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Press Clippings

A selection of press clips mentioning or quoting Pam Dixon. These clippings relate to her work in technology, employment and job searching, the workplace, distance education, and privacy.

KFMB-TV, 20 February 2007, Consumer alert (credit cards/financial privacy), Marcella Lee, interview.

STAR LEDGER, 20 February 2007, A new and growing threat to health, medical identity theft, Adam Levin.

TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT, 17 February 2007, Health risk: Are thieves after your medical records? Randy Griffith.

CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, 11 February 2007, Be careful if you post your resume online, information can make it easier to steal identity, David P. Willis.

WASHINGTON POST, 10 February 2007, Taking the bait on a phish scam; job seekers are targets, victims of a sophisticated ploy, Annys Shin.

ASBURY PARK PRESS (NJ), 22 January 2007, Scammers use Internet job boards to collect information, rip you off, David P. Willis.

NBC EVENING NEWS, 14 January 2007, Internet making it easier for doctors to keep track of medical records but privacy concerns arise from the practice, interview.

THE VIRGINIAN PILOT & THE LEDGER-STAR, 10 January 2007, A do not sell list would protect our privacy, Christina Nuckols.

BIOTECH BUSINESS WEEK, 08 January 2007, Electronic medical records, medical identity theft survey shows consumers concerned about privacy, protection of records.

BUSINESSWEEK, 07 January 2007, Diagnosis: Identity Theft, Dean Foust.

AMERICAN BANKER, 05 January 2007, Security Watch, Daniel Wolfe.

AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 01 January 2007, Medical ID Theft: Sophisticated schemet to get medical records add to the risk facing medical information holders, Geri L. Dreiling.

MANAGED CARE, 08 December 2006, Loss of protected patient information real danger for health care plans, Ed Silverman.

BASELINE MAGAZINE, 06 December 2006, Serious Pain; Providence Health & Services lost information on 365,000 patients--after 10 backup tapes and disks were stolen from the back of an employee's minivan. Now, 12 months and $7 million later, the health-care provider remains mired in the aftermath. Here's why. Deborah Gage and Kim S. Nash.

CIO INSIGHT, 06 December 2006, Serious pain, medical identity theft, Deborah Gage.

MONEY MAGAZINE, 01 December 2006, The complete layman's guide to cyber safety, Pat Regnier, Jeanne Sahadi.

KXLY4, 22 November 2006, Medical identity theft becoming a big problem, Melissa Luck.

KFMB-TV, 10 November 2006, Super shredder Friday, interview.

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, 04 November 2006, Starbucks data missing, Craig Harris.

U-WIRE, 02 November 2006, Google's offer to take over college e-mail rouses praise, concern, Aditya Ramanathan.

READERS DIGEST, November 2006, Your medical records, stolen! How to protect yourself, (Cover Story), Max Alexander.

CAREER JOURNAL/WALL STREET JOURNAL, 17 October 2006, Who's reading online resumes? Identity Crooks, Dana Mattioli.

SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL, 16 October 2006, Fast-growing medical identity theft has lethal consequences, Katie Weeks.

UPI, 12 October 2006, Privacy mavens hammer DHS rule change.

GOVERNMENT EXECUTIVE MAGAZINE, 10 October 2006, Privacy groups rap DHS plan, Jonathan Marino.

MODERN HEALTHCARE, 09 October 2006, A real steal: Patients, providers face big liabilities as medical identity theft continues to rise, and in many cases it's an inside job, Joseph Conn.

INFORMATION TODAY, 01 October 2006, E-books, Wikis, and search top the news, Paula Hane.

AFX ASIA, 26 September 2006, 3 AOL subscribers sue over data release.

NEW YORK TIMES, 04 September 2006, Victims fight to clear their names after others' deeds, Tom Zeller Jr.

AARP BULLETIN, September 2006, Scam Alert: Stealing your health, Sid Kirchheimer.

NETWORK WORLD, 28 August 2006, Privacy discussion overdue, Johna Till Johnson.

VOICE OF AMERICA, 24 August 2006, You've got trouble: America Online's big mistake with search data, special economics english report.

BUSINESS WEEK ONLINE, 23 August 2006, Fallout from AOL's flub, Catherine Holahan.

WALL STREET JOURNAL /WSJ EUROPE, ASIA, 23 August 2006, AOL's technology chief steps down, Matthew Karnitschnig.

NEW YORK TIMES, 22 August 2006, Privacy issue shakes AOL, Tom Zeller Jr.

BLOOMBERG NEWS, 22 August 2006, Chief tech officer, two others leave AOL after security "screw up," Cecile Daurat and Jonathan Thaw.

E-COMMERCE TIMES, 22 August 2006, Firings, CTO departure roil AOL in wake of search data release, Keith Regan.

SILICON.COM, 22 August 2006, Heads roll at AOL after search data blunder, Elinor Mills.

CNBC, Closing Bell, 22 August 2006, Grading corporate America, interview.

USA TODAY, 22 August 2006, AOL's tech chief quits after breach of privacy, company team formed to re-evaluate security policy, Michelle Kessler and Kevin Maney.

STAR-LEDGER (NEW JERSEY), 20 August 2006, Be careful what you search for - Web queries can come back to haunt Internet users, Kevin Coughlin.

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, 17 August 2006, Privacy group says AOL made public other queries.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 16 August 2006, Privacy rights group files FTC complaint against AOL.

E-COMMERCE TIMES, 16 August 2006, EFF, World Privacy Forum, ask FTC toinvestigate AOL, Erika Morphy.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 14 August 2006, AOL's release of search requests trigger demand for government inquiry, Michael Liedtke.

CNBC, Closing Bell, 14 August 2006, Radio Frequency ID tags in passports, interview.

DOW JONES NEWS SERVICE, 14 August 2006, AOL's release of search data triggers demand for FTC probe.

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH, 13 August 2006, Web queries offer clues to personal data, Phillip O'Conner.

EWEEK, 10 August 2006, AOL miscue, Matt Hines.

WORKFORCE MANAGEMENT, 31 July 2006, Wellpoint set to put medical records online, Jeremy Smerd.

