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Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Thank you for your immediate response


Dear Car Owner,

We are calling to deliver your auto warranty extension quote.

If you fail to renew your warranty, free repairs won't be available when it expires.

Your free quote is ready:
- Click here to confirm
- Click here for more information

(Valid as of August 6th, 2013)


Sincerely,
Jessica
Warranty Dept.






To stop receiving future promotions about this offer click here or write to: 1800 E. Robertson Blvd. Suite 220, Los Angeles, CA 90035.
An extended warranty is coverage for electrical or mechanical breakdown. It may or may not cover peripheral items, wear and tear, damage by computer viruses, re-gassing, normal maintenance, accidental damage, or any consequential loss.[1] Most state insurance regulators have approved the inclusion of normal wear and tear, accidental damage from handling, rental car and towing, power surge and other coverages in addition to the standard coverage for defects in materials and workmanship. The indemnity is to cover the cost of repair and may include replacement if deemed uneconomic to repair. It is important for consumers to read and understand the terms and conditions offered at the point of sale. In retail consumer electronics, extended warranties cost 20% to 30% of the price, and give sales associates up to 15% commission at some retailers.[2][3] Consumer advocate groups, such as the non-profit Consumers Union, advise against purchasing extended warranties unless they can be purchased at manufacturers cost. David Butler of the Consumers Union says, "The extended warranty is definitely in the best interest of the company because if the product breaks down they want you to be satisfied with it and buy another one when the time comes, but isn't often in the best interest of the consumer unless it can be purchased at cost with no or very little markup." Consumers Union says only two products deserve extended warranty consideration: projection TV's and digital cameras. Both are expensive to repair and need repairs frequently.[4]
"intentional or bad-faith violations" were found. The document said only that the missteps resulted in the "automated tools operating in a manner that was not completely consistent with the specific terms of the court's order." Additional safeguards were subsequently ordered by the surveillance court.Intelligence officials stressed at a Senate committee hearing on Wednesday that the program still does not let them look at content unless there is a reasonable suspicion that the material might be related to terror groups.Some lawmakers have come down hard on the NSA over these programs, pushing to force the agency to release more information and potentially rein in the program itself.One of the documents, though, adamantly defended the rationale for collecting massive quantities of "metadata" on phone calls -- like the date, time and duration of calls."The more metadata NSA has access to, the more likely it is that NSA can identify or discover the network of contacts linked to targeted numbers or addresses," the document says.Declassified order on phone data collection
wrote."It has been more than 10 months since the attacks.We appear to be no closer to knowing who was responsible today than we were in the early weeks following the attack. This is simply unacceptable. We encourage you to be aggressive in your investigation to properly hold accountable those who attacked our compounds in Benghazi."Obama administration officials have tried to assuage lawmakers' lingering concerns and questions about the Benghazi attack, including over allegations that the administration misled the public about the nature of the assault last September. But lawmakers have also grown increasingly frustrated over the fact that nobody has been brought to justice since four Americans were killed in the attack on two U.S. posts in the eastern Libya city that was a home base for the anti-Qaddafi rebellion.Lawmakers probed further on Wednesday, when they had a closed hearing with Col. George Bristol, who was the commander of a task force operating in northern and western Africa. He briefed members of the House Armed Services Committee. Eagerly awaited Benghazi testimony coming to Hill Lawmakers look for answers for a Benghazi hero




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