The New Book Provides Practical Tips for Protecting Digital Life and Identity
Brian Maki's "Little Black Book" offers a unique way to experience how to deal with the problems that those ages have added to our lives. As a pc coach and representative for more than two decades, Maki has seen how the season has made a quick adjustment to our lives where we are constantly stuck in “connections”, feeling the loss of endurance while offline, and being attacked by unsolicited email, pc frustration, and worse above all, the danger of kidnapping.
The e-mail book points back to our quest to catch the song of our way of life in an unrealistic way, an old-fashioned e-book in which we write down all our usernames and passwords, and save the text of any corrections we make to our debts. While Maki also admits that flash pressure can achieve this goal, he warns that flash drives are a challenge for viruses, and storing passwords on a pc leaves them vulnerable to hackers and viruses.
( Reprentative Image )With quick and concise chapters of the severa, Maki explains the concerns we all have to walk about almost behind our feet. He often encourages us to "move ourselves," how to improve often so we have very few problems on the road, how to deal with unsolicited email, the dangers of mobile phone robbery, and the electricity itself that social media has our lives, and how we can protect ourselves from such online records which take us away.
But what units this e-e book is on the very side that meets the importance of the final methods of making plans. After telling the story of William Weber, the man Maki helped to prepare his way of life before his death, Maki highlights how few people look at what will come out of our ways and online identification after we die. It gives us practical advice on how to track our materialistic lifestyle and how to make debt repayment plans that will protect us from being robbed even after we die.
This fast-paced e-book is especially important for a top-notch human topic. Maki covers serial topics as a way to help us protect our identity, our property, our freedom, and above all, our happiness. As Maki says:
"You have to re-evaluate how you interact with the Internet, what your equals are, why you're a percentage, and research not using the Internet again. It's your way of life that you should govern yourself."
As Maki notes, the era will be with us for the rest of our lives - now it is no more - so we must develop ways to use it and protect ourselves from it, placing it in its rightful place as the best thing to help us, instead of letting it take hold of our lives. I am well aware of the importance of this need, and I hope that different readers will also be able to.
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