Archive for July 3rd, 2008

A large part of phishing scams and identity theft is fooling people into thinking they are on one website when they’re actually somewhere else. The technical tricks to accomplish this include lookalike and phony domain names, zapping the hosts file, tricks with URLs and assorted attacks on DNS servers. What’s a normal person to do?

Flagfox is an unobtrusive extension for the Firefox web browser that offers some assistance by placing a flag in the bottom right corner of the Firefox window. The flag (shown below) indicates the country where the website physically resides.

If you don’t recognize the flag, hover the mouse over it and a yellow pop-up window (below) displays the IP address of the website and the country where it resides. If you normally deal with a bank, brokerage or credit union in, for example, the United Says, and one day you notice the flag is from another country, you’re not at the website you thought you were.

Of course this only goes so far. If a legitimate website is in New Jersey and a phony, phishing copy of it resides in New Mexico, the flag will still be American. Before doing anything sensitive, such as banking, click on the flag to open a new tab showing a map and more precise location information such as the city and say.

This is the physical location of the website, not of the organization or person represented by the website. Although in the case of CNET and CNET.com they are the same, this is not normally the case. The New York Times, for example, runs their website out of Colorado. The website of another New York City newspaper, the Daily News is in Texas. Our third local newspaper, the New York Post, hosts their site in Massachusetts.

In all but two cases that I tried, Flagfox was able to pinpoint a location based on the IP address. However, it didn’t know where CNN.com or TomsHardware.com were located.

The point is to be aware of where the important websites that you deal with are located. Customers of Citibank, for example, would be safer if they verified that the website was in New York City before signing in.

But where are the bank websites? Only the banks know for sure. For example, my personal showed Citibank.com as being in New York City, but if my machine was compromised, I could be looking at a scam site imitating Citibank while the real site is elsewhere.

For Flagfox to be most effective, banks, brokerages and credit unions would have to publicize the physical location of their websites. I’ll contact a few and see what they say…

Update July 2, 2008: If Flagfox can’t locate a website based on the IP address, there are other options. Two websites that I’ve used often for this are www.ip-adress.com/ipaddresstolocation and www.ip2location.com/demo.aspx.

I recently wrote about another Firefox tweak Firefox 3: Expand the Site Identification button on HTTPS pages which also helps with verifying the true identity of a website.

See a summary of all my Defensive Computing postings.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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The ill-fated invitation.

(Credit: Facebook)

Mark Zuckerberg, what hath thou wrought? A Facebook invitation for a big beach celebration in Britain looked to ensure an event so wild and widespread that the local police felt the need to impose a 24-hour ban on liquor consumption.

When more than 7,000 …

Source [The social]

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By Harry Wilson Of FINANCIAL NEWS Barclays Capital, Citigroup and Deutsche Bank were among the worst hit banks in Europe in the first half of this year as investment banking fees dropped by more than a third in the wake of the credit crisis. The three banks each lost market share in investment banking and saw their fees fall by more […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Marketers ought to be aware that some consumers are suspicious about the phenomenon known as “behavioral targeting,” a new report from eMarketer says.

Called “Behavioral Targeting Attitudes: The Privacy Issue,” the report released Friday explores the digital ad strategy, which collects consumer information and uses it to serve up ads …

Source [The social]

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The ill-fated invitation.

(Credit: Facebook)

Mark Zuckerberg, what hath thou wrought? A Facebook invitation for a massive beach party in Britain looked to ensure an event so wild and widespread that the local police felt the need to impose a 24-hour ban on liquor consumption.

When more than 7,000 …

Source [The social]

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I first encountered Faviconize through Seth Rosenblatt’s CNET story highlighting 12 “must-have” Firefox extensions. My life has not been the same since.

Faviconize won’t wash your socks or balance your checkbook. No, it does something much more basic: It frees up space in your tab list.

There are three sites that I spend a lot of time on: Zimbra (email), SugarCRM (CRM), and CNET (er, blogging). So, I’ve created three permanent places for them on my tab list. You can see them to the left of my open tabs. The rest come and go: These three stay, but they stay in a very unobtrusive fashion, taking up very tiny space.

Once installed, Faviconize allows you to right-click on any open tab to turn it into a favicon. It’s simple, powerful, and something you should install right now.

(You’re using Internet Explorer, you say? I’m sorry. You’ll have to rely on Microsoft to come up with equivalent technology for IE because, you see, it has a very limited community for IE to help with development. Better use an open-source browser next time.)

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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By Jed Horowitz Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–Enough already with the cliches about the perfect storm. For the huge investment banks, it’s almost a cataclysm. Let’s start with the basics. When the broad equity market suffers, brokerage stocks inevitably do worse. (When it rains on the market, in that storm analogy, it […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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(Updated at 10:45 p.m. PDT with ping information from CNET China, and at 6:30 a.m. on Wednesday with further information.)

Rumors began to surface late on Tuesday that Facebook could no longer get past the Great Firewall of China.

The company has acknowledged the situation but

Source [The social]

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James Wang

This post is by James Wang, Ph.D., a climate scientist at Environmental Defense.

The record floodwaters in Iowa and other parts of the Midwest are claiming lives, destroying homes and crops, contaminating drinking water, and — as the AP puts it — spreading “a noxious brew of sewage, farm chemicals, and fuel that could sicken anyone who wades in.” The cost in human discomfort is incalculable.

But why is it happening? Is it just a freak of nature? One causal element, as reported in Thursday’s Washington Post, might be human reengineering of the landscape. Mary Kelly, who heads up EDF’s rivers and deltas program, gives a good overview of these issues.

Another element might be global warming, which increases the probability of extreme weather events like torrential rain.

Global warming and heavy rainfall

Global warming intensifies the “hydrological cycle” — the process in which water evaporates into the air, forms clouds, and then rains back down on the Earth.

Higher temperatures cause evaporation to occur more quickly. This can cause very dry conditions on land, even drought. But there’s another side to it.

The greater amount of water vapor that a warm atmosphere can hold causes wetter clouds to form, so the rain, when it comes, can be unusually heavy — heavy enough to cause flooding. This intensification of the hydrological cycle causes some seasons to be very wet while others are very dry.

We can’t state for sure that global warming caused the unusually heavy rain in the Midwest — or any specific weather event. But we can state that the probability of torrential rainfall is increased due to global warming.

The IPCC’s 2007 report [PDF] says:

  • “The frequency of heavy precipitation events has increased over most land areas, consistent with warming and observed increases of atmospheric water vapour.”
  • “It is very likely that hot extremes, heat waves and heavy precipitation events will continue to become more frequent.”

Global warming doesn’t fully explain the catastrophe in the Midwest, but it likely plays a role. The sooner we have the ability to bring emissions under control, the better.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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