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Archive for the ‘Internet Technology’ Category

Privacy Lost – Be Careful What You Post

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

“Follow the money” was good advice given to Woodward and Bernstein by Deep Throat back in the Watergate days, and if you want to understand why privacy lids are coming off, do the same thing – follow the money.

Facebook is the world’s largest social networking site. Depending on whose statistics you use, it’s either the most frequently visited site each day, or it’s number two behind Google, 400 million members strong.  YouTube, Yahoo and Live round out the top five.  Facebook is moving toward its initial public stock offering, and everything it can think of is being monetized.

If you visit the site, you’ve already seen those advertisements in the right side bar.  More of that is coming, and as it does, your privacy is going.

You know how you’re asked about allowing your profile to be accessed every time you want to take one of those silly “Quizzes” on Facebook, like “How Well Do You Know So-and-So”?  If your email address is listed in your profile, you’ve just been added to someone’s mailing list and can expect to be receiving marketing emails.

Privacy has long since disappeared, and on the Internet, and especially on Facebook, whatever thin veil you think might still exist is useless in hiding any of the good parts.  Notwithstanding Facebook’s published Privacy Guide, your info is not the least bit safe.

Money has everything to do with it.  Currency on the Internet is traffic, and in that sense, Facebook is a currency printing press. Eyeballs on the site in those numbers make the Googles of the world salivate.  Add to that the email addresses for e-newsletter marketing, and, well . . . you get the point.

And lest you think the toothpaste can be jammed back into the tube, try getting that embarrassing Facebook update off Facebook’s server, or out of Google’s cache.  The only option you have is to take comfort in the notion of once burned, twice shy, and vow never to put anything anywhere on the Internet you can’t live with forever.

But, it still comes down to money.  Privacy issues can stand in the way of monetization, and when that choice has to be made, the answer is clear.  Making money is not a bad thing, mind you.  The costs of maintaining sites like Facebook, Twitter and so many others is substantial, and business is business.  It’s why the sites and systems were developed in the first place.

Just be careful.  Forever is a long time.

Newest Security Threat to Your PC

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

Today’s Internet technology danger story comes to us from warnings issued by ScanSafe, a security research firm. The threat alert team there has raised alarms about a potent and viral malware cocktail of back-door Trojans and password thieves that insinuates itself into unsuspecting Windows users from infected web sites.

The ratbastards who have foisted this upon us have embedded malicious iFrame into more than 55,000 web sites that when visited will fire the poison bullets at unsuspecting PC users who happen upon the sites.  iFrame refers to an in-line frame structure syntax of a web site’s source code, and is basically a method to embed other HTML documents within the framework of a regular HTML document structure.  In other words, it’s part of the source code of a web site, that gibberish “behind the curtain” of a web site page that is translated by your browser to display what you see on your screen.

The viral distribution of these Trojans and password thieves is benefiting from the fact that so many PC users fail to keep their operating systems and software updated.  A recent research study suggested that 80% of web users are running un-patched versions of Adobe Flash and Adobe Acrobat.

Not coincidentally, then, the most common programs presently under attach include Adobe Flash and Adobe PDF Reader, in addition to Apple’s Quicktime, WinZip and RealPlayer.  So, in addition to wanting your Windows patches up to date, you will want also to update these programs to the newest versions.

There are over 250 million web sites by present estimations, and so 55,000 may not seem like a lot – - 0.00022%.  But, if each site averages only 1000 visitors per month, and each of those visitors has only 10 email addresses in its address books, and each of those 10 has another 10 in theirs, and so on, and so on, it really isn’t that long before millions of PC users’ machines have become infected and their passwords stolen – - passwords to everything they have.

So, the solution?  Keep your system updated, install the newest versions, maintain all security patch releases from Microsoft, protect your computers.  If it can’t spread, the ratbastards are dead.

Corporate Email – Is it Really Free?

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Email is free. We all know that. Or do we, and is it?

While a stamp is not necessary to send an email, technology is. Companies use Microsoft Exchange servers for the service to their staff, and the software is not free. Neither are the servers or their management. The only other option, at least for operating systems, is the Linux competition.

Linux operating systems are free – - at the server level it might be the Red Hat version, or the FreeBSD version, and each has been around for a long time.  While the software is not necessarily free, perhaps from Novell GroupWise, it is less expensive than Microsoft Exchange software, and requires less maintenance, and fewer updates.

A study done earlier in the year compared these overall costs, and found that companies could cut the total cost of email by up to 64% if they were to switch from Microsoft Exchange to Novell GroupWise.  The report was published by independent analyst house Osterman Research.

They based their findings on a global survey of 132 organizations, and compared the total cost of email systems.  An organization with 1,000 users, they found, spends an average of $29.67 per Exchange email account, while just $11.64 for Novell GroupWise accounts on a Linux server.

In the spirit of disclosure, KISS Computing is an open source company, and our servers use FreeBSD as their operating systems.  Some of our work stations are powered by a Linux derivation system, also.  In at least one instance, Novell’s Evolution, a free email client similar in functionality and features to Microsoft’s Outlook, is used.  However, KISS is not affiliated with  either Osterman Research Group or Novell, and are not compensated for this blog post.

The Osterman report also indicated that the average person spends almost one-third of their workday on email, and sends/receives an average of 124 messages every work day.  With about three-quarters of all outgoing communications today done via email, it has become critical to a company’s everyday business activity.

At the very least, it is worth serious consideration in the corporate world how best to manage the costs of doing business.  Reviewing the cost of the single most important communication vehicle in the world today should be on the list.

While it is a mostly Microsoft world we live and work in, it is not the only technology available to us.  Linux does offer a meaningful alternative, as this Osterman Research report, which you can access here, suggests.