WALL STREET JOURNAL SUNDAY, 30 July 2006, Health costs: Avoid Medical identity theft, Tara Siegel Bernard.

BALTIMORE SUN, 25 July 2006, Many databases track you, Eileen Ambrose column.

CONSUMER REPORTS, July 2006, New resource to aid victims of medical identity theft. <http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/personal-finance/news/july-2006/new-resource-to-aid-victims-of-medical-identity-theft-7-06/overview/0608_medical_id-theft.htm>

NPR CAPITAL PUBLIC RADIO (Insight), 20 July 2006, Covering your digital tracks, Jeffrey Callison.

WCBS TV (New York), 14 July 2006, Medical ID Theft Assaults More Than Your Wallet, Kirstin Cole.

CBS 4 (Boston), 06 July 2006, Protecting yourself from medical identity theft, Sarah Underwood.

NBC SAN DIEGO, 05 July 2006, Medical ID Theft Leaves Victim Hurting, Peggy Pico.

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH, 30 June 2006, Phone record privacy tip backfires Woman changed name on her account and got a whole new set of junk mail solicitations, Michael D. Sorkin.

SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS, 29 June 2006, I-Team: Thousands fall victim to medical ID theft each year.

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, 25 June 2006, The Last Days of Privacy: As technology makes life richer and easier, we leave a trail of information that is susceptible to prying eyes, Jonathan Curiel.

LOS ANGELES TIMES, 24 June 2006, The Nation; Officials Defend Bank Data Tracking; Amid privacy concerns, the Bush administration portrays the Treasury Department's secret program as crucial to the war on terrorism, Greg Miller and Josh Meyer.

THE WASHINGTON POST, 23 June 2006, Concerns Raised Over AT&T Privacy Policy, Sara Kehaulani Goo.

SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS, 22 June 2006, AT&T Changes its policy on privacy, raises questions, Sanford Nowlin.

USA TODAY, 22 June 2006, AT&T: New privacy policy not 'knee-jerk'; Update coincides with lawsuit; giant says it's merger related, Elliot Blair Smith.

AFX ASIA22 June 2006, AT&T says it owns customer data.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 22 June 2006, AT&T to own customer data, track some Internet use, David Koenig.

KNIGHT-RIDDER TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE, 22 June 2006, AT&T changes its policy on privacy, raises questions, Sanford Nowlin.

THE DENVER POST, 21 June 2006, Book: First Data gave feds records, Andy Vuong.

BUFFALO NEWS, 03 June 2006, Can tests really help you choose a career? Joyce Lain Kennedy.

FORT WORTH STAR TELEGRAM, 03 June 2006, Medical identity theft on the rise, Maria M. Perotin.

FEDERAL TIMES, 31 May 2006, Agencies' biggest IT security threat: employees, Tim Kauffman.

THE LEDGER (Florida), 30 May 2006, Katrina sparks next debate: Digital records vs. privacy, Cory Reiss.

KPBS (San Diego) , 18 May 2006, These days: Medical identity theft, NSA phone records. Interview.

BALTIMORE SUN, 15 May 2006, Watch out for medical identity theft, Eileen Ambrose.

PRESS DEMOCRAT, 12 May 2006, Who's Watching You? Clark Mason.

CBS NEWS THE EARLY SHOW, 10 May 2006, Profile: Too Much Information; FTC issues warning about posting too much information on the Internet. Interview.

NATIONAL JOURNAL TECHNOLOGY DAILY, 09 May 2006, Medical identity theft is a growing problem.

SECURITY FOCUS, 04 May 2006, More protections urged for medical records, Robert Lemos.

ABC NEWS GOOD MORNING AMERICA, 03 May 2006, Beware: New medical scam. Medical ID theft can have both financial and physical ramification. Interview.

BOULDER COUNTY BUSINESS REPORT, 14 April 2006, Online marketing becomes targeted to small groups, Ben Frumin.

WINSTON SALEM JOURNAL, 23 March 2006, SAM the Straight Answer Ma'am (Job search privacy).

CHICAGO DAILY HERALD, 21 March 2006, Pay By Touch scan system now in all 270 Jewel stores, Mike Comerford.

CBS 2 (New York), 13 March 2006, Social networking sites. Interview.

THE SACRAMENTO BEE, 23 February 2006, Stolen laptop contains files on HIV patients, Todd Milbourn.

NPR: All Things Considered, 10 February 2006, Yahoo and AOL Offering Filter-proof E-mail. Interview.

ABC NEWS WORLD NEWS TONIGHT, 09 February 2006, Stealing You: Identity Theft. Interview.

MONEY, 01 February 2006, Talkin' 'bout MySpace Generation Kids' online profiles can hurt job prospects decades down the road, Scott Medintz.

HEALTH MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGY, February 2006, RHIO Nation, Robin Blair.

KNIGHT-RIDDER TRIBUNE, 26 January 2006, Eye in the Sky: Web sites allow you to see your home from space, Patrick Giblin.

UNIVERSITY WIRE, 24 January 2006, Ogling google, staff editorial, Cornell Daily Sun.

THE AUSTRALIAN, 24 January 2006, Muddled picture of online satellite images.

WASHINGTON POST, 22 January 2006, Guarding your Privacy, Sign here to give away your signature, Don Oldenburg.

LA STAMPA, 21 January 2006, Come difendersi dalle intrusioni.

THE GUARDIAN, 21 January 2006, Google defies White House over disclosing users' searches, David Teather.

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, 20 January 2006, Google, gov't in search spat, Daniel Dunaief and Elizabeth Lazarowitz.

AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE, 20 January 2006, Google refuse de livrer les recherches de ses utilisateurs a l'administration Bush.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 20 January 2006, Google clashes with Feds in battle over online search requests, Michael Liedtke.

CANADIAN PRESS, 16 January 2006, Prep-Cyber-Corner.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 15 January 2006, Firms search picture-perfect results: Online mapping service growing. But privacy issues remain a concern for Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Allison Linn.

NEW YORK TIMES, 15 January 2006, More Jobs Being Found Online, But That Doesn't Mean It's Easy, Barbara Whitaker.

