The Top Three Ways To Secure Your WordPress Blog

If you have a WordPress blog or a website, you may be wondering how am I supposed to keep it safe from hackers and from accidental changes or deletions?

In my previous post I described how I had five sites hacked, and what I did about it.

In addition to any kind of fancy modifications or security plugins, there are a few easy
steps you can take right now within the next few minutes to make sure your WordPress
website is secure.

The first three things you can do are:

  • only connect to WordPress on a secure WiFi connection,
  • only use trusted plugins, and
  • keep WordPress up to date.

Do you know that when you connect to a website using unsecure WiFi, which means
airport WiFi, Starbuck’s WiFi, public WiFi, that anyone can see your username and
password? That means when you connect via FTP or simply log into your WordPress
dashboard anyone can see exactly what your username and password is and join for
themselves.

That’s why it’s very important to only connect to your WordPress site and only connect to
FTP if you have an SSL connection or you’re connecting a cellular 3G network instead of
WiFi. If you don’t know what any of those things are, then simply make it a point to only
connect to your FTP website and WordPress from home instead of in public.

Next, only use plugins that you trust. Are you aware that any WordPress plugin, if it so
chooses, can have access to your entire WordPress site? All of your users, all of your
content, most of the time, to every single file on your website.

That is the reason why it’s very important that you only use WordPress plugins that you
trust. Don’t go out and install 200, 300 plugins just because they all seem like they have
cool features. If a plugin is brand new, if no one seems to be using it, that is not a good
sign, and it may be a Trojan Horse kind of plugin where someone had simply put it out
on the internet in the hopes that someone else will install it on their website, and now
you have given the hacker complete access to your files and your content.

Finally, a very easy way to secure your WordPress blog is to keep WordPress up to date.
People find security holes all the time, and WordPress is quick to fix those holes, but it
does you no good unless you update your blog to the current version, which is
safeguarded against most attacks.

Luckily the most current versions of WordPress have a single button you can click to
update it, which means it downloads and installs the most recent version so you are now
protected.

Backup your blog quickly and easily at Backup Creator.

Coconut Oil Touted as Alzheimer’s Remedy

I have been a fan of coconut oil for many years now, but had no idea just how beneficial it could be until I saw this video.  Take a look, and let me know if you find it as interesting as I did.  And if you know of any Alzheimer’s sufferers, do them a favor and give this information to their caregiver.

Mary Newport, the MD in that video, has more information on coconut oil here:

COCONUT OIL DIETARY GUIDELINES AND SUGGESTIONS

By Mary T. Newport, MD – Updated September 2009
See www.coconutketones.com for more information

HOW CAN COCONUT OIL BE USED IN THE DIET?

Coconut oil can be substituted for any solid or liquid oil,
lard, butter or margarine in baking or cooking on the stove, and
can be mixed directly into foods already prepared. Some people
take it straight with a spoon, but for most people it may be hard to
swallow this way and more pleasant to take with food. When
cooking on the stove, coconut oil smokes if heated to greater than
350 degrees or medium heat. You can avoid this problem by
adding a little olive or peanut oil. Coconut oil can be used at any
temperature in the oven when mixed in foods.

WHAT IS THE NUTRIENT CONTENT OF COCONUT
OIL? DOES IT CONTAIN OMEGA-3 FATTY ACIDS?

