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Comments on ‘Link spammers go on social networking rampage’MySpamBookPublished Wednesday 2nd April 2008 12:25 GMT
FilteringBy James Radley
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 12:33 GMT
I did notice on FB this week, that they are starting to filter out some of the Wall using text matching, to try and reduce the spam. To be honest, the majority of spam that I got in FB came from the fwits who belived that hitting "Forward(fast)" was actually a way to find out who fancied you. Everyone knows you have to hit ALT-F4 to find that information. It's like infantile IRC tricks all over again. But fortunately, it's now been filtered out which should stop most spam from spreading. How can you tell?By Cameron Colley
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 12:51 GMT
How can you tell if MySpace pages contain spam links? All the MySpaces I've seen look to be comprised of nothing but spam. Sorry, badly-coded spam. ALT+F4By Jamie
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 12:53 GMT
And here I thought that you had to press CTRL+F4 Net security firm Websense?By Whoopsie
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 13:03 GMT
Since when has Websense been a 'net security firm'? "Clueless purveyors of sub-par content filtering for the lazy" more like. the WallBy David Wiernicki
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 13:04 GMT
I guess Facebook's security people thought they didn't need no education... Let me see - how would I go about mas-hijacking of FaceSpace acounts?By Jimbo Gunn
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 13:23 GMT
Hmmm, well I'd need to steal a load of sign-on cookies, so I could sit in a few internet cafes snooping and hope I can catch a few... Or even better, could I find some way to plant malware actually inside an ISP so I can harvest cookies of millions of FaceSpace accounts, in order to accountjack? That would be tough, because the routers used by ISPs are quite hardy boxes... ... If only someone would install a piece of hardware inside the ISP that I could get a chance of pwning. But that would never happen, right. Phishing for FB accounts must be super-easy...By James Thomas
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 14:05 GMT
Given that when I had a FaceBook account I recieved an almost spam-like quantity of official and identical emails, all with a link to log in, I imagine it's child's play to fake them. ISP side traffic sniffing..By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 2nd April 2008 14:33 GMT
As someone who's worked for telco's & ISPs before, I can guarantee you that snooping happens quite often... and most of the time it's just staff, and they (most likely) won't do anything you'd care about with the information they glean. Quite often it's just part of network performance testing or general diagnostics and sometimes curiosity.. but very rarely snooping on specific individuals (we *know* you look at porn, download copyrighted files content, send compromising emails, we don't need to prove it to ourselves) I remember getting access through password sniffing to a few pron sites in my day (after ensuring that the site was fixed-fee, so as not to charge the customer more) - no biggie. In a reasonably well publicised screwup in Oz, a large mobile firm made undelivered MMSs accessible through a simple URL hack (luckily no personal details available along with it). I've decided that half the male population of Australia sends pictures of their dicks around, and that there aren't enough attractive women sending naked photos (but still a substantial number ..... and news for you, girls, guys DO forward your photos to their friends.. oh, the duplicates that I saw!) .. other interesting hobbies inside the workplace included searches on the SMS database for various words.. people are funny, when they think nobody's watching. :-) Statistically speaking, nobody is, of course. :-) I'm a spammer.... bitch!By Andy
Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 11:13 GMT
Maybe Mark Zuckerberg could *finally* find a way to make money from Facebook. Peddling porn and viagra isn't a long way to stretch from Beacon. Free Anti spam webinar-“Spammers Vs Today’s spam filters”By victor louis
Posted Saturday 5th April 2008 14:29 GMT
Anti spam webinar-“Spammers Vs Today’s spam filters” Today’s spam filters are not accurate and spam volumes are increasing rapidly. This will cost $42 billion for US alone. Spammers are using more innovation technology to send spam mails & Today’s spam filters are blocking only 80% of spam mails. Register for a complimentary Webinar conducted by Abaca and Ferris research to know more about the spammers behind the black market. To register please click the link below: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=LPFKkdkFwOYltiQZtM_2bttw_3d_3d The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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