|
May 2006 archives
The following are all the entries published for the month of May 2006. notifications removed
Monday 29 May, 2006 at 12:22AM (Nereus) :: permalink :: comments (6) Over the past year you have been able to subscribe to this weblog, which means you could get an email notification whenever a new entry was posted. Additionally, you could subscribe to specific entries and receive email notification whenever a new comment was made on that entry - a functionality that proved very useful for visitors that were following the webquest comments here. Unfortunately, the author of the plugin that provided this functionality decided to remove any kind of administrative interface, a feature that apparently existed in earlier versions of the plugin prior to the release of MT3.2 last year. I thought at the time that the lack of interface was kind of strange, but whatever, the plugin worked so no biggie. No biggie, that is, until I just started poking around in the database earlier today to find over 2,000 subscriptions, some of which are duplicates, and many of which appear to be email addresses hosted on known spam domains. I was wondering why I was getting increasing timeouts and similar issues here when I using MT.. grrrr. The end result is that the subscription option will be removed in the next few days, which means this will probably be the last time you are notified of a new entry here. MT itself provides some sort of notification system for new entries which I will look into, however subscribing to individual entries will be history, sorry. A step backwards, but there is little choice - I do not have the skillset to code the thing myself. The author of the plugin has repeatedly said on the MT forums that he would provide an interface, but only on an individual basis, and, of course, for a price. This is not a commercial weblog and I'm a full-time student so I won't be doing that - asking for small donations to the author is fine, but I don't think that's what he has in mind.. Anyway, trying to administer the subscriptions directly in the database is not a solution, so for those who wish to be notified of future entries, you can leave a comment on this entry and I will add you when I have something sorted out - just put the email address where you want to be notified in the email field - it will not show to the public. My apologies for any inconvenience. internet terrorism
Friday 26 May, 2006 at 10:03PM (Nereus) :: permalink :: comments (1) Internet terrorism? Yup, you heard me - however in this case the terrorism isn't instigated by an organisation of religous zealots or fanatical lunatics, but one, yes one, greedy spammer. Here's the story, mostly quoted direct from an article by John Leyden on The Register about a week ago: A company named Blue Security established a 'Do Not Intrude Registry' - similar to the Do Not Call Registry for telemarketing - with around 450,000 members (one of the email utilities I used was hooked up to their service). With the stand-alone service, participants downloaded a small tool called Blue Frog which systematically floods the websites of spammers with opt-out messages. Depending on your point of view, this initiative can either be viewed as community action or vigilantism. In my opinion it's giving the spammer a taste of his own medicine, however it seems like the spammer took exception to having to reap what he sowed. Last month, members of the Blue community received aggressive spam messages in an attempt to intimidate users into dropping out of Blue Security's network - even ordinary punters who had nothing to do with Blue Security received the same messages, which proved that the belligerent junk mail campaign was not a focussed effort but an all-out campaign. This campaign of intimidation was followed by a sophisticated denial of service attack against Blue Security's website. According to Blue Security, a renegade Russian language speaking spammer known as PharmaMaster succeeded in bribing a top-tier ISP's staff member into black holing Blue Security's former IP address (194.90.8.20) at internet backbone routers. This rendered Blue's main website inaccessible outside Israel. After Blue made configuration changes to point users towards its TypePad-hosted weblog, bluesecurity.blogs.com, PharaMaster upped the ante by launching a massive denial of service attack against TypePad and any other organisation associated with Blue Security. The attack forced Six Apart (which runs TypePad, Live Journal, and created Movable Type) offline, leaving the information superhighway temporarily bereft of the outpourings of numerous bloggers. LiveJournal and TypePad users in particular may recall this - it was around 4pm Pacific Daylight Time on the 2nd May, which was about 3 weeks ago. The sophisticated attack also disrupted the net operations of five top-tier hosting providers in the US and Canada, as well as a major DNS provider for several hours. "We didn't think PharmaMaster would go to extreme of launching a denial of service attack against so many organisations. With 20-20 hindsight we wouldn't have made these configuration changes, but at the time we didn't think he'd go so far," Blue Security CEO Eran Reshef told El Reg at the time. "My mistake was not anticipating he'd go berserk." Blue reckons PharmaMaster hired a botnet to launch the assault. During an ICQ conversation, PharmaMaster told Blue Security that if he can't send spam, there will be no internet. What a wanker. After the attack, Blue Security embarked on restoring its community-based anti-spam service to its members. But after working closely with its service providers and partners to help resolve the problems over the previous two weeks, it came to the conclusion that the risk of further attacks remained too great. Despite moving hosting providers and implementing security defences, Blue reckoned it would be unable to safely reintroduce its controversial service without exposing