THE GOLD COAST BULLETIN (Australia), 14 January 2006, The Price of Progress: One-digit pay system at our fingertips, Tony Wilson.

DOW JONES NEWSWIRE, 20 December 2005, In the Pipeline: Pediatric Doctors Seek To Connect, Donna Fuscaldo.

THE SEATTLE TIMES, 18 December 2005, Credit reports should be easier now, Jolayne Houtz.

NEWSDAY, 12 December 2005, Scams put risk in job hunts / Phony employers eager to shake cash out of applicants, Patricia Kitchen.

WISSEN (Germany), 06 December 2005, Wer hat Angst vor Larry und Sergey?

USA TODAY, 02 December 2005, Will that be cash, credit -- or fingertip? ; Buying stuff's as fast, easy as a quick touch or a little wave, Kathy Chu.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, 29 November 2005, `Cyber Monday' Sales Strong, Web Sites Say, Pui-Wing Tam and Mylene Mangalindan.

CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, 11 November 2005, Paying grocery bill is now right at your fingertip: New print scanner charges shopper's bank account automatically, Janet Rausa Fuller.

BBC NEWS ONLINE, 11 November 2005, Google talks up print and privacy, Alistair Coleman.

KIPLINGER'S PERSONAL FINANCE MAGAZINE, 01 November 2005, Credit Report Crackdown, Joan Goldwasser.

BALTIMORE SUN, 24 October 2005, Some Companies try to Push Workers Toward Adopting Healthier Lifestyles, Eileen Ambrose.

SECURITY FOCUS, 08 October 2005, Fingerprint Payments Taking Off Despite Security Concerns, Robert Lemos.

WIRED, 03 October 2005, "UnGoogleables" Hide From Search, Ann Harrison.

CBS NEWS SUNDAY MORNING, 02 October 2005, Privacy, interview.

NEWSDAY, 01 October 2005, Privacy's Weak Links: Institutions and businesses struggle to keep our personal data secret, Henry Gilgoff.

DESERET MORNING NEWS, 18 September 2005, Free credit report worth getting.

KIPLINGER'S, 18 September 2005, Free Credit Report Worth Getting,

EWEEK, 15 September 2005, Court Orders Brazen Data Thieves to Stop, Matt Hines.

USA TODAY, 05 September 2005, Beware of scams, impostors when seeking a credit report, Sandra Block.

FORTUNE, 05 September 2005, Job offer or identity-theft scam? Anne Fisher.

SUNDAY TIMES (LONDON)04 September 2005, Google Chief in Privacy Rumpus, Dominic Rushe.

CHARLESTON GAZETTE, 02 September 2005, Credit Free reports now available for state residents, Jim Balow.
KIPLINGERS, 01 September 2005, Report Card On Credit Reports, Joan Goldwasser.

THE WASHINGTON POST, 01 September 2005, Order Free Credit Reports Then Cross Your Fingers, Caroline E. Mayer.

REUTERS, 28 August 2005, ID Theft Creates Opportunities for Data Companies, Alexandria Sage.

PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE, 28 August 2005, Understanding credit reports requires homework, patience, Patricia Sabatini.

THE WASHINGTON POST, 25 August 2005, Little Assurance From ID-Theft Insurance, Leslie Walker.

USA TODAY, 23 August 2005, Don't get suckered by impostor offers of free credit report, Sandra Block.

LOS ANGELES TIMES, 23 August 2005, Firms Hit by ID Theft Find Way to Cash In on Victims, Joseph Menn.

THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS, 22 August 2005, FTC goes after credit report sites.

WASHINGTON INTERNET DAILY, 17 August 2005, FTC Cracks Down on Online Credit Report Services.

THE OREGONIAN, 17 August 2005, FTC Goes After Misleading Credit Report Web Sites, Jeff Kosseff.

THE BALTIMORE SUN, 17 August 2005, 1 million could get refund in FTC case; Experian subsidiary settles case over so-called `free' credit reports; Eileen Ambrose.

CMP TECH WEB, 17 August 2005, FTC Nails Credit Report Firm For $950,000.

STATES NEWS SERVICE, 16 August 2005, Marketer of "Free Credit reports" Settles FTC Charges.

BALTIMORE SUN, 14 August 2005, Federal law provides access to free credit reports, Eileen Ambrose.

NPR, 12 August 2005, Googled! Will the Internet come back to haunt you? Interview with Warren Olney of "To The Point," KCRW.

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH, 11 August 2005, Fingerprint system gets toehold in the region, Tavia Evans.

SAN DIEGO UNION TRIBUNE, 07 August 2005, Be careful when you opt for those free credit reports, Lynn O'Shaughnessy.

FEDERAL COMPUTER WEEK, 01 August 2005, FIPS 201 requires new scrutiny of contractors, Florence Olsen.

TIMES PICAYUNE, 31 July 2005, Free credit reports not always free, Iris Webb.

THE GLOBE AND MAIL, 26 July 2005, Bill Gates will be frisking you with a simple point and click, Simon Avery.

EWEEK, 21 July 2005, Congress nears final identity theft legislation, Lisa Vaas.

CNN MONEY, 20 July 2005, Cash or plastic? How about fingerprint? Grace Wong.

SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL, 20 July 2005, Identity thieves take advantage of misspelling, Ian Katz.

INFORMATION WEEK FINANCE TECH, 19 July 2005, Bill puts spotlight back on data theft, Gregg Keizer.

THE OREGONIAN, 15 July 2005, Imposter sites take advantage of free credit reporting, Jeffrey Kosseff.

SECURITY FOCUS, 15 July 2005, Report: Squatters a major problem for credit-report site, Robert Lemos.

FOX NEWS LIVE, 14 July 2005, Online resumes, interview.

CNET, 14 July 2005, Imposter sites plague free credit report site, Alorie Gilbert.

KFMB-TV, 08 July 2005, Public records sites pose privacy risk, interview.

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, 04 July 2005, Online Resumes Turn Risky, Carrie Kirby.

KFMB-TV, 13 June 2005, Credit report scams spreading online, interview.

SAN DIEGO UNION TRIBUNE, 11 June 2005, Identity thieves target those seeking free credit report.

