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Amazon Eve, World's Tallest Model, To Make It Official. Six-foot, 8-inch beauty Amazon Eve will soon officially be the world's tallest model, AOL News reports.

Amazon Eve, World's Tallest Model, To Make It Official

The Federation of World Records has recognized her as the tallest, prettiest lady of the land and the Guinness World Records folks will take a good look at her next month. But Amazon Eve's not worried. She remarked, "They are going to measure me at morning, noon and night, so we'll see. However, the previous record holder is 6 foot 4, so it looks good. " David Moye writes that 30 percent of Amazon Eve's income comes from modeling gigs -- she also does some wrestling and acting on the side, and is trained as a paralegal. She said, "Mainstream modeling wants you small and weak," adding, "I'm plus-sized and I'm thin and super-fit. She recently visited the Playboy mansion and told Fox News, "Sure I would do Playboy. Take a look at some videos of Amazon Eve.

Facebook To Share Users' Home Addresses, Phone Numbers With External Sites. See update below Facebook will be moving forward with a controversial plan to give third-party developers and external websites the ability to access users' home addresses and cellphone numbers in the face of criticism from privacy experts, users, and even congressmen.

Facebook To Share Users' Home Addresses, Phone Numbers With External Sites

Facebook quietly announced the new policy in a note posted to its Developer Blog in January. It suspended the feature just three days later following user outcry, while promising that it would be "re-enabling this improved feature in the next few weeks. " In response to a letter penned by Representatives Edward Markey (D-Mass.) and Joe Barton (R-Texas) expressing concern over the new functionality, Facebook reaffirmed that it will be allowing third parties to request access to users' addresses and phone numbers.

Facebook has attempted to tread a fine line with regard to privacy issues even as it has continuously pushed users to share more information, both on Facebook and beyond the social network. How Rumsfeld misleads and ducks responsibility in his new book - By Bob Woodward. Few people know the ins and outs of the Bush Administration as well as the Washington Post's Bob Woodward, who is flat-out disgusted with the evasions and elisions in Donald Rumsfeld's new book.

How Rumsfeld misleads and ducks responsibility in his new book - By Bob Woodward

Here he explains why: By Bob Woodward Best Defense guest columnist On page 527 of his memoir Known and Unknown, Donald Rumsfeld recounts what he says was an exchange on Oct. 14, 2003 with Condoleezza Rice who was then Bush's national security adviser. She apologized for a flap over Iraq policy at the time. You're failing," Rumsfeld said. Rumsfeld's memoir is one big clean-up job, a brazen effort to shift blame to others -- including President Bush -- distort history, ignore the record or simply avoid discussing matters that cannot be airbrushed away.

The Iraq War is essential to the understanding of the Bush presidency and the Rumsfeld era at the Pentagon. When Balz read this to Rumsfeld, he blew up. "Yeah," Rumsfeld finally told us. "I don't have notes," Rumsfeld insisted. By June 2003, Lt.