distract from the merits of this case.
"Mr. Trump supported someone against me in 2010. After I won the Democratic primary, he gave me one check. That was it," Schneiderman said in an appearance on CNBC today. "I wasn't asking him for campaign contributions."
State Board of Elections records show Trump contributed $12,500 to Schneiderman in October 2010, when Schneiderman was running for attorney general.
State Education Department officials had told Trump to change the name of Trump University, saying it lacked a license and didn't meet the legal definitions of a university. In 2010, Trump University was renamed the Trump Entrepreneur Institute.
Bob Guillo, 73, borrowed $35,000 to pay for the seminars and a retreat to help his son switch careers.
"They promised me that I would be one of the insiders. That whenever Trump put up condominium or any other type of building in the United States that we would get first crack at getting into it," Guillo said.
Guillo says he never got that opportunity and the closest he came to Trump was getting his picture taken in front of a life-size poster of the TV reality star.
"He took my self-respect and he embarrassed me," Guillo added.
Scheiderman said the three-day seminars didn't, as promised, teach consumers everything they needed to know about real estate.
Kevin Scott said he was also "humiliated" by Trump University. Scott attended a free Trump seminar in May 2008 and ultimately enrolled in a $25,000 mentorship program, which "overpromised and undelivered," Scott claims, when the "hard money lenders" the program advertised did not materialize.
"They had people built up that were interested and motivated and excited to take part in the program, and the return on the investment was certainly not there. It was quite the opposite," Scott told ABC News. "It was a huge, devastating blow."
Scott said he was forced to move out of his childhood home because of the massive debt brought on by Trump University.
"Donald Trump, you brought this on me," Scott told ABC News. "I bought into your program and I did all the right things. And you guys didn't deliver. .... It's time for you to step up and pay us back. Repay the money we paid to you and let's settle this."
The lawsuit claims many of the wannabe moguls were unable to land even one real estate deal and were left far worse off than before the lessons, facing thousands of dollars in debt for the seminar program once billed as a top quality university with Trump's "hand-picked" instructors. Trump did not pick the university's instructors and had not created the curriculums for any of its courses, the lawsuit alleges.
"He's totally wrong. I looked at every resume. I met with some people. I didn't meet with everybody. It's not my main business," Trump said. "We had a wonderful school with a fantastic approval rating. If you go to the Wharton School of Finance or if you got to Harvard, they don't have a 98 percent approval rating."
Trump also had a problem with the timing of the lawsuit.
"Who ever heard of a government agency bringing a lawsuit on a Saturday afternoon? He's been looking into this thing for two years," trump said. "He brings a lawsuit on Saturday afternoon right after he meets with President Obama. I think maybe it's a mini-IRS."
Schneiderman addressed the allegations as another diversion by Trump and pointed to the "overwhelming" evidence in this case.
"You can't run a bait-and-switch defraud 5,000 people out of $40 million and then distract things by saying things like, 'Oh, this is a conspiracy between me and President Obama,' or 'I was soliciting money from people who had some affiliation with him. The case speaks for itself. The documentary evidence is overwhelming," the attorney general said on CNBC.
"We're not going to sit down and let him make false accusations and let him lie about what the case is about. This is a classic bait -and switch scheme. You have to sent a message: no matter how powerful people are, aggressive they are about suing people who sue them -- which is something they does frequently -- they're not above the law. One set of rules for everyone. That's an important message to send."
Trump said he had the opportunity to settle the suit but decided against it despite the bad publicity.
"I don't mind the bad publicity. Who gets more bad publicity than me anyways? I'll take this. No, I don't want to settle this," he said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Malicious Software Poses as Video from a Facebook Friend
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/26/malicious-software-poses-as-video-from-a-facebook-friend/?partner=yahoofinance
Malicious Software Poses as Video from a Facebook Friend
By VINDU GOEL- GOOGLE+
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A piece of malicious software masquerading as a Facebook video is hijacking users’ Facebook accounts and Web browsers, according to independent Italian security researchers who have been investigating the situation.
The malware appears as a link in an e-mail or Facebook message telling people that they have been tagged in a Facebook post. When users go to Facebook and click the link, they are sent to a separate Web site and prompted to download a browser extension or plug-in to watch a video, said one of the researchers, Carlo De Micheli, in a telephone interview on Monday.
Once that plug-in is downloaded, the attackers can access everything stored in the browser, including accounts with saved passwords. Many people commonly save e-mail, Facebook and Twitter login data in their browsers, so the attackers can masquerade as the victim and tap those accounts.