USA TODAY, 07 June 2005, Tapes with data on 3.9M missing, Jon Swartz.

BLACK ENTERPRISE, 01 June 2005, Health Plan Query Hurting or Helpfing Us? Keith Reed.

MSN MONEY, 01 June 2005, Free credit reports spread to the South, Christopher Solomon.

THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER,  30 May 2005, Don't pay for your free credit report, Andrew Shain.

FORT WORTH STAR TELEGRAM, 20 May 2005,Texans get access to credit reports, but beware impostors.

ASBURY PARK PRESS, 16 May 2005, Online job hunters snared by fraud, Jim Hannah Gannett News Service.

MSNBC, 10 May, 2005, Many free credit reports still aren't free, Bob Sullivan.

ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, 25 April 2005, AOL gets tougher on 'phishing' e-mails.

TECHWEB, 22 April 2005, Google Personal-Search Tracker Raises Privacy Concerns, Antone Gonsalves.

SECURITY FOCUS, 21 April 2005, Privacy watchdog warns job seekers to beware Would-be workers need to be more cautious with resume services and posting their personal information online. Online fraudsters and scammers are waiting, Robert Lemos.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 20 April 2005, Google enables users to view personal search histories, MICHAEL LIEDTKE.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 03 April 2005, Credit reports free, but confusing to some, advocates say.

THE WASHINGTON POST, 27 March 2005, Employers Relying On Personality Tests To Screen Applicants, Ariana Eunjung Cha.

CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, 07 March 2005, "Free credit reports can be a hassle to acquire ; Web sites with similar names can lead to confusion," Stephanie Zimmerman.

LOS ANGELES TIMES, 06 March 2005, "Free Credit Report Could Cost You; Consumers encounter sales pitches and hassles trying to get the data they are entitled to,"  Kathy M. Kristof, Times Staff Writer.

THE KANSAS CITY STAR, 02 March 2005, Credit-report seekers create Internet gridlock, Paul Wenske.

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH, 01 March 2005, Pg. A01, 1087 words, A tangled Web, MICHAEL D. SORKIN.

NATIONAL JOURNAL (Technology Daily PM), 01 March 2005, Plan For Federal Identification Badges Gets Mixed Reviews, Randy Barrett.

WASHINGTON INTERNET DAILY01 March 2005, Vol.6, No.40, 133 words "Privacy."

UPI,  28 February 2005,  FTC urged to allow consumer links on site.

ABC NEWS, 16 February 2005, ChoicePoint Fraud Illustrates Identity Theft: Is there any way to truly protect yourself from ID theft? Eric Noe, Paul Eng.

USA TODAY, 31 January 2005, Oops! Amazon's new online Yellow Pages pictures Rockefeller Ice Skating Rink as a bus, Jefferson Graham.

WALL STREET JOURNAL, 25 January 2005, Keeping Your Job Hunt Secret is Harder Now, But Here's How to Do It, Erin White.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, 24 January 2005, A Driver's License As a National ID? Susan Llewelyn Leach.

FEDERAL TIMES, 24 January 2005, Controversial new ID badge: Privacy concerns worry employees, Tim Kauffman.

FEDERAL COMPUTER WEEK, 24 January 2005, Critics wary about biometric smart cards Opponents worry about job loss and invasions of privacy, Florence Olsen.

WORKFORCE MANAGEMENT, 01 January 2005, Eliyon Steps up the Search, Patrick Kiger.

MINNESOTA PUBLIC RADIO: MARKETPLACE MORNING REPORT, 15 December 2004, Group of businesses team up with law enforcement to stop phishing scam.

THE CONNECTICUT LAW TRIBUNE, 8 November 2004, Little Chip Evokes Big Brother; Retailers' use of high-tech tracking devices prompts privacy fears, Tresa Baldas.

HUMANIST, 1 November 2004, Technology and Tomorrow: A Challenge to Liberty, Brian Trent.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, 21 October 2004, Wired, but everyone on hold, Gregory M. Lamb.

USA TODAY, 15 October 2004, Google wins race to bring searches to hard drives; Free, speedy program will scour your computer, Jefferson Graham.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 15 October 2004, Google Launches PC Hard-Drive Search Tool, Michael Liedtke.

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, 15 October 2004, Google tops Microsoft with new PC search tool; provides 'photographic memory', Todd Bishop.

WALL STREET JOURNAL, 12 October 2004, 923 words, The Jungle (column), Erin White.

CONSUMER FINANCIAL SERVICES LAW REPORT, 06 October 2004, Groups urge veto of spyware bill.

RED HERRING, 17 September 2004, Should spyware be a Crime? Capitol Section.

eWEEK, 16 September 2004, Amazon.com's Search Launch Triggers Second Thoughts, Matt Hicks.

INTERNETNEWS.COM, 16 September 2004, California Spyware Bill: 'Worse Than Nothing', Susan Kuchinskas.

ABC NEWS, 07 September 2004, Mining Your Past: Background Checks Have Become an Integral Part of the Hiring Process, Eric Noe.

FORBES, 16 August 2004, 1265 words, Google Me Not; How to keep your secrets off the web, David Whelan.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, 04 August 2004, 963 words. Law enforcement in Mexico goes a bit bionic, Monica Campbell.

SECURITY DIRECTOR'S REPORT, 01 August 2004, 1389 Words, How to Keep Your Company Ahead of These New Risks.

HR FOCUS, 01 August 2004, 747 Words, How To Do Background Checks Properly.

THE NEWS-GAZETTE, 26 July 2004, 753 words, Internet job search poses risk for fraud, Illinois official warns, Christine des Garennes.

MSNBC, 19 July 2004, Online job seeker says she was duped into scam, Bob Sullivan.

EFE NEWS (South America), 19 July 2004, Fraude convierte en víctimas a buscadores de trabajo en Internet, Olivia P. Tallet.

NATIONAL JOURNAL TECHNOLOGY DAILY, 08 July 2004, Job fraud is becoming pervasive on the Internet, according to the World Privacy Forum, PM edition.

PC WORLD, 01 July 2004, 500 Words, Gmail Google's e-mail winner: privacy concerns aside, it works (Web-based E-mail), Steve Bass.

