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Bizarre Incident Delayed the Sacramento Fund Raising Dinner of Presidential Candidate Hilary Clinton
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El Dorado National Forest: What’s Open, What’s Not, Where You Can Drive and Much More
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Settlement Made
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The United States Department of Agriculture's Resource Conservation and Development
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California Poppy Project Offering Free Poppy Give Away
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Paying your Monthly Bills Just Got Easier
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Senator Cox’s New Phone Service Bill
According to Senator Dave Cox, Californians who
live in rural, more remote areas of the state do not always have the high quality phone service that
those living in urban areas enjoy. Now Cox, who represents the 1st
district which includes Amador County, is introducing a measure to
continue a program that allows a “fair” rate structure for phone customers
living in rural areas. “Not
all Californians have equal access to technological advancements. Californians who live in rural, more remote
areas of the state do not always have the high quality phone service that those
living in urban areas enjoy,” says Cox. The proposed
bill would allow the Public Utilities Commission to continue the program that,
in Cox’s words, “allows a fair and equitable rate structure for phone customers
living in rural areas.” Cox went on to say, “The bill will keep telephone and basic
telecommunications service available and affordable in rural and mountainous
areas.”
Bi-Partisan Effort On Immigration Reform: Congress To Debate next Week
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Senator Dave Cox Speaks About Identity Theft
State Senator Dave Cox has introduced a legislative
proposal to help protect the public against ID theft. Cox’s bill, SB 216, would require government
agencies to place only the last four digits of a person’s social security
number on court documents. Here’s why Senator Cox feels this is so important:
SOUND CLIP COMMING SOON!
Security Flaw Announced In Adobe Acrobat Reader
According to the Associated
press Computer security researchers announced yesterday that they have discovered a vulnerability in Adobe Systems Inc.'s massively
popular Acrobat Reader software that allows cyber-intruders to attack personal
computers through trusted Web links. Virtually any Web site
hosting Portable Document Format, or PDF, files are vulnerable to attack, according to researchers from Symantec Corp. and VeriSign Inc.'s
iDefense Intelligence. The attacks could range from stealing cookies that track
a user's Web browsing history to the creation of harmful worms, the researchers
said.