Babysheart's Posts
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Love and romance have been killed by a student selling her virginity to pay for medical school. Ariana, a 20-year-old from Russia, has put her body up for sale online with bids starting at $168,000. She said it’s the easiest way to raise money quickly and has even offered up her friend’s virginity for excessive bids. Ariana said, paying for tuition will be very expensive, the rent will also be high. I imagine that living in another country will be very hard, therefore I want to get the financial burden out of the way so I can focus on my medical studies. Ariana, who wants to study abroad, said she has put a lot of thought into this fdecision and decided to go through with it after years of not finding the right man. She’s explored a number of avenues and has asked her parents for the money. She continued, I am also an independent woman and can do just what I want. Believe me, I have thought long and hard to make this decision. I have hoped for so long to find my great love, but it did not work out. The student hopes the man is understanding of the situation and someone she can continue seeing he takes her virginity. https://www.elitedaily.com/news/student-auctions-virginity-medical-school/1626771/amp/
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Only the makeover fit plaster house. If women take off their makeup eh, so many 'beauty queens' go resemble witches. Except me ![]() |
So this Dullard won't fix the East West Road? Obviously, he's still thinking 5% 97%. You want to tap a region's resources but you won't fix their critical infrastructure. Okay, Oya, Walkers come attack me and if I hear, 'What did your Jonathan do, the thunder wey go find you come na from Mercury direct'! |
Businessideas:Obviously, you never expected a retort like that. So you went on bad-mouthing this lady. When she pays back in better measure, you go...,'oh, wow.. lady' Trumpstyle. Learn to speak to everybody with civility so you get same in return. As per senility, you don't know what it means because if you did, you wouldn't have used it in the statement you made above. |
edwardgunju:No wahala. It will be here for 5 minutes in the next 3 hours. In Full glory |
Akalia:I hear. |
Businessideas:You have the sickness of pathologically gullible people: knuckle dragging, silliness and ignorance. Go and see countries that had to redenominate and tell me if all was done under crisis and duress. Don't go to far, look at Ghana and the success of it. Stupid people like you in large numbers is the reason we are in the mess. 15m dullards. |
Kenneth205:Oya come see. ![]() |
wizzakosh:You lack home training. Oluku. |
Horbah1:How e wan take help you escape recession? |
I have better breasts sef. |
This is the only land where I've seen a higher number of juju shrines than churches. It's a cursed land. You claim you are not Igbos, abi? So you go to Benin and crown your kings... From the Eze - Egi to the Chukwumela Nnam-Obi the Ogba king who denies being Igbo despite bearing full Igbo names. You never knew you bring the witchcrafts Benin people are running from to your land. Those witches and juju you bring are ever blood thirsty. The killings won't stop. When one mafia don dies, another one will arise. By the way, I lived at Akabuka. |
This fool thinks Nigerians are stupid. You fall out of favour and became an overnight warrior. |
Very good info |
Look at his fake D & G belt. Fake pastor. |
sarrki:E be like na breeze dey inside your head. |
Unfortunately, because of tribal sentiments... A lot of Nigerians won't see anything wrong with this Dullard. |
This is what our my Yoruba tribe led us into. God must punish Satan o |
lastpage:You need sense. Otherwise you would have realised that even Abraham ad Moses won't win free and fair elections in Anambra State if they don't run on the APGA platform. |
freedom96:Bankole stole and was caught. Dino steals and hasn't been caught. Not much different between both. |
Businessideas:At the rate the naira is losing value under your Daura President, you might just need that redomination by fire by force. |
Me too |
Heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury, who pulled out of an Oct. 29rematch with former champion Wladimir Klitschko last week for unspecified reasons, with his promoter only saying he was "medically unfit," has been notified that he tested positive for cocaine. Klitschko and Fury agreed to have drug testing for their rematch overseen by the Las Vegas-based Voluntary Anti-Doping Association. England's Fury submitted to a random urine test Sept. 22 in Lancaster, England, and those results came back positive for the substance benzoylecgonine, the central compound found in cocaine and the marker for a positive test for the banned substance. In a letter from VADA president Dr. Margaret Goodman sent to representatives for Fury, Klitschko, the British Boxing Board of Control and the United States' Association of Boxing Commissions on Thursday night, a copy of which was obtained by ESPN.com, she wrote, "This letter is to advise you that the 'A' sample urine specimen number 4006253 collected from Tyson Fury on September 22, 2016 in Lancaster, England through his participation in the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) program has been analyzed for anabolic agents, diuretics, beta-2 agonists, stimulants and drugs of abuse. The results of the analysis are as follows: Adverse. Urine specimen contains benzoylecgonine." The VADA testing for performance-enhancing drugs is done separately and takes longer, so those results are not yet available. "Mr. Fury has the right to promptly request analysis of the 'B' sample at his expense," Goodman wrote. The positive test likely will result in Fury being stripped of his heavyweight world title belts, which he was supposed to defend in a rematch with Ukraine's Klitschko on Oct. 29 at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, Fury's hometown. http://www.espn.com/boxing/story/_/id/17677283/tyson-fury-fails-drug-test-positive-result-benzoylecgonine
