Wireless Data Secured: 26.5 Terabytes
Wireless Connections Secured: 13,030
Total Attacks Blocked: 3,100,000
What do these stats mean?
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Archive for the ‘Ads’ Category

Radio Ad #2

Tuesday, November 30th, 1999

The first radio ad blew my site through the roof (take the most traffic the site had ever seen on any given day and double it…)

Here’s the second radio ad, be sure to comment below and tell me what you think:

Anyone care to type it out for me? :D

The Advantage Of Being An Affiliate Of Wifi Security Guy

Tuesday, November 30th, 1999

We list all the advantages that being an affiliate of Wifi Security Guy’s Identity Theft brings you, from the most simple to the most compelling. We start with you getting your Identity Theft protection for free, and end up with you having a monthly income that constantly grows.

1. Your Security Is Free When You Send 3.

The number ‘3′ is a magic marketing number. All the big marketing companies know it, they just don’t use it. I learned it from the MLM gurus when I was writing their online commission systems, but it puzzled me as to why they didn’t use the very advice they were giving me.

Here’s how 3 is powerful: Everyone, no matter who they are, can get 3 people they know from their friends or relatives to purchase any product, no matter what it is, period. It doesn’t matter if you get involved in a book-of-the-month club, a vitamins-by-mail MLM, water that has special minerals, or a cell phone service.

I would think with the big marketing companies knowing this they would change their marketing goals. Instead of making their members recruit 10 - 20 people to the product before they can get their own product for free, they should set it up so you only have to find 3 people and yours is free.

Wifi Security Guy knows if you’re going to be successful as an affiliate the first goal you have is getting your own Identity Theft protection for free, so we setup all of our commission system based off of that number.

For every friend you refer to Wifi Security Guy’s Identity Theft protection that signs up, you get $5 credit, every single month their account is active. There are a couple important things to pick up from that:

  • It only takes 3 referrals to get your Identity Theft protection for free.
  • Your income will grow every month because the members that you refer are charged every month and you’re paid on them every month.

2. Your Income Can Only Grow.

Every month the members you referred to the Identity Theft protection are charged for that month’s service and you are paid $5. If you have 20 referrals this month your income will be $100 this month, and it will be $100 next month even if you quit referring people to the Identity Theft protection.

What happens if you don’t quit referring people to the Identity Theft protection? Your income will grow larger every month.

I’m not a marketing guy by any stretch of the imagination. I’ve been in MLMs before and I always flunked-out - I’m just not geared for sales. And when those MLMs set the bar up high where I had to find 10 or more people that would buy their product I would always fail because I’m not a marketer. Another thing that was wrong with those systems is their whole marketing approach was off-line. They didn’t have a good system for recruiting people online, which is where I spend most of my time. It’s certainly easier for me to send off a handful of emails every month that it is to talk face-to-face with people (you may be a face-to-face kind of person - that’s great!).

Since I’m not really a great marketing guy I’d like to use low numbers to show you how your income can grow slowly but I’ll bet for anyone out there reading this you’ll know you can certainly do better than this. How do I know? Because I’m doing better than this with the system that’s in place with Wifi Security Guy and if I as a non-marketing guy can do better than this I know you can. ;-)

In our first example, let’s just say you can get 5 people every month that signs up for the Identity Theft protection. In your first month you’ll make $25, and your income will grow by $25 every month. Here’s what it looks like over the first year:

Month 1:

The Advantage Of Being An Affiliate Of Wifi Security Guy

Tuesday, November 30th, 1999

We list all the advantages that being an affiliate of Wifi Security Guy’s Identity Theft brings you, from the most simple to the most compelling. We start with you getting your Identity Theft protection for free, and end up with you having a monthly income that constantly grows.

1. Your Security Is Free When You Send 3.

The number ‘3′ is a magic marketing number. All the big marketing companies know it, they just don’t use it. I learned it from the MLM gurus when I was writing their online commission systems, but it puzzled me as to why they didn’t use the very advice they were giving me.

Here’s how 3 is powerful: Everyone, no matter who they are, can get 3 people they know from their friends or relatives to purchase any product, no matter what it is, period. It doesn’t matter if you get involved in a book-of-the-month club, a vitamins-by-mail MLM, water that has special minerals, or a cell phone service.

I would think with the big marketing companies knowing this they would change their marketing goals. Instead of making their members recruit 10 - 20 people to the product before they can get their own product for free, they should set it up so you only have to find 3 people and yours is free.

Wifi Security Guy knows if you’re going to be successful as an affiliate the first goal you have is getting your own Identity Theft protection for free, so we setup all of our commission system based off of that number.

For every friend you refer to Wifi Security Guy’s Identity Theft protection that signs up, you get $5 credit, every single month their account is active. There are a couple important things to pick up from that:

  • It only takes 3 referrals to get your Identity Theft protection for free.
  • Your income will grow every month because the members that you refer are charged every month and you’re paid on them every month.

2. Your Income Can Only Grow.

Every month the members you referred to the Identity Theft protection are charged for that month’s service and you are paid $5. If you have 20 referrals this month your income will be $100 this month, and it will be $100 next month even if you quit referring people to the Identity Theft protection.