STRAITS TIMES, 20 June 2004, 602 Words, E-MAIL space war, Jessica Lim, English.

THE NEW YORK TIMES, 13 May 2004, 1799 Words, Google Mail: Virtue Lies In the In-Box, David Pogue.

NPR, 05 May 2004, 952 Words, Former AOL employee uses company's database to access the accounts of celebrites, forms relationships with them, and sells the story of her life to Hollywood.

DOW JONES NEWS SERVICE, 04 May 2004, 666 Words, Privacy Groups Urge Calif AG To Probe Google's Gmail Svc, Riva Richmond.

THE STAR-LEDGER, 29 April 2004, 914 Words, Google stock offering spurs mega-plans - Would-be investors see big returns but 'Gmail' upsets privacy, KEVIN COUGHLIN.

USA TODAY, 15 April 2004, 1296 Words, Targeted ads tied to Gmail's super space ; Observers raise privacy issues MONEY Personal technology, Edward C. Baig.

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, 14 April 2004, 570 Words, Free Google e-mail raises privacy fears: Silicon Valley heroes face legal action for tracking users' messages and using key words to trigger unsolicited advertising shots, Simon English in New York.

NEW YORK POST, 03 April 2004, 348 Words, Google Users Feeling Yucky, STEPHEN LYNCH.

THE REGISTER UK, 03 April 2004, Google Mail is Evil -- Privacy Advocates, Andrew Orlowski.

LOS ANGELES TIMES, 02 April, 2004, 646 words, Google's E-Mail Strategy Criticized;New Gmail Service scans messages and attaches targeted ads to them, raising privacy fears, Chris Gaither.

CNET NEWS.COM, 02 April 2004, 1855 Words, Google's Web mail no joke; Gmail, based on massive storage and search, represents a radical new approach to free e-mail, but the service raises privacy concerns, Stefanie Olsen.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 29 March 2004, 936 Words,Kits for employee background checks sold at Sam's Club, ADAM GELLER.

THE OREGONIAN, 27 March 2004, 994 Words, Privacy Measure Advocates Want Financial Institutions to Clarify Small Print, Jeff Kosseff.

U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, 08 March 2004, 1101 words, Job Search 2.OH!, Jill Rachlin Marbaix.

U.S. NEWSWIRE, 19 February 2004, 915 words, 60 Public Interest Groups Call on Corporate Donors to Withdraw Nov. '04 Initiative to Gut Unfair Business Competition Law.

THE NATION, 16 February, 2004,The Trouble with RFID, Simson L. Garfinkel.

CNN, 25 January, 2004, CNN Sunday Morning 07:00, Sunday, Transcript # 012508CN.V46, News; Domestic, 454 words, A Look at Online Job Search Site, Adaora Udoji, Jason Carroll.

MARKETPLACE MORNING REPORT, 13 January 2004, Marketplace Morning Report (6:50 AM ET) , Tuesday, Fraudulent job ads online pose problems for job seekers, KAI RYSSDAL, ASHLEY MILNE-TYTE.

MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL, 11 January 2004, Pg. 18P, 825 words, JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY, Tribune Media Services.

THE GAZETTE (Montreal, Quebec), 03 January 2004 Saturday Final Edition, Montreal Works; Pg. B6, 563 words, Watch out for bogus online ads: Job-seekers could be put at risk.

INFORMATION MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 01 January 2004, 325 words, Wanted: Online Privacy Police, Swartz, Nikki.

GUIDA NORMATIVA 30 December 2003, INTERPRETAZIONE; Pg. 34, 356 words, Annunci di lavoro on line e segnalazioni all'Inail: gli ultimi chiarimenti del Garante della privacy, a cura di, Roberto Giuliante.

THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE (Georgia), 21 December 2003, Sunday, Pg. F01, 422 words, JOB SEEKERS' DATA AT RISK .

DOW JONES NEWS SERVICE, 10:54, 12 December 2003, 445 words, Job Seekers Become Target Of New ID-Theft Scam, By Kaja Whitehouse.

THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER, 08 December 2003, 678 words, The Charlotte Observer, N.C., Worklife Column, By Amber Veverka.

CHARLESTON GAZETTE (West Virginia), 28 November 2003, Friday, News; Pg. P1D, 825 words, Employment seekers' personal data at risk, Andrea Coombes, CBSMarketWatch.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL EUROPE, 25 November 2003, 916 words, Online Job Seeker Should be Wary of Scams --- Advisers Say Pay No Fees, Closely Scrutinize Concerns, And Overall Guard Privacy, Kris Maher.

TIME MAGAZINE, 24 November 2003, COVER STORY/BUSINESS; Pg. 57, The New Rules of Web Hiring, Barbara Kiviat.

NEWSDAY (New York), 23 November 2003, Sunday, ALL EDITIONS, Pg. F09, 66 words, Who's Reading Your Resume?

MARKETPLACE, Marketplace (6:30 PM ET) - SYND, 20 November 2003, Thursday, 813 words, More businesses turning to high-tech time management systems to track employee efficiency, DAVID BROWN, ANDREA DUKAKIS.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, Career Journal: The Jungle, 18 November 2003, 897 words, By Kris Maher.

COMPUTERWORLD, 17 November 2003, Users of Online Job Services Risk Lack of Privacy Protection ; Yearlong study reveals sales of personal information, profiling of job seekers, Jaikumar Vijayan.

ST. PETERSBURG TIMES (Florida), 17 November 2003, Monday BUSINESS; Pg. 4D, 660 words, Job Web sites may not honor privacy.

THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE, 16 November 2003, 582 words, Job seekers' privacy is eroding online / Report claims safeguards flimsy.

HAMILTON SPECTATOR (Ontario, Canada), 15 November 2003, Saturday Final Edition, CAREERS; Pg. E01, 358 words, Hunting for a job online means details of your life are everywhere.

WASHINGTON INTERNET DAILY, 13 November 2003, Vol.4, No.219, 423 words, Privacy Mavens Seek Action, Disclosure on Job, Scholarship Sites.

