| Dec 19 |
HYIP Strategy and Investing Guide
![]() HYIP Strategy and Investing Guide What is High Yield Investment Program (Hyip)? HYIP, which simply means High Yield Investment Program? It’s exactly what it sounds like. These companies ask you to provide them with a loan of money and they promise to repay you with interest payments on a Daily / Weekly / Monthly basis. The return you get on your investment ranges from very small to very large percentages and could be spread over a long period of time. You’ll usually recoup your investment in about 2-3 months, and from then on it’s pure profit. HYIP’s are probably the most profitable investments available now days. Some can give you up to 100% return on your investment per month. This industry is growing by storm everywhere on the internet. There have never been investment opportunities such as this to give such a high profit within the shortest time. There are many different HYIPs on the internet with many different methods of payment and repayment. Never invest in every single HYIP that is out there. Around 90%+ of these HYIP programs are scams. If you follow the advise in this guide, you’ll make great profits like I do. What do these HYIP Companies do?
Are HYIP’s Legal? The real HYIP’s are legal, they’re a form of investing, but they’re only legal if you declare your earnings from them on your tax form, usually under ‘capital gains’ (similarly, you can put your losses on them as well). Can there be fraud in HYIPs? Security There are many methods used by the hackers of our time, and they’re figuring out new ways to do it every single day. SpyWare and Keylogging programs are one of the most practiced forms of gaining information that’s used to rob individuals of their funds from accounts on the internet. It’s also used to gain information so a hacker can gain entry to any program that you may belong to. I’m going to outline some methods to keep out the hackers, and I’m going to list some very good programs that can be acquired for free, and some that cost money. It’s my personal opinion that if you purchase the best security you’ll have the best security, and if you intend to protect programs that involve a good deal of money, then you should consider the purchase of the best software to be a really good investment. So … lets get started. About Firewalls This section is reprinted from Shields Up How does a Firewall Work? Even though we refer to “connections” between computers, this “connection” is actually comprised of individual packets traveling between those two “connected” machines. Essentially, they “agree” that they’re connected and each machine sends back “acknowledgement packets” to let the sending machine know that the data was received. In order to reach its destination – whether it’s another computer two feet away or two continents distant – every Internet packet must contain a destination address and port number. And, so that the receiving computer knows who sent the packet, every packet must also contain the IP address and a port number of the originating machine. In other words, any packet traveling the net contains – first and foremost – its complete source and destination addresses. As we’ve seen earlier on this site, an IP address always identifies a single machine on the Internet and the port is associated with a particular service or conversation happening on the machine. Look what this means! . . . Since the firewall software inspects each and every packet of data as it arrives at your computer – BEFORE it’s seen by any other software running within your computer – the firewall has total veto power over your computer’s receipt of anything from the Internet. A TCP/IP port is only “open” on your computer if the first arriving packet which requests the establishment of a connection is answered by your computer. If the arriving packet is simply ignored, that port of your computer will effectively disappear from the Internet. No one and nothing can connect to it! But the real power of a firewall is derived from its ability to be selective about what it lets through and what it blocks. Since every arriving packet must contain the correct IP address of the sender’s machine, (in order for the receiver to send back a receipt acknowledgement) the firewall can be selective about which packets are admitted and which are dropped. It can “filter” the arriving packets based upon any combination of the originating machine’s IP address and port and the destination machine’s IP address and port. So, for example, if you were running a web server and needed to allow remote machines to connect to your machine on port 80 (http), the firewall could inspect every arriving packet and only permit connection initiation on your port 80. New connections would be denied on all other ports. Even if your system were to inadvertently pick up a Trojan horse virus program which opened a Trojan listening port to the outside world, no passing Trojan scanner could detect or know of the Trojan’s existence since all attempts to contact the Trojan inside your computer would be blocked by the firewall! Or suppose that you wish to create a secure “tunnel” across the Internet to allow your home and office computers to share their files without any danger of unauthorized intrusion. Firewall technology makes this possible and relatively simple. I hope I’ve conveyed some sense for the powerful benefits and features created by firewalls. At a cost ranging from $29 to $39 USD, these personal firewalls are a terrific bargain! If you’ve also received the sense that this can be very tricky stuff I’d have to agree. THE MECHANICAL FIREWALL A NAT router, such as Linksys, actually acts as a mechanical barrier between the internet and your PC. There are many on the market and a good computer store will carry a good selection of the best of them. Be sure, though, that your system has one of the following, an ETHERNET or a USB port present and open. This will be necessary to utilize a NAT router. If you don’t have this on your PC, then you can purchase a PCI card that will add this to your system. The ETHERNET connection is the preferred connector for a router. A DSL modem also acts as a mechanical barrier between the internet and your PC. Most of the time if a hacker sends a mass ping out, a DSL modem, or a router is what he will see on the ping. Not your computer. Regular dial-up, and cable modems are not quite as secure as DSL. So, if