Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
AutoCheck and CarFax are popular ways to check on a used vehicle’s history before buying or selling. They aren’t always 100% accurate, but can still be a useful tool and possibly worth the $30+ retail price. But AutoCheck also lets car dealers check show free basic VIN checks to show their customers, and people (not me) figured out you can piggyback on this feature rather easily. Here are my adapted instructions:
http://www.autoexact.com/autocheck.aspx?vin=LONG_VIN_NUMBER&Id=5122742
Replace LONG_VIN_NUMBER with your own car or motorcycle VIN, something like:
http://www.autoexact.com/autocheck.aspx?vin=5TETX22N66Z267004&Id=5122742
(No spaces. Again this URL is only an example.)
If you’d like a 3rd-party website to do this all for you, then try www.geniusvin.com. Salvage titles are known to generate errors with this method. To perform a basic check of whether your car has been reported stolen or has a salvage title, use this NCIB.gov VINcheck tool.
This worked for my personal cars to make sure there was no incorrect information out there. The report is pretty detailed, with ownership histories and odometer readings. Overall my reports were clean, although there were some gaps in the information.
Credit: Butcherboy/FW, Genius/E46Fanatics, Melania Pinola/Lifehacker
Free VIN Check Trick, Free Vehicle History Report from My Money Blog.
© MyMoneyBlog.com, 2013.
Piled Higher & Deeper by Jorge Cham |
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title:
"Professor Proverbs" - originally published
6/3/2013
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An economics paper claiming that high levels of national debt led to low or negative economic growth could turn out to be deeply flawed as a result of, among other things, an incorrect formula in an Excel spreadsheet. The paper has been citedabundantlyby the world's press politicians, including one-time vice president nominee Paul Ryan (R-WI).
The paper, Growth in a Time of Debt, was written by economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff and published in 2010. The link it draws between high levels of debt and negative average economic growth has been used by right-leaning politicians to justify austerity budgets: slashing government expenditure and reducing budget deficits in a bid to curtail the growth of debt.
This link was always controversial, with many economists proposing that the correlation between high debt and low growth was just as likely to have a causal link in the other direction to that proposed by Reinhart and Rogoff: it's not that high debt causes low growth, but rather that low growth leads to high debt.