What happens if you don’t quit referring people to the Identity Theft protection? Your income will grow larger every month.

I’m not a marketing guy by any stretch of the imagination. I’ve been in MLMs before and I always flunked-out - I’m just not geared for sales. And when those MLMs set the bar up high where I had to find 10 or more people that would buy their product I would always fail because I’m not a marketer. Another thing that was wrong with those systems is their whole marketing approach was off-line. They didn’t have a good system for recruiting people online, which is where I spend most of my time. It’s certainly easier for me to send off a handful of emails every month that it is to talk face-to-face with people (you may be a face-to-face kind of person - that’s great!).

Since I’m not really a great marketing guy I’d like to use low numbers to show you how your income can grow slowly but I’ll bet for anyone out there reading this you’ll know you can certainly do better than this. How do I know? Because I’m doing better than this with the system that’s in place with Wifi Security Guy and if I as a non-marketing guy can do better than this I know you can. ;-)

In our first example, let’s just say you can get 5 people every month that signs up for the Identity Theft protection. In your first month you’ll make $25, and your income will grow by $25 every month. Here’s what it looks like over the first year:

Month 1:

Logo Contest

Tuesday, November 30th, 1999

Check out the logos that our marketing company just produced.

Let me know which one you like the most, and use the comment section below to tell me your impression of the logos!

I scanned them in (I don’t have the source images yet), so they are a little grainy, but I think you get the idea!

n
Which Logo Do You Like Most?
View Results

#1:

#2:
Logo 2

#3:

#4:

#5:

#6:

#7:

#8:

#9:

#10:

#11: (these are for when your wireless is (a) unsecured, (b) securing, and (c) secured)

iPhone Used To Hack Wireless Networks

Tuesday, November 30th, 1999

Fox news ran this story on August 8th, 2008 on how a company uses the iPhone to hack into corporate networks.

The company mails the phone in a package with a long-life battery where it sits in the mail room and eventually gets returned. While in the company premises it scans all available wireless networks for vulnerabilities. Although it may stay in the mail room for several days they say it only needs a few minutes to gather all the information needed for them to further break into that company.

You can read the article here, and we’ve included the full text below in case Fox news decides to take it off of their site:

LAS VEGAS — Want to break into the computer network in an ultra-secure building? Ship a hacked iPhone there to a nonexistent employee and hope the device sits in the mailroom, scanning for nearby wireless connections.

How about stealing someone’s computer passwords? Forget trying to fool the person into downloading a malicious program that logs keystrokes. A tiny microphone hidden near the keyboard could do the same thing, since each keystroke emits slightly different sounds that can be used to reconstruct the words the target is typing.

Hackers at the DefCon conference here were demonstrating these and other novel techniques for infiltrating facilities Friday.

Their talks served as a reminder of the danger of physical attacks as a way to breach hard-to-crack computer networks. It’s an area once defined by Dumpster diving and crude social-engineering ruses, like phony phone calls, that are probably easier to detect or avoid.

As technology gets cheaper and more powerful, from cell phones that act as personal computers to minuscule digital bugging devices, it’s enabling a new wave of clever attacks that, if pulled off properly, can be as effective and less risky for thieves than traditional computer-intrusion tactics.

Consider Apple Inc.’s iPhone, a gadget whose processing horsepower and cellular and wireless Internet connections make it an ideal double agent.

Robert Graham and David Maynor, co-founders of Atlanta-based Errata Security, showed off an experiment in which they modified an iPhone and sent it to a client company that wanted to test the security of its internal wireless network.

Graham and Maynor programmed the phone to check in with their computers over the cellular network. Once inside the target company and connected, a program they had written scanned the wireless network for security holes.

They didn’t find any, but the exercise demonstrated an inexpensive way to perform penetration testing and the danger of unexpected devices being used in attacks. If they had found an unsecured router in their canvassing, they likely would have been able to waltz inside the corporate network to steal data.

To keep the phone running, the researchers latched on an extended-life battery that lasts days on end. But they only really need a few minutes inside a building to test the network’s security.

“It’s like saying, once you get into Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory, and you’re in the garden where everything’s edible, you have it all,” Graham said in an interview.

The attack won’t work, of course, if a company’s wireless network is properly secured. In that case, Graham and Maynor said there’s likely no big loss: the package that had been sitting in the mailroom would probably be mailed back to them so they could try it again elsewhere.

Another talk focused on new twists to Cold War-era espionage tactics that could allow criminals to sidestep the locks on computer networks.

Eric Schmiedl, a lock-picking expert and undergraduate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, outlined several surveillance methods long used by government intelligence agents that have become more accessible to garden-variety criminals because of the falling price of the technologies.

For example, Schmiedl said even low-budget criminals now have a way to eavesdrop on conversations through a window. It involves bouncing a beam from a laser pointer off the glass and through a light sensor and audio amplifier.

If the people inside the room are close enough to the window, their conversation creates vibrations that the equipment can translate into a crude reconstruction of the conversation, Schmiedl said.

“We’re burning the candle at both ends,” he said. “The technology is becoming easier and cheaper and anybody can do it. And at the same time there’s more incentive now to do it. These are two trains on a collision course. The question is when they’re going to collide.”