Coconut oil has about 117-120 calories per tablespoons,
about the same as other oils. It contains 57-60% medium chain
triglycerides, which are absorbed directly without the need for
digestive enzymes. Part of it is metabolized by the liver to ketones
which can be used by most cells in the body for energy. This
portion of the coconut oil is not stored as fat. Coconut oil is about
86% saturated fat, most of which is the medium chain fats that are
metabolized differently than animal saturated fats. It contains no
cholesterol and no transfat as long as is non-hydrogenated. An
advantage of a saturated fat is that there is nowhere on the
molecule for free radicals or oxidants to attach. About 6% of the
oil is monounsaturated and 2% polyunsaturated. Coconut oil also
contains a small amount of phytosterols, which are one of the
components of the “statins” used for lowering cholesterol.
Coconut oil contains omega-6 fatty acids but no omega-3 fatty
acid, so this must be taken in addition to coconut oil. You can
obtain all of the essential fatty acids required by using just
coconut oil and omega-3 fatty acids. If you were to use coconut
oil as your primary oil, the only other oil you would need is an
omega-3 fatty acid, which you can get by eating salmon twice a
week, or taking fish oil or flax oil capsules, 2-3 per day. Some
other good sources of omega-3 fatty acids are ground flax meal,
chia (a fine grain), walnut oil and walnuts. Lauric acid is a
medium chain triglyceride that makes up almost half of the
coconut oil. Scientific studies show that lauric acid has
antimicrobial properties and may inhibit growth of certain
bacteria, fungus/yeast, viruses and protozoa. It is one of the
components of human breast milk that prevents infection in a
newborn.

WHAT KIND OF COCONUT OIL SHOULD I USE?

Look for coconut oils that are non-hydrogenated with no
transfat. Avoid coconut oils that are hydrogenated or superheated
because it changes the chemical structure of the fats. If you
like the odor of coconut, look for products called “virgin,”
“organic,” or “unrefined,” which are generally more expensive
than “refined,” or “all natural,” or “RBD” (refined, bleached and
deodorized) coconut oil, which do not have an odor. The oil itself
is tasteless. Any of these have essentially the same nutrient with
about 57-60% MCT oil (medium chain triglycerides.) The least
expensive that I have been able to find so far is the Louanna brand
at Walmart, priced locally at $5.44 per quart. Using coconut oil
capsules is not an efficient way to give the oil since the capsules
are relatively expensive and contain only 1 gram of oil per
capsule, whereas the oil is 14 grams per tablespoon. Capsules
might be useful for someone who will not take the oil.

WHY DOES THE COCONUT OIL LOOK “CLOUDY?”

Coconut oil is a clear or slightly yellow liquid above 76
degrees but becomes solid at 76 degrees and below. If your house
is kept right around 76 degrees you may even see partly liquid oil
with solid clouds of oil floating in it. If your home is generally
kept at 75 degrees or below, the oil will tend to be a white or
slightly yellow soft semi-solid.

WHAT OTHER COCONUT PRODUCTS CONTAIN
COCONUT OIL?

Coconut milk is a combination of the oil and the water from
the coconut and most of the calories are from the oil. Look for
brands with 10 to 13 grams of fat in 2 ounces. Look in the grocery
store’s Asian section. Some brands are less expensive but are
diluted with water. Coconut cream is mostly coconut milk and
sometimes has added sugar. Flaked or grated coconut can be
purchase unsweetened or sweetened and is a very good source of
coconut oil and fiber and has about 15 grams oil and 3 grams fiber
in ¼ cup. Frozen or canned coconut meat usually has a lot of
added sugar and not much oil per serving. A fresh coconut can be
cut up into pieces and eaten raw. A 2” x 2” piece has about 160
calories with 15 grams of oil and 4 grams of fiber. MCT Oil
(medium chain triglycerides) are part of the coconut oil and can
also be purchased in some health food stores or on-line. This may
be useful for people who are on the go and do not have much time
to cook. Also, MCT oil is used as energy and not stored as fat, so it
may be useful for someone who wants to lose weight, if substituted
for some of the other fats in the diet. Coconut water does not
usually contain coconut oil, but has other health benefits. The
electrolyte composition is similar to human plasma and is useful to
prevent or treat dehydration.

HOW SHOULD I STORE COCONUT PRODUCTS?

Coconut oil is extremely stable with a shelf life of at least two
years when stored at room temperature. It does not need to be
refrigerated and becomes extremely hard when cold. If you wish
to keep it in the refrigerator, you can measure out 1 or 2
tablespoons into each section of a plastic ice cube tray. The
coconut oil easily pops out of the plastic tray. Coconut milk is
mostly coconut oil and can be substituted for the oil in many ways.
Coconut milk must be refrigerated after opening and should be
used within a few days or tossed out. Grated or flaked coconut can
be stored at room temperature for a few weeks, but may last longer
if stored in a refrigerator. A freshly cut up coconut can be stored in
the refrigerator for a few days or freezer for a couple of weeks.

