✅ NEVER FORGET A PASSWORD AGAIN - Are you looking for the best password book to keep your internet passwords organized? Safe & Sound Publishing password journal will help you to create secure passwords and to keep them safe and organized. This book allows you to store all your passwords and account & website login details in one place and to keep your online web account information & user data safe. ✅ ALPHABETICALLY Sorted - the alphabetic sorting system makes it easy to record the passwords you need. The Logbook also has space to write important data, wireless & email settings, software license information & additional notes. It has separate pages for your most important websites so you can access them quickly. ✅ ELEGANT, SMART, PRACTICAL & SECURE PASSWORD ORGANIZATION - This password keeper book has been designed to be anonymous without an obvious title on the cover. For added security, there is space to write hints instead of the password itself. It includes Network and computer information section to keep all your important information and a secure and safe place.
Youssef Moustafa Ali Nada was an Egyptian businessman and Muslim Brotherhood financial strategist. Nada is most famous for raising successful European human rights legal cases to defend himself against accusations of terrorism by the United States. The U.S. accusations, made directly after the 9/11 attacks, resulted in his placement on the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267 terror blacklist. In 2001, Nada, former chairman of al Taqwa Bank, was placed on the UN terror list by the U.S. Treasury Department. Nada was alleged to have financed activities of al Qaeda, charges Nada vehemently denied. The U.S. accusation was made applicable under the UN terror-listing program and affected his life in Switzerland, notably his assets, reputation, honor, and ability to move freely. In 2006, he sued the Swiss government for restitution of financial losses due to the Swiss investigation. By 2009, both the Swiss and Italian investigations of Nada were dropped as no evidence was found to support the U.S. accusations. Both Switzerland and Italy petitioned the UN Terrorism Committee to remove Nada's name from the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267 blacklist, at the objection of the United States. The U.S. finally acquiesced to his removal on 24 September 2009, but retained Nada on the domestic U.S. Treasury list under Executive Order 13224 until 25 February 2015 when it also removed his name from its own sanctions list. While the United States refused to disclose evidence of Nada's guilt, claiming that the evidence was classified, it removed his name from all its lists silently with little fanfare in 2015. Between 2007 and 2009, Nada's ordeal featured heavily in a report by Swiss Senator and former Prosecutor Dick Marty on behalf of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Marty's report assessed the UN's terror-blacklisting procedures against international rule of law standards – along with those for a similar blacklist run by the European Union – and concluded that both were "completely arbitrary" and violated human rights. In 2008, Nada raised a case against Switzerland at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, also a body of the Council of Europe. On 12 September 2012, the European Court of Human Rights ruled in favor of Nada, citing that Nada's human rights had been violated, in the context of the European Convention on Human Rights. In this ruling the government of Switzerland was ordered to pay Nada 30,000 Euros in damages, for their treatment of him as a person placed – with no evidence of guilt – on the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267 terror blacklist by the United States.