Mr. De Micheli said the malicious software has been spreading at a rate of about 40,000 attacks an hour and has so far affected more than 800,000 people using Google’s popular Chrome browser. It is replicating itself primarily by hijacking victims’ Facebook accounts and reaching out to their friends on the social network. A user hit by the malicious software cannot easily remove it, since it blocks access to the browser settings that allow it to be removed and also blocks access to many sites that offer virus removal software.
A spokeswoman for Google, which makes the Chrome browser, said the company was aware of the attack and has already disabled the browser extensions that allowed it.
“When we detect items containing malware or learn of them through reports, we remove them from the Chrome Web Store and from active Chrome instances,” said the spokeswoman, Veronica Navarrete, in a statement. “We’ve already removed several of these extensions, and are continuing to improve our automated systems to help detect them even faster.”
Facebook said that its security systems had also detected the attack and it was working to clear the malicious links.
“In the meantime, we have been blocking people from clicking through the links and have reported the bad browser extensions to the appropriate parties,” Michael Kirkland, a Facebook spokesman, said in a statement. “We believe only a small percentage of our users were affected by this issue, and we are currently working with them to ensure that they’ve removed the bad browser extension.”
However, Mr. De Micheli said the attackers, who appear to be of Turkish origin based on comments embedded in the software, were adapting the malicious code and had already found a way to target users of Firefox, another popular browser.
This is not the first instance of an attack through a browser extension, which is a bit of software that allows a Web browser to perform specific functions, much like an app does for a smartphone. But this attack appears to be one of the most extensive to use the technology.
“A few years ago, you’d tell your friends, don’t click on attachments,” Mr. De Micheli said. Now, the same advice applies to browser add-ons, he said.
Mr. De Micheli said that browser makers should do a better job of warning users that installing a plug-in, like installing a smartphone app, can give the software access to a wide variety of personal information. “People are used to clicking ‘accept,’” he said.
Mr. De Micheli is an independent security researcher who, along with several other Italian colleagues, has done extensive work tracking unseemly activity on social networks, including the underground market in fake Twitter followers. In the case of the malicious browser extensions, he is working with Andrea Stroppa, Danny di Stefano and Matt Hofman.
Justin O’Kelly, a spokesman for Mozilla, said that users should make sure that they are only installing legitimate software from well-known Web sites that they trust. “Users should be wary of scams or suspicious messages asking them to install software from an unknown site,” he said in a statement.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz. Quiz results
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2012/0205/Sunni-and-Shiite-Islam-Do-you-know-the-difference-Take-our-quiz/Results
Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.
Quiz results
Your score | Average reader score | Expert score |
18
Correct
1
Wrong
95%
You answered 18 of 19 questions correctly for a total score of 95%.
|
74%
|
How did you do? For more on the religious differences between Sunni and Shiite Islam, see Dan Murphy's recent article.
More quizzes: (View all)
Your results
Question | Your Response | Correct Answer | Score |
Which Muslim sect is larger demographically? |
Sunni
| Sunni | |
Which sect believes that the prophet Muhammad's son-in-law Ali was the rightful successor as the leader of Islam? |
Sunni
| Shiite | |
Which sect is more hierarchical in structure? |
Shiite
| Shiite | |
Which sect observes the holy month of Ramadan? |
Both Sunni and Shiite
| Both Sunni and Shiite | |
Which sect observes Ashura as a holy day of mourning that can include displays of self-flagellation? |
Shiite
| Shiite | |
Which sect recognizes Mecca as a holy city? |
Both Sunni and Shiite
| Both Sunni and Shiite | |
Mullahs of which sect were the driving force behind Iran's Islamic Revolution in 1979? |
Shiite
| Shiite | |
Saddam Hussein, who oppressed Iraq's majority sect, was himself a member of which sect? |
Sunni
| Sunni | |
Osama bin Laden was an adherent of which sect? |
Sunni
| Sunni | |
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is more closely associated with which sect? |
Shiite
| Shiite | |
Saudi Arabia is the most powerful country of which sect? |
Sunni
| Sunni | |
The title Sayyid is used by members of which sect? |
Both Sunni and Shiite
| Both Sunni and Shiite | |
The name for which sect comes from the Arabic word for follower? |
Sunni
| Sunni | |
The Islamist militant group Hezbollah adheres to which branch of Islam? |
Shiite
| Shiite | |
Which sect considers members of the other to be apostates? |
Neither Sunni nor Shiite
| Neither Sunni nor Shiite | |
Which branch of Islam did Syria's Alawites come from? |
Shiite
| Shiite | |
Iran is the most powerful country of which sect? |
Shiite
| Shiite | |
What is the majority sect in the most populous Muslim country? |
Sunni
| Sunni | |
The name for which sect comes from the Arabic word for partisans? |
Shiite
| Shiite |
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