Tips on How to Avoid Phishing

Got an email from Google today about how you can avoid phishing, which is defined by Wikipedia as “an attempt to criminally and fraudulently acquire sensitive information, such as usernames, passwords and credit card details, by masquerading as a trustworthy entity in an electronic communication.”

Here are the tips offered in the Google email:

  • Don’t reply to or click on links in emails that ask for personal, financial, or account information.
  • Check the message headers. The From: address and the Return-path should reference the same source.
  • Instead of clicking the links in emails, go to the websites directly by typing the web address into your browser, cut and paste or use bookmarks.
  • If on a secure page, look for “https” at the begging of the URL and the padlock icon in the browser.
  • Keep your computer’s antivirus, spyware, browser, and security patches up to date and regularly run system scans.
  • Review your accounts regularly and check for unauthorized activity.
  • Use a browser that has a phishing filter (Firefox, Internet Explorer, or Opera).

A related article by Walter Mossberg was also published at WSJ today, How to Avoid Cons That Can Lead To Identity Theft.

Scale and interaction and persuasion – not just impressions!

Charlene Li on social networks’ value in a recession: …it means all those me-too, social-network with a twist startups who don’t have a monetization plan, or whose plan is dependent on traffic=advertising, are in trouble. This is social media — media being defined as ways to turn traffic into advertising. Not a good place to be sitting in a recession, when marketers are looking for scale and interaction and persuasion, not just impressions.

12 BB Meta Blog Blackberry Blogging Client

I found this new blogging client for Blackberry and it seems to work fine with my bb 8830 and my WordPress 2.3.2 blog.

The name of the client is BB Meta Blog Blackberry Client and I am posting this with it.

Does anyone know of any other Blackberry blog clients?

test from my blackberry

Posting from my blackberry… Nothing to say, just testing…

| 17 years ago in Uncategorized

It’s Capitalism, Not Cybersquatting

Schwartz-Rick-260X330
Inside Cable News today is reporting on the sale of the domain names ireport.com and i-report.com to CNN. Domainer Rick Schwartz sold the names to CNN for $750,000.
Note that Rick bought the domains in 1997, long before CNN had ever thought of creating its ireport service (I wrote about its launch here).

So why does Inside Cable News title their story Cyber-squatting pays off? WIkipedia defines cybersquatting as follows:

Cybersquatting, according to the United States federal law known as the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, is registering, trafficking in, or using a domain name with bad-faith intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else.

Was registering the domain ireport.com almost 11 years ago something done in bad faith? Surely not. I would bet Rick’s wife thought he was crazy 11 years ago; buying domain names that had no present value. It’s called speculation, and there’s nothing illegal, immoral, or unethical about it. No one had any claim to the term “ireport” at the time.

Now his speculating has paid off, but please don’t paint it with the “cybersquatting” brush, ICN. That’s just incorrect. Registering “BruceSpringsteen.com” and hoping to sell it to the Bruce for a big payday is indeed cybersquatting, but registering generic terms and made up words is not. It’s just capitalism.

Update: ICN has changed the title of their article to Domain name speculation pays off, noting that the term ‘Cybersquatting’ doesn’t apply in this case. All media outlets should learn how to issue a correction like this one, with humility.

Note to Self: Amazon S3 Plugin for WordPress

Amazon S3 Plugin for WordPress: “A WordPress plugin allows you to use Amazon’s Simple Storage Service to host your media for your WordPress powered blog.”

Once setup, this plugin transparently integrates with your WordPress blog. File uploads are automatically saved into your Amazon S3 bucket without any extra steps. Once saved, these files will be delivered by Amazon S3, instead of your web host. Any image thumbnails that get created are saved to Amazon S3 too. You’ll also find an “Amazon S3″ tab next to your regular “Upload” tab, which allows you to easily browse and manage files that were not upload via WordPress.

Note to Self: JS-Kit

Js LogoThanks to a comment the other day, I was reminded of a another useful add-on tool I came across a while back, JS-Kit. They have Ratings, Reviews, Comments, and Polls you can add to your blog or website.

Seems like a nice service, and the designs are unobtrusive and understated. Would love to know if you are using this service and what you think of it.