other members of the net community to potential attack. "It's clear to us that [quitting] would be the only thing to prevent a full-scale cyber-war that we just don't have the authority to start," Reshef told WashingtonPost.com. "Our users never signed up for this kind of thing." Blue's decision to shut up shop is understandable but regrettable, because it represents a significant victory by a spammer in the fight to control the internet. In effect, PharmaMaster has succeeded in his main aim of getting Blue Security to dismantle. What this article doesn't emphasize is the fact that one single person managed to cause so much damage, shut down millions of sites temporarily, hold major ISP's and a security company to ransom, and get away with it. Why? For fear of repeat attacks. Gee, that sounds familiar, doesn't it? hmm, can someone say 'Mohammed cartoon'? What the people who make these decisions need to realize is that by bowing to the demands of these greedy self-centered spammers (likewise with Islamofacists) they are only encouraging it to happen more often. How many other spammers have seen what this one spammer has done and will follow in his footsteps and make threats of attacks in order to get what they want? How much more damage will be done in the long run because nobody has the balls to do something about it now? Hell, this spammer should be hunted down just like any other terrorist - he may not be taking lives, but spam costs the international economy trillions of dollars every year in labor hours, IT costs, the spread of virii and all sorts of other related costs. I think spending a bit of money in the short term to take these spammers out would be much better for the long term. Or maybe not - because the execs running the ISP's are just as greedy as the spammers, and they don't want to spend any more money than they have to if it means cutting into their profits. This is a very good reason for having an international independant authority to make sure the interests, ideals and the very nature of the internet itself are not compromised. The top-tier ISP that black holed Blue Security should be fined substantially, and the staff member at that ISP who did the deed should be spending time in jail. It is the responsibility of all ISPs to work to catch these people, and those who are caught should be locked up and never allowed access or involvement with the internet again in any way whatsoever - for life. When one spammer can say that if he can't send spam, there will be no internet, and get away with it, then the future looks bleak - be prepared for a lot more down time and more and more restrictions placed on innocent users because of a greedy few assholes like this arrogant son of a bitch PharmaMaster. Here's an idea - whenever you get a spam email, forward it to your ISP. Maybe they'll get the hint and do more to combat these parasitic scum. sunglass tragedy
Wednesday 17 May, 2006 at 11:46PM (Nereus) :: permalink :: comments (2) Almost three years ago I scored a pair of sunnies from Hot Buttered Surfboards in Australia for helping out with some issues on the HB website. Thanks to Blake Foss (the web developer), Terry Fitzgerald (HB surf legend), and Liv (friendly person at HB), I was able to choose the frame and lens I wanted, so I went for a pair of their 'Species' Italian frames in matte black with the blue mirror-type lenses (like in the inset).
The sunnies were really lightweight, very comfortable (no marks on the sides of the nose after wearing them for a while either) and styling big time imho. My old New Zealand Dirty Dog 'Weapon' sunnies were on their last legs, so the timing was brilliant. The sunnies lasted really well over the couple of years with barely a mark on them, until a couple of weekends ago - no, they weren't destroyed, they were stolen. It was my fault really - I put them down while checking something out in a store, then realized shortly after that I hadn't picked them up again, but of course the sunnies were nowhere to be found. In Brooklyn, New York, that's not much of a surprise. I left my name and contact at the shop just in case, but they never turned up (and I think the staff would likely keep them if they did), so now I was without my beloved sunnies. Tragedy indeed. I emailed HB to see if I could get another pair - they still have the Species frames available on their website, but not with blue lenses, and unfortunately they don't have the option to pick your own lenses anymore. They replied to say they have those frames with the grey polarized lenses only now. Bummer. I've emailed back asking who the manufacturer is, but I'm not holding my breath. After searching around heaps of webites, I've ordered a pair of Oakley XX sunnies in the meantime to try out (hard to tell what they really look like until you get them on), but they are similar to the HB ones although not in matte black and, well, here look for yourself:
I have a 30 day period to return them if they look suspect, so we'll see how they go. I'm still hoping HB can do something for me, so think positive. Pretty melodramatic for a pair of sunnies, but hey, I was attached to those HB Species, ok. :P If you're in NYC and see someone wearing a pair of those sunnies with HB on the side, grab them for me, they're mine - there's almost no way there would be another pair the same sunnies anywhere around here. That's all for now, exams all over the place, scary times, especially with no sunnies. *sneef* |
current weblog entries weblog archives syndication (atom/rss) weather forecasts related utilities online games psychic mind reader the bad day cure internet security webmaster resources password generator gisborne surf, nz goat island bay session las vegas 2005 bbc world headlines cnn world headlines michelle malkin usgs earthquakes daily rotten news national geographic time world headlines time photoessays urban scrawl site info urban scrawl site map contact the author linkage list |
|
| |