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Marry both. ![]() |
Businessideas:Soludo is an erudite Professor of Economics who was once the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria. Who are you? |
You don't fight a battle you know you will lose. It's foolishness. |
mrvitalis:Is he the one building it? |
Berlyn: |
A pair of security researchers recently uncovered a Nigerian scammer ring that they say operates a new kind of attack called “wire-wire” after a few of its members accidentally infected themselves with their own malware. Over the past several months, they’ve watched from a virtual front row seat as members used this technique to steal hundreds of thousands of dollars from small and medium-sized businesses worldwide. “We've gotten unprecedented insight into the very nitty-gritty mechanics of their entire operation,” says James Bettke, a researcher at SecureWorks, a subsidiary of Dell Inc. focused on cybersecurity. Bettke and Joe Stewart, who directs malware research for SecureWorks, are presenting the details of their findings this week at the annual Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. This new type of attack is a twist on an old favorite. For years, rings of scammers in West Africa have stolen money from companies through a technique known as "Business Email Compromise," or BEC, in which they use internal corporate email accounts to execute fraudulent financial transactions. Or, in another approach known as “spoofing,” scammers have impersonated a CEO’s email from an external account to persuade an employee to send a wire transfer to their own bank account. The SecureWorks experts say wire-wire, which is how criminals refer to the new type of attack, represents a more sophisticated approach to BEC that is harder to detect. Bettke and Stewart discovered the ring in February when five of the scammers self-infected their own computers with the same malware they were using to steal from others. Such errors are a surprisingly common way for security researchers to get an inside look at scammers’ operations. For months, the malware automatically loaded screenshots and keystrokes from compromised computers to an open web database. One of the infected scammers also frequently trained new scammers, which revealed even more details about their techniques. The SecureWorks team initially found the database by using the virus scanning tool VirusTotal to search for suspicious email attachments. The wire-wire scammers begin by using a simple marketing tool to scrape the email addresses of businesses and employees from corporate websites. Then, they blast these addresses with messages containing keylogger software or other malware in a process called “bombing.” Employees who click on a malicious link or open an infected attachment might be prompted to log in, providing scammers with the password to their email accounts. Once they’re in, the scammers allow the employee to continue with business as usual and discreetly monitor the account for potential financial transactions. As soon as they see that the employee is sending an invoice to a customer, they reroute it through their own email account and physically alter the account number and routing number before forwarding it on to the customer. The email address they use is often very similar to the original email address, so it’s easy to miss. Unlike spoofing, BEC techniques such as wire-wire rely on earning internal account access rather than externally impersonating a company account. Since February, the SecureWorks team has witnessed the thieves deploy this method to reroute transactions averaging between US $30,000 and $60,000 from mostly small and medium-sized businesses making international deals. In one case, the attackers rerouted a $400,000 payment from a U.S. chemical company to its Indian supplier. Bettke and Stewart estimate the group they studied has at least 30 members and is likely earning a total of about $3 million a year from the thefts. The scammers appear to be "family men" in their late 20s to 40s who are well-respected, church-going figures in their communities. “They're increasing the economic potential of the region they're living in by doing this, and I think they feel somewhat of a duty to do this,” Stewart says. After the fact, it can take awhile before the customer and seller realize they’ve been scammed—often, neither buyer or seller realizes that something is amiss until the shipment or payment is overdue. Given their vantage point, Stewart and Bettke have tried to alert some businesses to the scam before the fraudulent transactions are complete, but they sometimes have a hard time persuading employees that they aren’t scammers themselves. The SecureWorks team has notified Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and their description of wire-wire scamming has led to at least one active investigation. They say the easiest way for business owners to prevent such attacks is to require two-step verification for employee logins. Stewart and Bettke have also uploaded a program to GitHub that detects digital artifacts that remain on an altered invoice to tip employees off to suspicious activity. http://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/telecom/security/nigerian-scammers-infect-themselves-with-own-malware-revealing-new-wirewire-fraud-scheme |
That locking system easily gets weak. Or fails. |
seunmsg:In your small mind. Go and remove Ekweremadu by fiat... As if the APC even zoned the position to the South East in the first instance. You are as ignorant as the governor. |




