Archive | 2004

Brian Livingston: beware of slick phishing tricks

Steve Black sent me a link to Brian Livingston’s column on new and clever phishing techniques,
“phishing” being the slang for tricking people into revealing
information, like credit card numbers and SSNs. The article shows how
Internet Explorer’s address bar and the SSL lock icon can be faked. A
few guidelines might make your online experience safer:

1. Don’t accept HTML emails that can hide the real links you’re being sent.

2. Don’t ever enter personal information unless you’re really, really
sure. Banks aren’t going to ask for your CC number and expiration. If
someone wants your SSN, they better be with the Social Security
Administration.

3. Consider a safer browser.  These tricks were all done with IE.
I wonder if they can be reproduced using XUL on Mozilla or in Safari or
Opera or Netscape or…

White Light Computing opens its doors

Rick Schummer announces his new business. Good luck, Rick!

White Light Computing – Open for business!.
Announcing White Light Computing, Inc., a new company in the Fox
Community led by Rick Schummer. White Light Computing is offering a
number of services to developers and IT departments including
mentoring, software testing, consulting, and is selling the popular VFP
developer tools HackCX and ViewEditor (with more tools to come). Give
us a call or send an e-mail if you think we can help your organization
in any way. More information is available on our Web site. By White
Light Computing, Inc..

[FoxCentral News]

Conference Model 2.0?

Dave Winer blogs “Sponsors, speakers, panels, audience.”

“Supernova and the recently announced Web 2.0
conference are throwbacks to the priorities of old conferences, of the
eighties and nineties: sponsors, speakers, panels, audience.”

“Execs
from high tech companies, paying sponsorship fees, not disclosed,
guarantee that most of the content is paid advertising and that nothing
real is said on stage. If you don’t pay the sponsorship fee, you don’t
get a speaking slot. If you offend a sponsor, you don’t get invited
back…These conferences are all spin, and empty bluster.”

Read more at 

[Scripting News]

Sean Gallagher: On a Wing and a Wiki

Sean Gallagher tells a tale of Open Source to the Rescue:
when Ziff-Davis’s eWeek staff lost connectivity to their main site, he
improvised a wiki on his $7 a month personal web site to get them
through the day.

DevEssentials conference fee discount deadline

There’s a big deadline coming up this Friday for early discounts to the
DevEssentials (Essential Fox) conference in Kansas City next month.

DevEssentials. DevEssentials – Register before May 8, 2004 and save. http://www.devessentials.com To register, visit: https://secure.visionds.com/DevEssentials or call toll free, 866-568-4459. Session matrix available at http://www.devessentials.com/sessionmatrix.asp.
Pre- and post-conference workshops: SQL Reporting Services, .NET Boot
Camp, .NET Business Frameworks, VFP Boot Camp, VMP and more… http://www.devessentials.com/workshops.asp By Vision Data Solutions, Inc.. Posted from FoxCentral News

Diebold electronic voting set back in California

E-Voting Challenge in California.

  • Mercury News: State curbs use of e-vote. California
    Secretary of State Kevin Shelley on Friday banned the use of
    touch-screen voting machines in the November election unless they meet
    stringent security measures. He barred outright the use of a new
    Diebold electronic voting system in Kern, San Diego, San Joaquin and
    Solano counties. Ten other counties — including Santa Clara and
    Alameda — will only be permitted to use touch-screen voting if they
    provide a paper receipt for digital ballots cast or meet 23 security
    conditions, including disconnecting the machines from phone lines and
    the Internet.
  • Dan Gillmor says: “This is
    amazingly good news, and shows that Shelley has been, in effect,
    radicalized by the outrageous behavior of the voting-machine industry.
    The companies selling their balloting snake oil went too far, and now
    they’re going to have to do the right thing.
    Most notably in Shelley’s announcement yesterday, he said he’d referred
    the case of the notorious Diebold Election Systems to the attorney
    general for possible criminal, not just civil, prosecution. The record
    is already clear that Diebold has — at absolute best — been
    irresponsible and has dissembled about what it’s been doing in
    California (and who knows how many other states).
    Had Diebold not been so over the top, Shelley might have allowed the
    2004 election to proceed as planned even in counties using non-Diebold
    machines. The requirement for a voter-verifiable paper trail had not
    been scheduled to take effect for two more years.
    Now, faced with an industry that insists on pretending all is well when
    all is blatantly not well, he’s doing the right thing early. The paper
    trail will now have to work this year, or the machines won’t be
    allowed.
    Predictably, local voting officials — the same people who’ve been so
    negligent in adopting an unproven, maybe dangerous technology — are
    screaming about the unfairness of it all. They’re partly responsible
    for this fiasco. They should stop complaining and get to work. We’re
    only talking about the core of our republic here.”

    [Dan Gillmor’s eJournal]

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