No, not unless you tell everyone your username and password.
no
NASA's web page, www.nasa.gov, has contact information. For general (non-Recovery Act) questions, the email address is public-inquiries@hq.nasa.gov.
Dear, My e-mail address: marta.b1988@gmail.comI have one ask.If I am from Poland Have I any chance win callback and act a part?Thank you very much for your reply.Martha
yes people on Disney get paid to act, its there gob to act!
That was Siegfried and Roy. They featured white tigers in their act. In October 2003, a male tiger that had been used in the show hundreds of times, sunk his teeth into Roy's neck--on stage. The blood loss and trauma triggered a stroke. Roy survived; the act did not. Roy recovered enough to perform again, but using a cane to walk. In 2010, Siegfried and Roy announced they were retired for good. Note: The video of the attack was censored due to the violent nature and for Roy's privacy.
I act in her hair stylish.
At the begining
at the beginning of the e-mail
this email contains for official use only (fouo) information, which must be protected under the privacy act and afi 33-332
No. You are protected by the privacy act.
Yes. No game needs a parent's email address so long as you are 18 or over. Due to the United States' Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998, any information such as email addresses from those under the age of 13 is protected. This is federal law. Additionally, your parents are the legal guardians of your private information until you reach the age of 18 or find yourself emancipated. As this is rare, the age of default is 18.It isn't personal. Actually, it is. And anything personal that regards a minor is protected, and strictly verboten.
Privacy Act
There is no specific legal age requirement for obtaining an email address. However, most email service providers require users to be at least 13 years old in compliance with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) in the United States.
Privacy Act
privacy act statement"
privacy act statement"
Don't think so. It would be against the federal privacy act.
Sufficiently original literary works are automatically protected by copyright, even email.