UNIVERSITY WIRE, 13 November 2003, Thursday, Study claims online job search sites may violate privacy laws, By Ashley Dinges, Michigan Daily.

WASHINGTON INTERNET DAILY, 13 November 2003, Vol.4, No.219, 423 words, Privacy Mavens Seek Action, Disclosure on Job, Scholarship Sites.

CNN Headline News, 12 November 2003, Wednesday, 07:00-07:30 ET, CNN Headline News, Cable, National Cable, 30 words.

SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS 12 November 2003, Wednesday, SJ-INTERNET-PRIVACY, 824 words, Report Warns Job Seekers to Guard Privacy when Searching on Internet, By Michael Bazeley.

THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER , 12 November 2003, 554 words, Job-sites report raises privacy issue.Group says too much data is given to third parties, which leads to extensive profiling, LISA MUOZ.

NEWSDAY (New York), 12 November 2003, Wednesday, ALL EDITIONS, Pg. A45, 393 words, Online Job Sites Have Privacy Holes, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, 12 November 2003, 592 words, Privacy Isn't Part of Online Job Hunt, By Ryan J. Foley.

THE OREGONIAN 12 November 2003, Wednesday, 759 words, Online Job Seekers Are at Risk for Identity Theft, Study Shows, By Jeffrey Kosseff.

PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER12 November, 2003, Wednesday, PH-ID-THEFT, 661 words, Job Searches Are Goldmines for Identity Thieves, By Jane M. Von Bergen.

eWEEK.COM, 11 November 2003, Tuesday, 653 words, Holes Found in Online Job Search Privacy; Some career Web sites, recruitment services and automated job-application kiosks offer flimsy privacy protections and might even violate employment and credit laws, a report released Tuesday asserts.

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 11 November 2003, 630 words, Report finds privacy holes in digital job searches, By BRIAN BERGSTEIN.

WALL STREET JOURNAL, 26 August 2003, "Office and Ethics Collide More Often Than Ever," Kris Maher.

CNN, WOLF BLITZER REPORTS 12:00, 05 August 2003, Transcript # 080506CN.V95, News; Domestic, 1416 words, Jobs Wanted, Nick Corcodilos, Pam Dixon, Wolf Blitzer.

CONSUMER REPORTS, July 2003, CR MONEY; Vol. 68, No. 7; Pg. 53,631 words, Steer clear of online job scams.

THE BOSTON GLOBE, 25 May 2003, Sunday, ,THIRD EDITION, Pg. H1, 1241 words, Specialists Urge Caution on Career Websites, By John P. Mello Jr., Globe Correspondent.

CNN, NEXT@CNN, 17 May 2003 Saturday, resume poaching / identity theft issue on online job sites, and its impact.

THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER, 02 April 2003, 1426 words, "Combination of Posting Resumes Online, Networking Best Ways to Find a Job," By Amber Veverka.

THE NEW YORK TIMES, 20 March 2003, Thursday, Late Edition - Final, Section G;  Page 6;  Column 3;  Circuits. Privacy; Is the Employer Real? Guarding Your Personal Information, By BILL WERDE.

PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE, 17 March 2003 Monday, Pg.D-1, 1179 words, Privacy on the line; Personal Information Postd with Online Job Sites May be Reaching Far More People Than You Want, Adam Geller, The Associated Press, New York.

CONSUMER FINANCIAL SERVICES LAW REPORT,  14 March 2003, Vol. 6, No. 17, 133 words, Monster issues ID fraud warning .

ASSOCIATED PRESS, 21:00, 14 March 2003, 1193 words, Posting resumes on the Internet pose risk to job seekers' privacy By ADAM GELLER.

THE GUARDIAN (London), 10 March 2003, Guardian Office Hours Pages,Pg. 3, Office Hours: WPM, Rosie Chouff.

FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM10 March 2003, Monday, FT-ONLINE-RESUMES, 713 words, Job Seekers Should Be Cautious When Posting Resumes Online, By Maria M. Perotin.

WASHINGTON INTERNET DAILY, 7 March 2003, Vol.4, No.45, Protection of Job-Seekers' Data Gains Higher Profile.

THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE02 March 2003, Sunday, 2 STAR EDITION, BUSINESS;, Pg. 2, 786 words, Resume rustlers threaten job sites ; Few safeguards protect privacy, business viability, Kris Maher.

THE RECORD (Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario), 01 March 2003 Saturday Final Edition, FRONT; Pg. A13, 240 words, Online job seekers risk theft of personal information, NEW YORK.

REUTERS NEWS, 17:44, 28 February 2003, 587 words, Online job site warns users of identity theft. By Elinor Mills Abreu.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS State & Local Wire, 27 February 2003, Thursday, BC cycle, Business News, 594 words, Monster.com warns job seekers about dangers of false postings, By ADAM GELLER, AP Business Writer, NEW YORK.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, 25 February 2003, 984 words,Career Journal: Resume Rustling Is Threatening Online Job Sites, Kris Maher.

PALM BEACH POST, 23 February 2003, "Posting Resumes Online May lead to Privacy Pitfalls, ID Theft."

AUSTIN AMERICAN STATESMAN, 20 February 2003, Thursday, Business; Pg. C1, 464 words, Resumes on the Web not secure, group says, Bob Keefe.

THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE , 20 February 2003, Thursday, BUSINESS;Pg. C-1, 724 words, Online resumes copied, sold without consent, Bruce V. Bigelow; STAFF WRITER.

ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER, 20 February 2003, 389 words, Biotech Job-Search Web Site Sues Rival for Fraud, Copyright Infringement, By Lisa Munoz.

THE ATLANTA JOURNAL AND CONSTITUTION, 20 February 2003, Business; Pg. 5D. "Privacy a larger issue with online resumes," Bob Keefe.

WALL STREET JOURNAL, 21 January, 2003, 787 words "Strategies for Overcoming An Inappropriate Interviewer," By Kris Maher.

2002

MACHINE DESIGN, 12 December 2002, 195 words, Who's reading your resume? Kathy Franzinger.

MSNBC.com , 04 November, 2002, "Online job listing an ID theft scam," by Bob Sullivan.

