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Frequently Asked Questions
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These are some of the questions you may be asking your self
about us, read throug all the questions since they will guide you
in how to deal and work with us
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1 How do I pay for the serrvices?
2.When is the right time and how should I contact stodacom Investigators?
3.Do I have a right to know the latest about the investigation?
4.What is the maximum time for results?
5.Who is to contact me for updates?
6.What if I need to cancel the already submitted assignment and had not paid yet.
7.How much does an Investigation cost?
8. What is due deligence?
9. Waht is cyber crime?
10. What is a background check?
11. What is survaillance?
12. Who is a missing person?
13. What is Insurance Fraud?
14. What is terrorism?
1 How do I pay for the serrvices?
Your business is appreciated.To streamline the entire process, we are able to accept on-line Credit Card (Out of function presently)and
Bank Transfer payments, and accept money transfer through Western Union.
To make an on-line payment to Stodacom Investigators via paypal,it will be possible though use of bank tranfer and western union are strongly advised.
For bank transfer you will contact us for bank details.
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2.When is the right time and how should I contact stodacom Investigators?
You can contact Stodacom Investigators in many ways by phone , email or fax
any time feel free to contact us we will be there for you.We recomend if possible after sending us an email back it up with a text message in this format "Assignment Pliz"
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3.Do I have a right to know the latest about the investigation?
Yes of course if you don't have the right then we are not doing your assignment! you are entittled to full updates of the investigation every after two or three days depending on the
investigation type.Remember you can specify on when you are confortable to receive our updates.
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4.What is the maximum time for results?
Let us not promise you heaven and earth it only depends on the type of your assignment for example cases
like skip tracing it can take minimum three to two weeks,but we promise to keep it as fast as possible
where we can.
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5.Who is to contact me for updates?
You will only be contacted by our CEO for updates no other member of staff can contact you (This is done to minimum the risks of information leaking) ,in case you receive emails or any information from a different person then contact us.
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6.What if I need to cancel the already submitted assignment and had not paid yet.
Since many things happen you will only pay half of the agreed money that is if the assignment had already comenced, but if the assignment had not startted yet and you had already paid you will be refered all your money.
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7.How much does an Investigation cost?
Good question,various assignments have been labeled various price tags let say Due delligence it will cost you not less than $200 and others.All you need to do is to contact Stodacom we will provide you with our price.Our charges are affordable our past clients can justify on this.
NOTE: Investigating firms charge differently mostly due to location and the policies governing private investigators in that region.
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8. What is due deligence?
Due diligence is a term used for a number of concepts involving either the performance of an investigation of a business or the performance of an individual
In business transactions, the due diligence process varies for different types of companies. The relevant areas of concern may include the financial, legal, labor, tax, environment and market/commercial situation of the company. Other areas include intellectual property, real and personal property, insurance and liability coverage, debt instrument review, employee benefits and labor matters, immigration, and international transactions.[2]
Consider the somewhat related business terms of malfeasance and nonfeasance. The American Heritiage Dictionary defines these terms as such: malfeasance is misconduct or wrongdoing esp. by a public official. Nonfeasance as failure to perform an official duty or legal requirement. Furthermore the term misfeasance means to perform a duty or responsibility inadequately or poorly.
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9. Waht is cyber crime?
cybercrime is usually restricted to describing criminal activity in which the computer or network is an essential part of the crime, this term is also used to include traditional crimes in which computers or networks are used to enable the illicit activity.
Examples of cybercrime which the computer or network is a tool of the criminal activity include spamming and copyright crimes, particularly those facilitated through peer-to-peer networks.
Examples of cybercrime in which the computer or network is a target of criminal activity include unauthorized access (i.e, defeating access controls), malicious code, and denial-of-service attacks.
Examples of cybercrime in which the computer or network is a place of criminal activity include theft of service (in particular, telecom fraud) and certain financial frauds.
Finally, examples of traditional crimes facilitated through the use of computers or networks include Nigerian 419 or other gullibility or social engineering frauds (e.g., hacking "phishing", identity theft, child pornography, online gambling, securities fraud, etc.). Cyberstalking is an example of a traditional crime -- harassment -- that has taken a new form when facilitated through computer networks.
Additionally, certain other information crimes, including trade secret theft and industrial or economic espionage, are sometimes considered cybercrimes when computers or networks are involved.
Cybercrime in the context of national security may involve hacktivism (online activity intended to influence policy), traditional espionage, or information warfare and related activities.
One of the recent researches showed that a new cybercrime is being registered every 10 seconds in Britain. During 2006 the computer crooks were able to strike 3.24 million times. Some crimes performed on-line even surpassed their equivalents in real world. In addition, experts believe that about 90% of cybercrimes stay unreported.
According to a study performed by Shirley McGuire, a specialist in psychology of the University of San Francisco, the majority of teenagers who hack and invade computer systems are doing it for fun rather than with the aim of causing harm. Shirley McGuire mentioned that quite often parents cannot understand the motivation of the teenage hackers. She performed an anonymous experiment, questioning more than 4,800 students in the area of San Diego. Her results were presented at the American Psychological Association conference:
38% of teenagers were involved in software piracy;
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10. What is a background check?