WHO SHOULD TRY THIS?

People who have a neurodegenerative disease that involves
decreased glucose uptake in neurons could benefit from taking
higher amounts of coconut and/or MCT oil to produce ketones
which may be used by brain cells as energy. These diseases
include Alzheimer’s and other dementias, Parkinson’s, ALS (Lou
Gehrig’s), multiple sclerosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy,
autism, Down’s syndrome, and Huntington’s chorea. Ketones can
also serve as an alternative fuel for other cells in the body that are
insulin resistant or cannot transport glucose, and could potentially
lessen the effects of diabetes I or II on the brain and other organs.
If you are at risk due to family history, you consider making this
dietary change as well. If your loved one is in assisted living, the
doctor may be willing to prescribe coconut oil to be given at each
meal, increasing gradually.

HOW MUCH SHOULD I TAKE?

If you take too much oil too fast, you may experience
indigestion, cramping or diarrhea. To avoid these symptoms, take
with food and start with 1 teaspoon coconut oil or MCT oil per
meal, increasing slowly as tolerated over a week or longer. If
diarrhea develops drop back to the previous level. For most
people, the goal would be to increase gradually to 4-6 tablespoons
a day, depending on the size of the person, spread over 2-4 meals.
Mixing MCT oil and coconut oil could provide higher levels and
a steady level of ketones. One formula is to mix 16 ounces MCT
oil plus 12 ounces coconut oil in a quart jar and increase slowly as
tolerated, starting with 1 teaspoon. This mixture will stay liquid
at room temperature.

WHAT ABOUT CHILDREN?

Children with Down’s syndrome and some children with
autism show decreased glucose uptake in parts of the brain. A
reasonable amount to give a child would be about ¼ teaspoon of
coconut oil for every 10 pounds that the child weighs, 2 or 3 times
a day. Also, some children like the taste of coconut milk – 1 ½ to
2 teaspoons per 10 pounds weight can be added to the diet 2 or 3
times a day. If you use coconut milk for a child be sure to
refrigerate it and toss after two days. Do not add honey to
coconut milk for children under 1 year old due to risk of infection.

DO I NEED TO BE WORRIED ABOUT GAINING
WEIGHT FROM THE EXTRA FAT IN THE DIET?

Yes!! The best way to avoid gaining weight is to substitute
coconut oil for most other fats and oils in the diet, and if that isn’t
enough, cut back on portion sizes of carbohydrates, such as
breads, rice, potatoes, cereals, and other grains. In general it is a
good idea to use whole milk products but, if weight gain is a
problem, you can also compensate for some of the new fat in the
diet by changing from full fat to lower fat dairy products, such as
milk, cheese, cottage cheese and yogurts, as well as low-fat or fatfree
salad dressings, to which you can add coconut oil. Also, use
a measuring spoon and remove the excess by leveling it with a
knife to avoid overestimating, which can make a big difference in
the number of calories consumed. Tiny glass measuring cups are
available at grocery stores with markings for teaspoons and
tablespoons. These are especially useful for combining salad
dressing with coconut oil.

DOES COCONUT OIL INCREASE CHOLESTEROL?

Hydrogenated coconut oil can increase cholesterol.
Therefore look for non-hydrogenated coconut oil with no transfat.
There is no cholesterol in coconut oil itself, and with nonhydrogenated
coconut oil, most people will see little difference or
will see an improvement in their HDL (“good”) and a decrease in
LDL (“bad”) cholesterol. Some see an increase in total
cholesterol, usually as a result of an increase in HDL (“good”)
cholesterol.

