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More greeting ecard spam and what to do about it

More bogus electronic greeting cards in my mailboxes, but luckily Hotmail and Outlook catch most if not all of the offending mail… supposedly from “a friend.” 

image

Some friend. I’ve never heard of the sender.

My ISP catches many bogus mails as well in their own spam filter before it every touches my Outlook In box.

According to the Wikipedia wiki on Email spam, most spammers get e-mail addresses of their victims through the purchase of direct marketing email address databases and lists, from newsgroups, company staff directories, though the use of spambots, and through the WHOIS listing available through most domain name registrars (which is where I believe most get my email addresses).

To combat spammers from getting my regular email addresses, I use a separate, unique email address for the technical contact listing on my personal Internet domains and – and the majority of spam targets those addresses.

I also route email from my personal Internet web addresses to Hotmail, using the MSN postmaster to block most if not all spam and attack mails.

For more, see my previous post on spam and what to do about it here… which last year would have weighed more than 750 pounds if converted into regular snail mail junk mail. (See the post for more on the weight of spam. 😉 

More info:

Tags: spam, antispyware, security.

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Press coverage on Microsoft Windows 7 (internal name) “due in 3 years”

Letting out a deep breath…


Today in Todd Bishop’s Microsoft Blog, Todd covers that Microsoft confirms ‘Windows 7’ due in 3 years.



“At an internal meeting for its sales force this week, Microsoft confirmed the code name and approximate timing for Windows Vista’s successor. The details, such as they are, aren’t a huge surprise, but given the dearth of information from Microsoft on its next PC operating system, any confirmation seems notable.


“According to a series of PowerPoint slides presented at the company’s internal “MGX” global sales meeting this week, the new version is, as expected, known by the internal name “Windows 7,” and it’s due out in approximately three years.


“In a statement today, Microsoft described the presentation as part of an “ongoing outreach to enterprise customers and partners … including Software Assurance customers in particular.” The statement confirmed that the company “is scoping Windows ‘7’ development to a three-year timeframe, and then the specific release date will ultimately be determined by meeting the quality bar.”


On the “Windows 7 internal name…” that’s the project name we use internally to refer to the next version of Windows Client.


With apologies to Prince, one day it will be “the Microsoft OS formerly known as Windows 7.” 😉


And ZDNet‘s Mary Jo Foley said in her post “Windows Seven: Think 2010” that “before Microsoft delivers Windows Seven, it plans to roll out an update to its current MDOP offering, Vista Service Pack 1 and then another MDOP update, according to the deck. Microsoft made no dates — tentative or otherwise — available for these planned releases via the deck.”



“Short answer: Yes, it is going to take us at least three years to release Windows Seven. Longer if it’s buggy and doesn’t hit the “quality bar.” The Windows teams a while back set themselves the goal of releasing new versions of Windows client and Windows server every two years, alternating between major and minor releases. Microsoft’s Office team has prided itself on releasing like clockwork new versions every 24 to 36 months.”


Also see…



Tags: Windows 7, Microsoft. trackback

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I found (the hard way) that numbers are invalid characters on Facebook

OK, I’m now on Facebook (following my long-standing stint on LinkedIn…) given the ad partnership we have with this partner (and providing tools such as the Facebook Dev Toolkit).


Not all rosy…



Microsoft


You have no friends at Microsoft.
There are
17,509 people in the Microsoft network.


Ouch. 😉


More amusing thing is that my name is invalid… or at least contains an “invalid character.” So I’m on as “Mthree” for now until my friends at Facebook fix my name…


Tags: Facebook, social networking.

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Jon Udell considers the limits of the question “How do you know this person?”

If you don’t read http://blog.jonudell.net/, you might consider adding it to your blogroll.


Of interest is one of his latest posts on how Facebook wants to know how you’re connected to people, and how one seemingly logical choice is missing…



“Like other social applications, Facebook wants to know how you’re connected to people. So it asks: “How do you know this person?” …  


The choice I usually want — “Through the Web” — isn’t available. One friend coerced “Met randomly” by adding “The web as a conversation engine” — but that’s an unsatisfactory workaround. There was nothing random about how we met. Given our shared interests and our online expression of them, it was inevitable that we would come into contact.


“Through the Web” should be a first-class answer for “How do you know this person?” 


I’ll reckon, it’s difficult to know anyone “through the web.” You can stumble upon or find people through the web, but you come to know them through interaction as a result of an introduction via the web. And as the cartoon that my old boss (shameless name drop), Trip Hawkins, shared with me one afternoon far too long ago calls out “On the Internet, Nobody Knows You’re a Dog.”


So, perhaps the question is better put: “How do you know this canine?” 😉

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Brian Krebs reports on the rise in bogus electronic greeting cards

In his post on Not-So-Friendly Greeting Cards, Brian Krebs of the Washington Post calls out the rise of fake online greeting cards that can install keystroke loggers on to your computer, rather than delivering what you thought to be an innocent e-card from a long lost aunt.



“You might want to think twice before opening that e-greeting card sent to you via e-mail. Cyber crooks have recently been blasting out millions of fake online greeting cards in the hope that recipients will click on the included links and infect their computers with password-stealing viruses.

“Previous e-greeting card scams harbored their viral payload in an infected e-mail attachment, but fraudsters now are simply embedding links in the fake card messages. Anyone who clicks on such a link without the benefit of the most recent security updates for their Web browser is likely to have their PC silently whacked with an invasive keystroke-logging program.


“… It is sad that the state of e-mail security has come to this, but Microsoft Windows users would be well-advised to simply delete any e-greeting cards that land in their inboxes.”


For more info, see the Wiki link on the Storm Worm, and here on Symantec’s site.


Also, here’s the link if the embedded links above don’t work: http://blog.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2007/07/notsofriendly_greeting_cards_1.html


And see my past note on how there’s no immunity from security vulnerabilities.


More info:



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