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Sony Ericsson Ringtone
Many of the world’s most knowledgeable crime fighters have repeatedly focused their attention on the mountainous region between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Somewhere in those mountains a not-too-small cave serves as the living quarters for Osama Bin Laden. While living in a rather isolated area, he apparently has retained the ability to communicate with like-minded individuals around the world. How does he make contact with far-distant points?
Does he have a mobile phone with a Sony Ericsson free real ringtone? If not, then perhaps he places calls from a cell phone with a Sony Ericsson keypress ringtone. Maybe he punches the keys on a mobile device with a Cingular ringtone for Sony Ericsson.
Could it be that Bin Laden has found a way to obtain a free Sony Ericsson ringtone? If so, then what might cause him to desire a different-sounding ringtone, such as the polyphonic ringtone for Sony Ericsson? Would he see benefits in the acquisition of a free polyphonic ringtone for Sony Ericsson.?
Perhaps the answers to those questions could offer guidance to those who hope to find and capture Bin Laden. Perhaps those questions highlight untried methods for seeking out the location of a Most-Wanted criminal. Crime-fighters might, for example, look for evidence that Bin Laden has tried to download ringtone for Sony Ericsson.
Has an online shopper in Afghanistan or Pakistan requested a Midi ringtone? Sony Ericsson might be approached with that question. Did an Internet search conducted by Bin Laden end with his selection of a mobile carrier? Have those searching for Bin Laden made contact with a number of different mobile carriers?
Maybe Bin Laden lacks confidence in the dependability of a free Sony Ericsson mp3 ringtone. Maybe he worries about the loud sound coming from that ringtone. Maybe he hopes to find a quieter Sony Ericsson mp3 ringtone.
Who does Bin Laden try to contact, and where are they when he reaches them? What sort of ringtone do his contacts have on their cellphone? Has that ringtone sounded while the contact was at a wedding ceremony? Has it sounded while the contact stood in a public area? Those are questions for which security-minded people should have answers.
Some would, no doubt feel that a search for the answer to any of the above questions could be seen as an invasion of the phone-carrier’s privacy. Yet failure to go after such answers could one day lead to a decreased privacy for large numbers of telephone users. Even today, some countries with a less than democratic government monitor the phone calls and the Internet usage of their citizens.
People can no longer look aside when a government interferes with the right of law-abiding citizens to have a private conversation. They should push for a control on such acts of interference. At the same time, those with a say concerning security issues should not hesitate to take a cue from the actions of certain less than democratic governments.
Authorities should monitor, when necessary, each element of the present-day communication pathways.
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