SOME OTHER BENEFITS OF COCONUT OIL AND
OTHER COCONUT PRODUCTS

Coconut oil is easily absorbed by the body and increases
absorption of certain vitamins and minerals and other important
nutrients. This would also hold true for coconut milk, coconut
meat, whether wet or dry, such as flaked or grated coconut. The
fiber in coconut meat may be especially beneficial to persons with
Crohn’s or other types of inflammatory bowel disease or
malabsorption syndromes and people who have diarrhea from MCT
or coconut oil.
All of your cell membranes and about 60-70% of the brain and
are made up of fats. Cholesterol is a very important component of
the support structure of the brain. Many cell functions take place
within the cell membrane. Since about the 1950’s many people in
this country have been using 100% vegetable oil, which is usually
hydrogenated polyunsaturated fat and contains transfat, which can
carry free radicals into your cell membranes. If you begin to
substitute coconut and other natural oils, such as olive oil and even
butter, along with omega-3 oils you may be able to undo some of
the damage. Most of the cells of the body turn over within 3 to 6
months and you may notice a nicer texture to your skin, and a
decrease in certain problems such as yeast and fungal infections.

FOOD IDEAS

· Use coconut oil instead of butter on toast, English muffins,
bagels, grits, corn on the cob, potatoes, sweet potatoes, rice,
vegetables, noodles, pasta.
· Mix coconut oil into oatmeal or other hot cereal.
· Add coconut oil or milk to smoothies, yogurt or kefir.
· Mix coconut oil half and half with salad dressings.
· Mix coconut oil into your favorite soup, chili or sauce.
· Use a measured amount of coconut oil to stir fry or sauté (add
peanut oil over medium heat)
· Purchase or make coconut macaroons made from all natural
products.
· Eat a 2” x 2” square of raw coconut for a snack to provide 15
grams of oil.
· Add flaked or grated coconut to hot or cold cereal, yogurt, fruit
or vegetable salads.
· “The Coconut Lover’s Cookbook,” Bruce Fife – many more
great ideas

Coconut macaroons:

2 egg whites Dash of salt 1/2 tsp vanilla
2/3 cup sugar or 1/4 cup sugar and 1 to 2 dashes of Stevia extract
1 cup shredded coconut
Beat egg whites with salt and vanilla until soft peaks form.
Gradually add sugar (and stevia), beating until stiff. Fold in
coconut. Coat cooking sheet with generous amount of butter.
Drop by the rounded teaspoon onto cookie sheet. Bake at 325
degress for 20 minutes. Makes about 18 cookies. Each cookie at
this size would have about 4 grams of coconut oil.

Coconut Milk:

Mix in a container and shake well before use:
1 can of coconut milk ½ can of water Dash of salt
1-2 tablespoons of honey or other sweetener to taste
- Store in refrigerator and discard unused portion after 4 days.
MCT Oil/Coconut oil Mixture
Store at room temperature, in a quart size jar:
16 ounces MCT oil + 12 ounces coconut oil

“Fudge”

Melt and mix together 1 cup each of coconut oil and chocolate
chips and divide equally into a plastic ice cube tray and place in
freezer. In a 16 cube tray, each cube will equal 1 tablespoon
coconut oil. Add grated coconut and/or nuts for variety.

If you’re looking to buy some coconut oil after reading all this, my wife has a link to a review of the best source we have found on her Facebook Wall.  I asked her if we would earn any money from it, but she said “unfortunately, no!”  Anyway, the source is Tropical Traditions.

Facebook: What Else is New?

Facebook has been changing so much lately that it’s hard to keep up with it! In the previous post you read about Frictionless Sharing: you probably already know that another big change that will happening soon is replacing the Facebook profile by the Timeline. What will this mean for you and your Facebook marketing?

Facebook Users

When Will You See Timeline?

The first question everyone is asking is “When will this happen?” I checked with Facebook and they say: “Timeline will be available in the upcoming weeks.” Your guess is as good as mine as to what that means – presumably it’s another way of saying “We’re working on it”!

Facebook TimelineWhat Will Timeline Look Like?

Concerning how it will look, Facebook tells us: “Your timeline is your collection of top photos, stories and life events.” In essence, it will contain everything you ever posted to Facebook organized in a way that helps you find what you’re looking for. It also gives you the chance to mark what you consider to be important, and even (yes!) delete the items you wish were not there: would that our real lives were that simple!

How Will Timeline Affect You?

When Timeline is released, I can imagine that there will be a flurry of Facebook activity as everyone sets about reorganizing their profiles. You will probably remove some of the older stuff that is not relevant to who you are now, reorganize your photos into more appropriate albums, and update material that is starting to grow old. That’s quite apart from deleting those embarrassing photos and posts!