WALL STREET JOURNAL, 16 July 2002, "How to Protect Your Data When Job Hunting Online," By Kris Maher.

OMAHA WORLD-HERALD, 17 June 2002, 1362 words, "If you have previous experience, press 1. If you don't, press 2. Unsure? Press 3." Job seekers who carpet-bomb firms with resumes and cover... Daniel P. Finney.

WALL STREET JOURNAL, 21 May 2002 ,793 words, "Interviewing Effectively In a Tight Job Market," Career Journal: The Jungle , By Kemba J. Dunham.

WALL STREET JOURNAL'S CAREER JOURNAL, 07 May 2002, "The truth behind online job hunting," Sarah Needleman.

KIPLINGER'S PERSONAL FINANCE, 01 May 2002, 189 words, Resume Theft: An Online Risk, ERIN BURT.

CNBC, 14 March , 2002, Business Center Broadcast interview with Pam Dixon and CNBC Business News correspondent Sharon Epperson about online job searching tips.

SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST, 20 February 2002, 427 words, Employers go online to bypass expensive recruiters.

PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, 19 February 2002, "Firms join to launch recruiting Web site," By Jane M. Von Bergen.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, 29 January 2002, 793 words, Career Journal -- The Jungle: How To Apply Online, By Kris Maher.

WASHINGTON POST, 25 January 2002, 'Résumé Spamming' Brings an Online Backlash, by Carrie Johnson.

CHICAGO TRIBUNE, 21 January, 2002, "Resume vaults local techie into spam battlefield," by Christine Tatum.

2001

THE WASHINGTON POST, 11 September 2001, 720 words, Privacy Advocates Say Job-Search Site Misuses Data, Carrie Johnson.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, 11 September 2001, 672 words, Career Journal: The Jungle, By Kemba J. Dunham.

THE ASIAN WALL STREET JOURNAL, 10 September 2001, 933 words, Job Hunters Find CVs Posted on Net Leave Digital Trail, By Jeremy Wagstaff.

INFORMATION WEEK, 10 September 2001, 451 words, Privacy Group Alleges Monster-ous Breach -- Monster.Com Doesn't Let Users Know What Happens To Resumes, Foundation Says, Tony Kontzer.

TRIBUNE MEDIA, syndicated column 09 September 2001,Careers Now: Disturbing new Privacy Report About Online Resumes, By Joyce Lain Kennedy.

WIRED, 06 September 2001, "Who's Looking at Your Resume?"

TORONTO STAR, 06 September 2001, 547 words, Warning issued about online resumés, Warning issued about online resumes, Tyler Hamilton.

BNA INTERNET LAW NEWS, 06 September 2001, TALK ABOUT A MONSTER ABUSE OF PRIVACY BNA Internet Law Highlights.

NEWSFACTOR, 05 September, 2001, "Monster.com Privacy Practices Assailed by Watchdogs," NewsFactor Network.

NEWSBYTES , 05 Sep 2001, 'Systemic' Privacy Abuses At Monster.com - Report," David McGuire.

TECHTV, 17 April , 2001, broadcast.

CNN, 05 April, 2001, broadcast.

TECHTV , 06 March, 2001, broadcast.

SMARTMONEY, 01 March 2001, Career Guide 2001. Wired for Hire: For job hunters, the Internet can be an indispensable tool -- but only if you know your way around, Sarah Breckenridge.

CNN MORNING NEWS, 02 February, 2001, Pam Dixon on strategies for finding a job online 12 p.m. EST Author Pam Dixon Discusses 'Job Searching Online For Dummies' , Stephen Frazier. 

2000

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, 27 November 2000, 1641 words, The Best Way To... ...Find a Job --- Employment opportunities are a lot easier to find -- if you know where to look, By Beth M. Mantz.

THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL, 09 August 2000, 137 words, Help as close as the library.

THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL, 05 March 2000, 825 words, Search and do research to land yourself a paying internship, JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY.

MEETINGS & CONVENTIONS , 01 January 2000, 1,999 words, "Newjob.com," Sarah J.F. Braley.

1999

CNNfn, 12 November 1999, 575 words, Job Searching Online, Deborah Marchini.

U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, 01 November 1999, 4126 words, Why it pays to quit. Loyalty, schmoyalty. In today's frenzied job market, staying put gets you nowhere. Walking out gets you ahead, Kim Clark; Joellen Perry.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, 01 November 1999, 872 words, Manager's Journal: Watch Out, or You Might Get `Salvaged,' By Richard Miniter.

SMARTMONEY, 01 October 1999, 415 words, Put Your Best Font Forward: How to make sure your resume doesn't get lost in the online shuffle, By Lisa Kalis.

SMARTMONEY, 01 October 1999, 4295 words, From Click to Corner Office: The complete guide to finding your dream job online, By Lisa Kalis.

BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS , 01 October 1999, 1027 words,College @ Home, Bob Ehlert.

NEWSDAY , 27 September 1999, 550 words, (English) After a Bad performance review or a lost promotion, it's important to take a step back and consider what to do next.

THE SEATTLE TIMES, 20 September 1999, 885 words, Don't Fall For It -- Lost Out on a Promotion or Raise - or Even Lost the Whole Job? There's a Trap in Reacting to Bad News Badly, AMY JOYCE.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, 16 August 1999, 276 words, Shelley Donald Coolidge.

CNNfn:, 11 August 1999, 526 words, Your Money: Online Job Hunting, Allan Dodds.

FORTUNE, 24 May 1999, "Read This Before You Put a Resume Online Cybersapce is a Job Jungle."

SYDNEY MORNING HERALD , 27 February 1999, 2892 words, Rejected? Karin Bishop.

CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, 03 January 1999, 661 words, Information superhighway cuts distance, Joyce Lain Kennedy.

BUFFALO NEWS, 02 January 1999, 568 words,The Best Books to Read When You're Searching for Work, JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY.

1998

THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTITNEL, 16 December 1998, 1155 words, Gifts that can enhance careers, SHERRI ENG.

SMARTMONEY, 01 October 1998, 278 words, Virtually Educated: More universities are offering online classes that let you learn at home, By Jason Tanz.

