Black Friday & Cyber Monday Deals for eSign, Email Security & File Sharing It’s finally Blaber Fronday! We’re offering a money saving deal for e-sign, e-security and file sharing that happens only once a year. These days, if you want a memorable catchphrase, you opt for the portmanteau—where two words or names become one (e.g. “brunch”, “chillax”, “Brangelina”). Everybody’s doing it— even health policy wonks (“twindemic”, “tripledemic”) and economists (“stagflation”). (Don’t yet fully grasp what “stagflation” is? Watch a Johns Hopkins-tenured economics professor here very robustly describe monetary policy, money printing, inflation and the Federal Reserve’s recent moves as he climactically builds up to the “stagflation” part. Appointment television this is not—no wonder they still call economics the ‘dismal science’.)
The other day I had dinner with my daughter, a high school senior, at her favorite restaurant (amazingly, with no phones in hand, only conversation). Inevitably, the topic of colleges came up, and she mentioned one I had never heard of: Stoxbridge where so much of the British upper crust apparently attended. I googled the name later to find out that it was, yes, a portmanteau of the three best Universities in the UK: St(Andrews)Ox(ford)(Cam)bridge. Stoxbridge. The portmanteau has, indeed, a wonderful ability to reduce several things into one catchy word or two, usually to humorous effect. Stoxbridge. Hmm. My mind drifted a bit to RMail’s latest tech, while waiting for the food to arrive. RMail’s latest tech, which combats today’s sophisticated cybercriminal attacks that cause business-email-compromise-induced mis-wires of client funds to cybercriminal accounts (aka wire fraud) is called PRE-Crime, a portmanteau of pre-empting cybercrime (i.e., after the hook is in, before the steal). [Watch these webinars to learn more: For title insurance, real estate, escrow, transactional attorneys click here. For lawyers click here (plus get bonus CLE credits for Florida lawyers). For insurance professionals, click here.]