Yes. A good rule of thumb regarding email, or anything else you send over the net, is this: If you can't bear having it read aloud in a court of law, don't send it. The above is good advice, but I'd take it a step farther. If it is private and you don't want anyone/everyone to see it, NEVER send it in an e-mail or IM, do not talk about it in chat rooms (chats can be saved), do not post it on message or discussion boards. In fact, you'd do well not to even save it on a disk, CD or your computer if it is something the Feds would be interested in. I learned this years ago: If you don't want someone else to see/read it, don't write it down. I learned this the hard way after having my mother read my diary when I was a teenager, then again years later, when my husband started reading my personal journals. If the Feds are indeed investigating you, even hard copies (pen and paper copies) could become open to scrutiny if they find enough evidence to merit a warrant for your home. This advice has apparently come a bit too last if you're already under investigation but the best way to protect your privacy and stay out of trouble is to simply avoid questionable activities. It's not hard, hundreds of millions of people manage to do it their entire lives.
in the short form Yes in the long form you could encrypt everything you do but it wont help your case to look like an very paranoid person as if you had something to hide you could also find a way to flip a switch to destroy/mame/melt/ damage until it looks like dust your computer but sooner or later you could slip up and get busted so in conclusion attempting to evade the law is a stupid and immoral idea Yes. Calea, Patriot Act, Carnivore, Echelon, Matrix, Safeback, Snapback, keyloggers, pen registers, Microsoft/AT&T backdoors, FBI staffed computer forensic labs, etc. are all REAL. Your ISP has a record of every single thing you have typed on record. and...don't forget to point your webcam at the wall...... Check the related links below for a good site on laws pertaining to internet use. Answer first of all, it's not wise to post a traceable message asking if you can avoit the feds who might even be reading this now. The only way to hide it from the feds is to use a public computer and hope nobody sees you
He did, except for the portion of one tape that was "accidentally" erased.
no it can not get erased
If your files have been erased from MS-Outlook due to some problem whether it can be corruption or lose by mistake. First check your "Deleted Items Folder",if it is available over there then find yourself lucky because you can recover emails by just simple drag and drop.But in case if it is not available over there, then it means it is Shift+Delete or permanently erased (deleted). At that instance, you have to switch for any third party utility which can help to recover your erased Outlook PST file. To more about Outlook deletion visit: http://www.en.pstrecovery.net/repair-outlook-deleted-items.html
The present tense of erased is erase.
sarah ERASED her pencil marks with her eraser
yes it can be written but unfortunatly it cannot be erased
Citizen Erased was created on 2001-06-17.
Erased Tapes Records was created in 2007.
If you have erased it then it will no longer work
Once erased, the codes are gone.
no there is not if you erased it,it's gone for good! sorry!
Correction,can a wrongful misdeameanor be erased from a nursing certificate/ license