A background check or background investigation is the process of looking up official and commercial records about a person. It was often done when someone applies for a job but mostly for those that requires high security or position of trust like a school, hospital, bank, airport, in law enforcement, etc. It is traditionally done by the police but is now most often purchased as a service from a private business. Information usually includes the following: past employment, credit worthiness, and criminal history. These checks are important because they allow better informed and less-subjective evaluations to be made about a person. However, they also pose risks including improper and illegal discrimination, identity theft, and violation of privacy.
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11. What is survaillance?
Surveillance is the monitoring of behavior. Systems surveillance is the process of monitoring the behavior of people, objects or processes within systems for conformity to expected or desired norms in trusted systems for security or social control. Clinical surveillance refers to the monitoring of diseases or public health–related indicators (for example symptoms indicating an act of bioterrorism) by epidemiologists and public health professionals. The word is pronounced /sɚˈveɪəns/ or /sɚˈveɪləns/.[1]
Although the word surveillance in French literally means "watching over",[2] the term is often used for all forms of observation or monitoring, not just visual observation. Nevertheless, the all-seeing "eye in the sky" is still a general icon of surveillance. Surveillance in many modern cities and buildings often uses closed-circuit television cameras. Although surveillance can be a useful tool for law enforcement and security companies, many people have concerns about the loss of privacy.
Here at Stodacom we do all sorts of survaiillance, both online and pysical monitoring.
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12. Who is a missing person?
A missing person is a person who has disappeared for no known reason
People disappear for many reasons. Some individuals choose to disappear alone; most of these soon return. About 10% of missing persons in the United States never return, however. Reasons for this include:
Leaving home to start again in a new place under a new name.
Becoming the victim of kidnap.
Abduction (of a minor) by a non-custodial parent or other relative.
Seizure by government officials without due process of law.
Suicide in a remote location or under an assumed name (to spare their families the suicide at home, or to allow their deaths to be eventually declared in absentia).
Victim of murder (body disguised, destroyed, or hidden).
Mental illness can cause someone to become lost, or they may not know how to identify themselves.
Death by natural causes or accident far from home without identification.
Disappearance in order to take advantage of better employment or living conditions elsewhere.
Sold into slavery, serfdom, sexual servitude, or other unfree labor.
To avoid discovery of a crime or apprehension by law-enforcement authorities. (See also failure to appear).
Joining a cult or other "religious" organization.
To escape domestic abuse.
To avoid war or persecution during a genocide.
To escape famine or natural disaster.
What ever reason might be Stodacom Investigators will help you locate that missing personality by all means, you only have to trust us and give us clear leading clues.
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13. What is Insurance Fraud?
Insurance fraud or false insurance claims are insurance claims filed with the intent to defraud an insurance provider.
!!! For example laws of California, USA, tell that "Insurance Fraud occurs when someone knowingly lies to obtain some benefit or advantage to which they are not otherwise entitled or someone knowingly denies some benefit that is due and to which someone is entitled." So if doctor assigned by insurance company makes false report leading to deny of benefits it's also fraud. We need talented person to describe this side of problem !!!
In the United States insurance fraud is estimated to cost US$875 per person per year with The Coalition Against Insurance Fraud estimating the loss to be $80 billion per year and Medicare estimating fraud in its system costs the government $179 billion per year
Insurance fraud is not a highly visible crime, but an extremely costly one. In fact, insurance fraud is the second most costly white-collar crime in the world (tax evasion being the first).
Insurance fraud costs consumers approximately $150 billion a year in damages, leaving the average family paying a minimum of $1,000 a year in higher insurance premiums and costs of goods and medical services
Stodacom Investigators can help you out in discovering wether that person real deserve a compasation
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14. What is terrorism?
Terrorism is "the systematic use of terror especially as a means of coercion."[2] There is is no internationally agreed legal definition.[3] In one modern definition of terrorism, it is violence against civilians to achieve political or ideological objectives by creating fear.[4] Most common definitions of terrorism include only those acts which are intended to create fear (terror), are perpetrated for an ideological goal (as opposed to a lone attack), and deliberately target or disregard the safety of non-combatants. Some definitions also include acts of unlawful violence and war.
Terrorism is also a form of unconventional warfare and psychological warfare. The word is politically and emotionally charged,[5] and this greatly compounds the difficulty of providing a precise definition. One 1988 study by the US Army found that over 100 definitions of the word "terrorism" have been used.[6]. A person who practices terrorism is a terrorist.
Terrorism has been used by a broad array of political organizations in furthering their objectives; both right-wing and left-wing political parties, nationalistic, and religious groups, revolutionaries and ruling governments.[7] The presence of non-state actors in widespread armed conflict has created controversy regarding the application of the laws of war.
An International Round Table on Constructing Peace, Deconstructing Terror (2004) hosted by Strategic Foresight Group recommended that a distinction should be made between terrorism and acts of terror. While acts of terrorism are criminal acts as per the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1373 and domestic jurisprudence of almost all countries in the world, terrorism refers to a phenomenon including the actual acts, the perpetrators of acts of terrorism themselves and their motives. There is disagreement on definitions of terrorism. However, there is an intellectual consensus globally, that acts of terrorism should not be accepted under any circumstances. This is reflected in all important conventions including the United Nations counter terrorism strategy, the decisions of the Madrid Conference on terrorism, the Strategic Foresight Group and ALDE Round Tables at the European Parliament.
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