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  2. Escrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escrow

    Escrow is an account separate from the mortgage account where deposit of funds occurs for payment of certain conditions that apply to the mortgage, usually property taxes and insurance. The escrow agent has the duty to properly account for the escrow funds and ensure that usage of funds is explicitly for the purpose intended.

  3. IBM 3624 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_3624

    The IBM 3624 was released in 1978 as a second-generation automatic teller machine (ATM), a successor to the IBM 3614. [1] Designed at the IBM Los Gatos lab, the IBM 3624, along with the later IBM 4732 model, was manufactured at IBM facilities in Charlotte, North Carolina and Havant, England until all operations were sold to Diebold, tied to the formation of the InterBold partnership between ...

  4. Source code escrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_code_escrow

    Source code escrow is the deposit of the source code of software with a third-party escrow agent. Escrow is typically requested by a party licensing software (the licensee), to ensure maintenance of the software instead of abandonment or orphaning .

  5. What is a mortgage escrow? How it works, as explained ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/mortgage-escrow-works-explained-nj...

    In real estate, escrow is typically used for two reasons: to protect a buyers' home deposit to ensure that money is available based on the conditions of the sale, and to hold a homeowners' funds ...

  6. Escrow insurance: What is it and when you need it - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/escrow-insurance-235640110.html

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  7. Escrow.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escrow.com

    Escrow.com was founded in 1999 by Fidelity National Financial in response to Bank of America's four million dollar purchase a few years earlier of Loans.com. Fidelity decided to liquidate Escrow.com and did so in 2002 in a trade with iLumin for a software license.

  8. Paymaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paymaster

    In the United States, there is no licensing requirement to be a paymaster. However, a paymaster often is a licensed lawyer, due to the security and safety issue that lawyers in the United States are required to hold any funds that do not belong directly to them in an "Attorney's Trust Account" (also known as an IOLTA account), which is monitored by the state bar, in the state in which the ...

  9. 5 Signs You May Have a Snake Infestation and Not Even Know It

    www.aol.com/5-signs-may-snake-infestation...

    Imagine stumbling out of bed and accidentally stepping on a snake. It’s the stuff of nightmares! Yet, it happens, especially in the warmer months. Snakes tend to make themselves known during ...