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'Allergic' to Wi-Fi? Move to West Virginia

There's a place where Wi-Fi and cell phones are non-existent. It's not in the middle of the rain forest or from a time long, long ago. It's in Green Bank, W.Va.

Green Bank may sound like geek hell, but it's heaven for people who believe electromagnetic radiation makes them sick. The BBC chatted with a couple of these refugees from technology and they described symptoms ranging from physical pain to fatigue.

"When I'm exposed to the cell phones, it hurts to think," Green Bank resident Diane Schou told the BBC. She describes herself as a "technological leper" who has found relief since moving from Iowa to West Virginia.

Electromagnetic hypersensitivity has been the subject of some controversy. The symptoms may feel very real, but a 2007 study led by Elaine Fox of the U.K.'s University of Essex showed that short-term exposure to a typical GSM base station-like signal did not affect well-being or physiological functions in sensitive or control individuals. … Read more

Robbery suspect's Facebook name: 'Willie Sutton Jr'

The history of those who use Facebook to make themselves seem a little bigger, a little more glamorous is growing longer.

Soon, no doubt, there will be a TV show called "Outrageous Facebook Stories," in which those who did crazy things on Facebook will tell their stories. It will probably be on Fox or VH1.

One of those featured might, one day, be Jesse Hippolite.

The way the Smoking Gun has fired it up, Hippolite, a 23-year-old New Yorker, came under the suspicion of the police after bank employees gave them the partial license plate of a getaway … Read more

Scottrade Mobile lets you trade on the go

Scottrade Mobile puts all of the online brokerage's trading tools in the palm of your hand. It lets you conduct research on securities, manage your account, and place trade orders just as easily as you would on the full Web site.

From anywhere in the app, you can get stock readings by hitting the Get a Quote button on the bottom of the screen. Type in a ticker symbol or company name to bring up all of a stock's vitals, as well as options to find relevant news, set alerts, and add the stock to your Watch List. … Read more

Analyst: Apple MacBook to make gains on PC

Apple's MacBook is set to make market share gains on PCs in the second half, according to a research note from a Deutsche Bank analyst.

As demand for consumer Windows PCs softens a bit, Apple will be in a position to a grab market share, according to a research note released today from Deutsche Bank analyst Chris Whitmore.

"Our recent checks with the PC supply chain suggest overall orders have softened modestly in the past several weeks due to weaker European and U.S. Consumer NB (notebook) demand and more conservative back-to-school expectations from OEMs," he wrote. … Read more

Safe online banking requires a dedicated PC

In June, Patco Construction Company of Sanford, Maine, lost its lawsuit against Ocean Bank to recover more than $300,000 the construction company had lost to online hackers, as reported by Kim Zetter on Wired.com's Threat Level blog.

The court found that while Ocean Bank's security procedures "were not optimal," in the words of Magistrate Judge John Rich of the U.S. District Court in Maine, Patco was ultimately responsible for securing the company's online bank accounts. Patco is not the only business to learn this lesson the hard way--far from it.

Greg Farrell … Read more

Jumio turns cameras into credit card readers

"It's Square without hardware." That's how Jumio CEO Daniel Mattes describes his new credit card processing system, which uses cameras on consumer devices to read credit card info and to verify the authenticity and presence of the actual card itself.

In addition to saving users time (they don't have to type in credit card number if they're checking out at a site that uses Jumio), Mattes also says his system prevents against fraud: It can tell if the card the software is looking at is real plastic, if the numbers are embossed, even if the hologram on a card is real. Jumio, he says, destroys the criminal model of stealing credit card numbers. Now the bad guys need to have the cards themselves. Or a technological solution to fake out a webcam.

Sending the encrypted video stream also foils keyloggers.

In the future, Jumio might also be able to authorize credit transactions against additional tokens, like driver's licenses. It may eventually even verify against faces.

The service currently works through a Flash-based app that access a computer's Webcam. A mobile version is forthcoming, Mattes says.

There's no question that being able to hold up a credit card to a camera is easier than having to type in numbers. It's also more secure, although not absolutely so.

Jumio improves the convenience and security of the credit card system and has the big advantage of requiring no major infrastructure or behavioral change by consumers or credit card companies. But I would argue that the whole credit card concept is antiquated and has to go. Just ask yourself: if you were designing a new consumer transaction system today, would you base it on static, human-readable numbers engraved on physical tokens? Technologies like Jumio can plaster over the flaws in this ancient architecture--and profit greatly in the process--but really it's time for a new way to grant access to, and prevent fraud of, financial accounts.

I leave that as an exercise for the reader.

To stimulate your thinking, see 'Smart' credit cards get closer to consumers' wallets.… Read more

The 404 850: Where Jill will do anything for love (podcast)

Aunt Jill's been busy with her own podcast Jill On Money, but today she joins us on The 404 to answer your financial questions. Listen to this episode to find out what each of us did as teenagers to make money, how kids today can make the most of their time, and the best way to handle your monthly credit card debt. Plus, Jill helps us out with another Tang That Tune, now with a video and audio intro thanks to Patrick and Jamey!

The 404 Digest for Episode 850

Listen and subscribe to Aunt Jill's podcast, Jill on Money! Check out #AuntJill's Twitter, and send her your questions!

Episode 850 Subscribe in iTunes (audio) | Subscribe in iTunes (video) | Subscribe in RSS Audio | Subscribe in RSS VideoRead more

Citigroup hacking nets $2.7 million from customers

About 3,400 Citigroup credit card customers suffered a loss of $2.7 million during a security breach earlier this year, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

Citi acknowledged earlier this month that a May 10 breach compromised the company's online account system, allowing the attackers to access names, account numbers, and contact information for the affected customers. However, Citi said that Social Security numbers, birth dates, card expiration dates, and card security codes were not compromised.

The banking giant said its customers will not be liable for the losses.

Citi originally said the breach affected about 1 … Read more

Schwab Android app adds mobile check deposits

After launching its official Android app (download) only two weeks ago, Charles Schwab Bank and Brokerage has already released an update with a much-needed feature: mobile check deposit. This adds some serious power to an app that already lets you transfer money between accounts, view balances, and track and trade stocks.

To deposit a check, select either your Schwab Bank or Schwab brokerage account, enter the deposit amount, take photos of both sides of the endorsed check, tap Submit, and you're all set. But be warned: checks cannot be wrinkled or folded, and pictures need to be clear, in-focus, … Read more

Bank statement file converter

Online banking has been one of the Internet's greatest conveniences, eliminating not just tons of paper but also delays, lag time, and errors. What could be better, you say? Well, electronic bank and credit card statements could be more useful. ProperSoft's Bank2CSV is a free utility that converts your electronic bank and credit card statements from the OFX, QFX, QIF, QBO, and OFC formats used by programs such as QuickBooks, Quicken, and Microsoft Money into spreadsheet-compatible Comma Separated Value (CSV) files that are compatible with Microsoft Excel, OpenOffice.org, and other spreadsheets.

Bank2CSV's simple, dialog-based interface is … Read more