Exercise your 2nd Amendment Rights: Chris Engelman hosts Ohio Concealed Carry course in Powell on 11/17/13

Chris Engelman will be sponsoring an NRA Basic Pistol Shooting Course on Sunday, November 17th, 2013.  In addition, we will be meeting Ohio’s requirements for obtaining a Concealed Handgun License and conducting a preview of the NRA’s Personal Protection in the Home.

Students are welcome to bring their own handguns to use at the range, or they may select the handgun rental option in which a .22 semi-auto and .22 revolver will be provided with ammo.  Firearms must be transported in compliance with Ohio law, and locked securely in the student’s car.  http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/2923.16

Absolutely NO LIVE AMMUNITION will be permitted in the classroom.

Classroom instruction will be held in Banquet Room A at Wedgewood Golf &  Country Club and students will enter to the left of the front door at the Banquet Entrance.  The shooting range portion will be held at The Powder Room, and range time, eye and ear protection is included in your tuition.  Once tuition is paid in full, your seat will be reserved and a detailed itinerary will be emailed.  We look forward to working with you.  Be safe!

Use Paypal email: chris@thenewamericanmedia.com
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Experts on PSN Hack: Sony Could Have Done More

As the PlayStation Network outage enters its fourth week, with no definite answer to the question of when service will be restored, security experts have told PCWorld that Sony could have done more to prevent PSN from being infiltrated by hackers.

Their comments follow the congressional testimony of Gene Stafford, a computer security professor at Purdue University, who told lawmakersthat Sony used an outdated version of the Apache Web server software, and had no firewall installed. Hackers compromised the PlayStation Network on April 19, stole personal data, and forced Sony to rebuild its network from the ground up–a process that is still going on.

Sony has denied Stafford’s claims, but other experts who spoke with PCWorld doubt that Sony took every precaution that it could have.

“Everything I’ve seen suggests that this very, very much could have been prevented,” said Stan Stahl, president of the Los Angeles chapter of the Information Systems Security Association, which organizes conferences for security experts.

 

 

Full Story Here

By Jared-Newman

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