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Hook Up with Fat Wallet for Free Sweet Deals on the Net Maybe you have heard of fatwallet.com, but you don't know exactly what this site can offer you. Their slogan is "pocket the difference," which sounds good, but what exactly can this do for you? Here is a brief introduction to fatwallet.com, and what it can offer you. Expect to find the best deals and consumer reports in this vibrant web community. Welcome to the Community of FatWallet What is the FatWallet community? The mission of this community is value, knowledge and guidance. The FatWallet community offers its users to share in the deals and knowledge derived from their vibrant and active forums. With almost a million active members and shoppers, the FatWallet forums are places of knowledge and exchanged information. You can save your best money-saving tips and deals in these very free forums. You will find that the FatWallet forums are often addictive and fun. Signing up for these forums is easy and fast, and you will have instant access to the best of what FatWallet has to offer you. How to Join FatWallet If you are new to the community, here are the three fast and easy steps you need to take in order to join FatWallet. First, you just sign up so that the company knows whom to pay. Joining FatWallet is fast and free. Next, just make sure to shop through FatWallet. You will find the best deals from your favorite stores. Whenever you make an online purchase, you will be earning back Cash Back. This money will begin to add up in your FatWallet account. Finally, get paid. You can request your payments to be made via PayPal or via check. If you need any help with FatWallet, you will find that the website offers responsive customer service that can help answer all of your questions and deal with your concerns. Why Should You Join FatWallet? Maybe you are wondering why you should bother signing up with FatWallet. There are many reasons why you might choose to shop through FatWallet. First, shopping through FatWallet allows you to communicate with almost a million shoppers in the FatWallet forums. Find out what's hot and what's not in the FatWallet forums. You can raise your shopper's IQ by reading up on money-saving tips and the latest deals. You will find that the FatWallet forums are what make the site so very special. You will also find that the forums can be very addictive. What Makes FatWallet So Special? Perhaps you are wondering what makes FatWallet so special. FatWallet is one of the most intriguing shopping websites because it is content-driven, and most of the content on the website is created by its users. That means that the majority of the content on the FatWallet website is generate by consumers, specifically for consumers. FatWallet is not just a fun and easy way to save money and make money through online purchases, it is also a great way to find out the latest shopping trends. You can easily find out the latest shopping trends. If you are looking for the best price on an item, chances are that you need only consult the FatWallet forums to find the best and latest deals on whatever you happen to be shopping for. Whether it is a new car, new laptop computer or new pair of shoes, you will be able to find the best deals by checking in with your fellow FatWallet forum members. Enjoy the experience consumer critical mass. When half a million consumers get together, you will be surprised and pleased by how much you can learn about the products and services that are currently available on the market.

Web Hosting - All About Domain Names "What's in a name?" Shakespeare asks in Romeo and Juliet. In the case of your web site the answer is: quite a lot. A domain name is the English (or other) language designator for your site. Because of the way the Internet functions, that name is associated with an IP address, a numeric identifier that computers and network components use to connect a browser to a web site. It's not mandatory that a site has a name. But directing visitors by IP address can quickly generate difficulties. Having an IP address IS mandatory, since it's ultimately the way a web site is located by other computers and network software. In the early days of the Internet the name was chosen carefully in order to help a person remember the URL. That made it easier to type, too. With hotspots on a page, great search engines, social networking and other contemporary tools, that's not as important now. But from a marketing perspective, it still helps to have a good name. It's still beneficial to have a site called 'CheapTVs.com' if what you sell are inexpensive TV sets. Calling your site, 'InexpensiveElectronicVisualDisplayDevices.com' may describe your business in some way, but it's a little harder to refer a new person to your site. Which name you choose can, therefore, affect how much traffic your site gets, how soon. Sooner or later, if you have information and/or products/services that people want, word will get around. But having a good name can certainly help. Love them or hate them, the Google company chose well. Of course, the fact is that there are millions of web sites around the world. That means, you don't necessarily get the name of your first choice. ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) is the internationally recognized authority for managing IP addresses across the worldwide Internet, along with the top-level domain name-parts (.com, .net, .org, .edu, and so forth). But registering a name is done by simply contacting any of a hundred organizations that work as intermediaries to establish and track the names. GoDaddy, Register.com, Network Solutions and a great many others provide the service for anywhere from free to a few dollars per month or year. You contact them by navigating to their web site. Then, using a feature they all provide, you can select a possible name. They use something called whois and other software to determine if the name is already claimed. Or, you can check yourself at www.whois.com. Registration is for a limited time, but typically renewable in perpetuity provided you pay the (usually annual) fee. You may have to go through several choices to find a domain name that isn't already in use. With so many millions of sites, the odds of you getting your first choice is slim, unless you have a highly unusual imagination. But, it's also true that domains tend to die or expire. As they do, the name becomes available for use by someone new. A method for getting on a 'waiting list' is available. You register the name you want and if and when the name becomes available, you are offered the chance to claim it. Naturally, there's competition even on the waiting list for 'good' names. There are many different ways of establishing priority that vary by company. At any given time there are thousands of so-called auctions going on to bid on names. Give some thought to your new domain name and research its availability, but don't stress over it. The name isn't everything. After all, if Google had built a search engine that delivered usable results only 10% of the time, their name would be mud.

Copyright Music Infringement Copyright Music Infringement is Not Preferred Method for Music Lovers In recent years, copyright music infringement has seen an unprecedented leap in scope and scale. This is largely due to online services that allowed unchecked file sharing among their subscribers. While this abuse of copyright is not by any means limited to music, this is where the most profound effects of file sharing have been observed. Industry giants of file sharing are cropping up left and right with the demise of the pioneer for illicit file sharing, Napster. The Recording Industry Association of America (or RIAA) has made copyright music infringement their primary cause to fight. They estimate that peer-to-peer file sharing takes around 4.2 billion dollars each year worldwide from the coffers of the music industry. I really cannot blame them that is a fairly large chunk of change. The problem with their estimates however is the assumption that people would actually buy every piece of music they download or that they aren't buying the music they would have bought at any rate. While I by no means condone copyright music infringement or any other copyright infringement I do believe they are overestimating the damage to the industry that is being done by these file-sharing programs. One of the primary arguments that the RIAA is using in order to, hopefully, discourage people from not supporting their favorite groups and artists by buying their recordings, is the fact that new and struggling bands are less likely to continue making music because it will no longer be profitable. The bulk of musician's incomes are the result of royalties, which depend entirely on the sales of their albums. The RIAA is using the legal system to back them up by taking the fight to court. Recent claims made by the RIAA include one rather controversial claim that people ripping CDs they have bought and paid for does not constitute fair use because CDs are not "unusually subject to damage" and that if they do become damaged they can be replaced affordably. This assertion has raised more than a few eyebrows and is giving rise to opponents of the RIAA who claim that the lawsuits and crackdowns against those presumed guilty of copyright music infringement are actually hurting music sales and the profits of the music industry. During the height of Napster popularity (the hallmark by which all file sharing seems to be compared) CD sales were at their highest rate ever. People were exposed to music and groups they otherwise may not have heard without file sharing. As a result of enjoying the music by these groups people went out and actually bought the CDs of the music they enjoyed. It's ironic that the very lawsuits designed to stop copyright music infringement have actually managed to stifle file sharing enough that CD sales are dropping noticeably around the world. Opponents and critics also challenge that rather than being a source of copyright music infringement, peer 2 peer networks offer unprecedented exposure for new artists and their music. Another argument against the RIAA is that the real reason for the lawsuits against file sharer is because they want to keep the prices for CDs over inflated while keeping the actual royalties coming to the artists relatively low. The copyright music infringement claims made by the RIAA have become suspect. The music industry is currently working on ways where fans can legally download music. This will mean that fans have access to the music they love from their PCs and directly to their music playing devices without resorting to illegal copyright music infringement. The truth is that most people want to do the right thing and given viable alternative will elect to do so.