What You Need To Do Now

So what should you do now? I suggest three things:

  1. Decide what you want your Facebook profile to look like. Is it a personal, fun, profile or a business-oriented one? Either way, you will need to keep a lot of personal information there, because Facebook is a social medium: a corporate approach will not encourage people to know, like and trust you.
  2. Read the Facebook “Help” information on Timeline – “Get Started”. This will tell you what you can do and help you to … well, get started! Devise your strategy based on what you want your profile to look like.
  3. Implement the strategy by working step-by-step through Facebook‘s suggestions for getting started. Review the results as you go, keeping the important items in front of the reader and relegating the others. Nobody is likely to want to read everything you have there, so make sure they get your message up front.

When you have done this (and preferably not before) take a look at other people’s profiles to see if you can get some other good ideas for your own. This is also the time to ask other people to look at yours with a view to positive suggestions. Often they will see things about you that you never thought were important or interesting: you might also get some customers this way, but don’t think of that as the object of the exercise!

What Else?

What did I miss? Let me know what you thought of and I forgot.

 

Facebook to Provide Frictionless Sharing

Facebook’s “Frictionless Sharing” is going to be powerful.

In case you hadn’t heard, it’s coming soon, and it works like this: If a visitor to your blog or website has enabled access, Facebook will automatically post your content on that user’s wall. They don’t need to “like” your post – just going there is enough to post the link on their wall: how cool is that?

If you think only young people use social networks, think again. According to the Pew Research Center, two-thirds of all Americans use social networking sites and more than 42 percent of Americans over the age of 50 use social media. There are millions of people of all shapes, sizes and interests, using Facebook every single day and they love it when Facebook makes it even easier for them to share – and 60% of U.S. Facebook users are over the age of 35.

How are You Using Facebook Now?

Your reaction to Frictionless Sharing may be, “So what? It doesn’t appear on my wall. How does it affect me? Take a look at how you’re using Facebook now.

Where is Your Traffic Coming From?

Take a look at your analytics and see where your visitors are coming from. If you have traffic from Facebook there is no way to tell who they are or why they came to your blog – all you can see is that they came through a Facebook link.

Maybe they came tbecause someone told them your blog was interesting. They visited because someone else told them to, not because of your search engine optimization. Right now, that is probably true of only a few visitors, but with Frictionless Sharing this is going to change very rapidly. Have you noticed how much information from your wall is shared following the recent Facebook changes?

Increase Your Connectivity Now!

If you’re like me, you worked hard to build your Facebook and Twitter friends, and then, once you got to a certain number (say 4,000) you left it to take its course. You probably focused on one niche, which may not be the best one for you now: the times they are a changin’! Now is the time to review who you want to connect with, and build your friends accordingly.

With Frictionless Sharing, anyone who comes to your blog (from Facebook or anywhere else) will automatically get a link posted on her wall, and all her friends will see it. This opens you to the 750 million current Facebook users without your having to do anything except attract some existing Facebook users to your blog! No other SEO is necessary.

What this means is that you need to provide something useful to the one person who visits your blog, like writing to him as if he were a real person, rather than a traffic statistic, for example. That way, he’ll want to come back from time to time to see what else you have of interest, and every time he does his “friends” get to see what he’s doing. Do you see the power in this?

His friends will want to see why he keeps going there, so they will visit, and their visit will appear on their walls. Soon, their friends will want to visit you:

now that’s viral!

Take Action Now!

So what do you need to do right now?

  • Post valuable content, so that people want to read what you have to say (yes – content is still king!)
  • Spread the word on Facebook (I’m sure you’re doing that already.)
  • Reconsider your niche. I’d love to hear your views on this, but I think this could be the end of niche marketing! You see, you have no idea where your net will be cast with Frictionless Sharing, so the wider your appeal the more chance you’ll attract buyers. I really hope this is true, because I have a hard time narrowing my niche: just look at the range of topics I cover!

Tell me what you think, and how you plan to use Frictionless Sharing.