you want to really be secure, then start with a NAT router. If you have DSL, then you wont need a router unless you want to link to the net with several computers. THE SOFTWARE FIREWALL You can set a software firewall to conform to your individual needs and most software firewalls have a good help system and directions to aid you in the setup of the software. A good software firewall enhances and strengthens a good mechanical firewall. A mechanical and a software firewall work hand-in-hand with each other to make your system invisible to hackers. There are several good firewall programs available, and a search via google using “firewall” as the subject will get you a list of them to look over. My personal preference, as I said is Norton Personal Firewall. I’ll cover that in more detail later in this guide. SPYWARE Spyware is very sneakily installed on your computer via free programs, toolbars, smiley face programs, email program addons and even via autosurfing programs. It also can enter, and so can viruses, in your email as it comes into your computer daily. Spyware sits in your computer and reads your sensitive data and surfing habits and details of the sites you visit, and sends the info to the person or persons who did the sneaky install. It is not a very ethical thing to do, but it is done to almost everyone everyday. There are many good stand alone anti-spyware programs available for free download. These include SpyBot Search and Destroy, Spyware Guard, and many others. Again, a search via google will turn up many choices. Just enter “spyware” as the subject. Again, Norton has included anti-spyware in its program, Norton Internet Security, and it is part of Norton AntiVirus. VIRUS Spyware can enter your computer in the form of Virus, or Worms, and also Trojans. A Trojan is named after the “Gift Horse” used in the war between Greece and Troy. And it comes in the form of an innocent or inconspicuous file or program. It gets into your system and sends out information such as passwords and ID names to the person, or persons, who installed it or sent it to your PC. A worm gets into your system by innocent means such as email attachments etc. A virus can enter your system via any download or email or attachment to an email. Viruses are the most destructive kind of PC invasion. Some viruses, once activated, can totally destroy your system’s BIOS and can totally wipe out your hard drive. So a good anti-virus program is vital to good internet security. So…in summary…A top level internet security system will consist of a Mechanical Firewall…a Software Firewall…a good Anti-Spyware program…and a good Anti-Virus program. I’m going to list a few of the programs available for a price and a key word to use to access a variety of free and paid for options later in this guide. A good program to self test your security online is called Shields Up. Here is the link to use it https://grc.com/x/ne.dll?bh0bkyd2 PASSWORDS RoboForm and RoboForm Pro….. This program is my personal recommendation for keyless password entry into any program or site that requires a password, and can also be used to quickly access those sites, with one click, that either do or don’t require a password. It’s a great system that keeps all of your information handy and fills in all kinds of forms. There are those who debate about keeping a program like this on your PC, but if you utilize a full internet security program, then this form filler is safe and can do your password entries without using key strokes. Norton SystemWorks has a feature called “Password Manager” that does the password part, but RoboForm does it all. I highly recommend that you go ahead and purchase RoboForm Pro. It has unlimited passcards and you can install unlimited custom info fields. It’s the greatest information entry time saver available on the net at this time, like I said will securely enter your saved passwords without keystrokes. It also keeps you from forgetting the entry information to all of your programs, and the data can be backed up, so you wont lose it if your PC crashes. It also stores the URLs you need for entry to your programs. I just cant say enough good things about it and I would be lost without it. Creating and saving passwords to use for any program….. What I’m about to cover here, is a method that I’ve developed to create passwords in a stealth mode without using keystrokes at all. I’m going to include an example of creating one and installing it to a program, or site, and then saving it to RoboForm. Creating a password using copy and paste is a stealth method that requires no keystrokes to do it. First, log onto a site that has a lot of text and numbers in it. Make sure you don’t try to copy from a hyperlink or a URL because it will frustrate you when it goes to that site. What you do is highlight a section of, or a few letters of a word, and copy it to notepad or wordpad. Then you find some numbers and highlight 2 or 3 in a row and copy them and paste them onto the letters you have just pasted on your “pad”. Then locate and highlight a few more random letters and do the same. Repeat this process until you have created a password containing numbers and letters. It can be done in any order, and can include upper and lower case letters. Each time you complete a potential password, save the file under a filename you can locate easy, and just start a new line in this file for each password you create. I would not create more than about 8 – 10 at any one time. For instance, I’ll create 3 passwords here using the text I have already entered. Tut83Rep2 sw328nsta 281staRep3 The 3 passwords above were created from the text in the above paragraph without entering a single keystroke, and can now be copied and pasted into a password field in a program without a single keystroke. Once you use a created password, you need to save it to the password field in your RoboForm passcard via copy and paste, and you will have done the entire procedure without once entering a keystroke. Once you’ve completed the whole process, you should delete the password from your list of created passwords and resave the file without that password in it. Just remember to backup your RoboForm data so you don’t ever lose your entry info. You can change your passwords monthly, if you like, using this method, and you probably will never have this information “hacked” from your PC.
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