Avoid Travel Traumas With KeepYouSafe.com

March 7, 2007 --The plane ticket is suddenly not where it should be, or a debit card gets eaten by a foreign ATM machine, perhaps the traveler's checks and passport are effortlessly lifted from a pocket -- and suddenly a standard business trip becomes a journey to bureaucratic hell.

Replacing these items isn't easy if you don't have backup copies – the number of missing credit and debit card and a way to contact the issuing bank, a scan of the passport, and the serial numbers of the traveler's checks. And sometimes travelers need quick access to documents they didn't bring with them, insurance and medical records if an accident happens, child custody papers to show a zealous border guard, proof of citizenship when the passport goes missing. Travel professionals advise their clients to make copies of tickets, passports, and other important personal information and then leave these documents with a trusted someone back home. Now there's another option: KeepYouSafe.com's (www.keepyousafe.com) easy-to-use, safe, and secure Online Safe Deposit Box.

KeepYouSafe.com enables consumers to securely store their most important records online and then access those stored records from anywhere, at any time, via the Internet.

“KeepYouSafe.com offers business travelers peace of mind. Anyone who has lost important documentation while they're travelling knows what a hassle it can be to replace it when you're away from home. Our Online Safe Deposit boxes make the process much easier,” said Eric Wolbrom, COO and co-founder of KeepYouSafe.com.

“And our military-grade encryption ensures that you can safely access your documents from any place with Internet access: the embassy, an Internet café, a library or a hotel.”

Fodor's Travel Wire (www.fodors.com/wire/archives/002317.cfm) recently described KeepYouSafe's service as an "innovative and useful" travel essential. The basic Online Safe Deposit Box is free, and consumers can also take advantage of KeepYouSafe's secure file transfer service to send and receive documents that contain information too sensitive to trust to e-mail.

SOURCE KeepYouSafe.com