$100 Diagnosis and Repair Parts-People has been specializing in Dell laptops for 20 years. We are a leading supplier of Dell replacement parts and stock all laptop repair parts needed to repair your Dell laptop. We are a trusted supplier to 1000s of schools, government agencies, military and repair shops worldwide. Send your laptop to the Dell Experts!
Most of our orders are from repeat customers. Parts-People began as a small company 20 years ago in an extra bedroom of my house. I had saved a small sum of money to purchase some computer parts and began selling them on eBay. After a few months I realized that people needed a place to go for Dell parts so I began building our website. Since we are located in Austin, Texas, where Dell.com was founded, I was able to set up a solid supply line with Dell. From the start, we focused on customer satisfaction and selling quality parts. We have grown a lot since 2002 but still and always the customer will come first. You will find that we go above and beyond with every order and offer free resources and support before and after the sale.
20 years in business
over 2 million Dell parts sold
Thanks to NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden, the Optic Nerve, a secretive British spying program, has recently been been outed for allegedly collecting millions of webcam images from Yahoo users. The GCHQ, Britain’s surveillance agency, has also identified the Xbox 360’s Kinect camera as a possible source of stolen images. Files, dating from 2008 to 2010, show Optic Nerve’s conquest, with millions of images being stored in databases. An article written by The Guardian states “these images were stored regardless of whether the users were being targeted by intelligence services”. Of the images, an estimated 3% to 11% contain “undesirable nudity”, with over 1.8 million captured from Yahoo users in a six-month period alone.
Yahoo undoubtedly responded to the report with outrage:
"We were not aware of, nor would we condone, this reported activity. This report, if true, represents a whole new level of violation of our users' privacy that is completely unacceptable, and we strongly call on the world's governments to reform surveillance law consistent with the principles we outlined in December."
This hush-hush nerve center may have done more than snoop on Yahoo Messenger users. It is also being reported that interception of the Xbox 360 Kinect camera is likely possible. Microsoft is denying all knowledge and calling it a nightmare. It is also not yet known whether GCHQ actually got a hold of recorded and still images via the Kinect, it is simply being implied. GCHQ says the camera generated “fairly normal webcam traffic and was being evaluated as part of a wider program”.
In turn, Microsoft is stating that back in December they began “initiating a broad effort to expand encryption across our services and are advocating for legal reforms”. This isn’t the first time Microsoft has been under the microscope in recent times. Just last year, Snowden revealed the scope of NSA’s PRISM spying efforts, when the GCHQ and NSA were both caught listening to Xbox Live chats. Current revelations of spying should only make webcam users extra aware of what they do online, and when they have the camera on. Although that lens is in front of you, it is always possible to turn it off, disconnect it, or put tape over it.