TIME MAGAZINE, 20 July 1998, 2485 words, Brushing Up From the boardroom to the back office, Americans are returning to school for quick, practical courses that allow them to keep up, Laura KossFeder.

CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, 16 July 1998, 559 words, Blind e-mail resumes not recommended, Joyce Lain Kennedy.

THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS, 02 June 1998, 684 words,Finding jobs on Net is easy, Joyce Lain Kennedy.

BOSTON HERALD, 20 April 1998, 477 words, Careers; Boston Herald Workplace Diversity Job Fair '98; Get in focus for Job Fair; Preparation can be key to attaining success, STACEY URICH.

TULSA WORLD, 01 March 1998, 668 words, Study Area Markets Before Making Career Move, Anita Bruzzese.

1997

THE PRESS ENTERPRISE RIVERSIDE CA, 21 September 1997, 1770 words, Long-Distance Scholars High-tech advances allow students in the Inland Empire to pursue college degrees at schools across the nation, Gordon Johnson.

THE NEW ORLEANS TIMES PICAYUNE, 21 September 1997, 776 words, REPUTABLE COLLEGES TAKING DEGREES ONLINE, DEBORAH SOLOMON.

CNNfn: Digital Jam , 14:30, 09 July 1997, 1125 words, Author of "Virtual College" Discusses Online Education, Beverly Schuch.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, 28 March 1997, 538 words, Net users claim media overreaction to Web angle on suicides, ELIZABETH WEISE.

NEWSWEEK, 10 March 1997, 705 words, Internet U - no ivy, no walls, no keg parties.(virtual colleges)(2000 - The Millennium Notebook), Kendall Hamilton.

COMMUNICATIONS WEEK, 10 March 1997, 470 words, Jobs Will Follow 'Net Networking, David B. Opton.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS, 09 March 1997, 1804 words, Going to College in Cyberspace in the Internet Age, Many are Going Online or Turning on the TV to Earn their Degree, Fawn Germer.

LIBRARY JOURNAL, 01 March 1997, 56 words, Takecharge Computing for Teens & Parents / Great Software for Kids & Parents / The World Wide Web for Kids & Parents.

THE SEATTLE TIMES, 02 February 1997, 1143 words, How to Check if Online Schools are Accredited, JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY.

THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS, 28 January 1997, 563 words,Getting degree a la modem Here's what to look for if you're constrained to study online, JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY.

1996

BUSINESS WEEK, 11 November 1996, 822 words, Hitting the Books at a Virtual Campus. Get a degree--from business to nursing, EDITED BY AMY DUNKIN .

NEWSDAY , 27 October 1996, 2040 words, VIRTUAL COLLEGE / Education Graduates to Online Classroom. SIDEBAR: Going to School on the Internet, By Katherine Cavanaugh.

BUSINESS WEEK, 30 September 1996, 1653 words, POUNDING THE VIRTUAL PAVEMENT EDITED, BY AMY DUNKIN .

THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, 16 September 1996, 1765 words, Snagging a Job Off the Net / Using a PC to find work is becoming mainstream, Laura Castaneda.

LAN TIMES, 10 June 1996, 537 words, Electronic Employment Seeking Job Candidates Online, By Ram Tackett.

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, 26 February 1996, 5004 words, Spring computer books, Paul Hilts Ingrid Chevann.

BLACK ENTERPRISE, 01 January 1996, 2350 words, Taking your job search online: don't limit your job hunt to the classifieds. You can increase your prospects by entering cyberspace, Cassandra Hayes .

1995

THE TAMPA TRIBUNE, 11 December 1995, 1922 words, Does your resume stand out? Can it easily be read by people and computers alike? It may be time toupdate the way you look on paper, NOAM M. M. NEUSNER.

THE SEATTLE TIMES, 03 December 1995, 1265 words, AGENCY MAY HELP OVERRIDE RACIAL BIAS IN JOB HUNT, JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY.

TIMES UNION (Albany, NY) , 26 November 1995, 613 words, Older workers can make that uphill climb.

FORTUNE , 13 November 1995, 895 words, Getting hired by getting wired (Column), Marshall Loeb.

HOME PC, 01 November 1995, 266 words, Surfing for a living, David D. Busch.

U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, 30 October 1995, 523 words, A paper resume? It's passe Selling yourself online, Margaret Mannix.

U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, 30 October 1995, 992 words, The home-page help wanteds Need some leads on a new job? Try browsing the World Wide Web, Margaret Mannix.

DENVER POST, 28 October 1995, 154 words, DATA BANK.

BUFFALO NEWS, 13 August 1995, 353 words, AT THE LIBRARY.

LOS ANGELES DAILY NEWS, 07 August 1995, 473 words, JOB HUNTERS HIT PAY DIRT ON INTERNET, L.M. Sixel.

HOUSTON CHRONICLE 07 August 1995, 979 words, Land a job by using the 'Net/Computer search extends reach, L.M. SIXEL.

ROANOKE TIMES AND WORLD NEWS, 06 August 1995, 776 words, Reasses Your Job Skills to Develop a Career Path -- and Avoid Obsolescence, CAMILLE WRIGHT MILLER.  

THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, 17 July 1995, 1888 words, Surfing the Internet Can Land You a Job / Computers are giving a whole new meaning to 'networking', Jonathan Marshall.

THE SEATTLE TIMES, 09 July 1995, 1238 words, Online Services Can Wire You up to Opportunities, JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY.

THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, 25 June 1995, 694 words, Paper Still Has Place in Computer Age, Craig Crossman.

THE SEATTLE TIMES, 18 June 1995, 1040 words, Don't Keep Waiting in Line for Jobs, Just go Online, DAVID JACOBSON.

THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER, 05 June 1995, 831 words, New On The Bookshelf,  JEFF ROWE.

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, 27 February, 1995,  Bibliography. 6,868 words

Dixon's television appearances include segments on CBS News' "48 Hours ," NBC, ABC, CNN, Fox, PBS, MSNBC and NPR .

Also, ClearChannel radio carries a weekly segment by Pam Dixon about technology.