About HIM-I AM A FAN OF THE BAND"HIM"
Tuesday, 6 October 2009
Towel Head
Talk about post-traumatic stress,i just finished a 3 year tour of duty of Afghanistan,on the bus ride home i was reading my last letter again of my wife saying she is planing a"night of hot steamy sex",i got home and went upstairs and my wife got out of the shower with a towel wrapped around her head and i accidentally shot her
Update on Hotmail:Scam hits more e-mail accounts
The scale of a phishing attack originally thought to be directed at Hotmail may be larger than previously thought.
BBC News has seen a list of more than 20,000 more names and passwords that have been posted online.
The list contains e-mail addresses and passwords from Hotmail, Yahoo, AOL, Gmail and other service providers.
The list was published on the same website as the original list of 10,000 Hotmail login details.
Some of the accounts appear to be old, unused or fake. However, BBC News has confirmed that many - including Gmail and Hotmail addresses - are genuine.
Other addresses include Comcast and Earthlink accounts.
It is not clear whether the list was part of the same phishing attack that collected the Hotmail addresses or a separate scam.
Phishing involves using fake websites to lure people into revealing details such as bank account details or login names.
A spokesperson for Microsoft said phishing was an "industry-wide problem".
"Our guidance to customers is to exercise extreme caution when opening unsolicited attachments and links from both known and unknown sources, and that they install and regularly update their anti-virus software."
Password change
Technology blog neowin.net was the first to publish details of the original attack. It said the accounts were posted on 1 October to pastebin.com, a website commonly used by developers to share code.
The Pastebin website is currently down for maintenance.
Its owner, Paul Dixon, told Neowin that it had received "an unprecedented amount of traffic".
"Pastebin.com is just a fun side project for me, and today it's not fun. It will remain offline all day while I make some further modifications," he told Neowin.
Security expert Graham Cluley of Sophos advised users to change their passwords as soon as possible.
"I'd also recommend that people change the password on any other site where they use it," he said.
About 40% of people use the same password for every website they use, he added.
New rules to end 'blogger payola'
US regulators will for the first time crack down on bloggers who fail to disclose fees or freebies they get from companies for reviewing products.
The Federal Trade Commission, FTC, decided to update its nearly 30 year old guidelines to clarify the law for the vast world of blogging.
Offenders could face eventual fines of up to $11,000 (£6,900) per violation.
The updated policy on how advertisers can use endorsements will also apply to celebrities and research firms.
Until now, bloggers had not been covered by the guidelines - something which had concerned consumer groups. They had argued for a long time that the links between some bloggers and companies were not always totally transparent and clear for readers.
"Consumers are increasingly dependent on the internet for purchase information," said Jack Gillis of the Consumer Federation of America.
"There's tremendous opportunity to steer consumers in the wrong direction."
There is nothing in the new rules about how disclosures must be made.
"That's left up to the endorser," said Richard Cleland, assistant director of the FTC's division of advertising practices.
"It can be a banner, part of the review. The only requirement is that it be clear and conspicuous."
'Material connections'
The FTC said its commissioners voted 4-0 to approve the final web guidelines, which will take effect from 1 December. The commission had unveiled a draft of the proposed policy last year.
In a statement the FTC said "the revised guides specify that while decisions will be reached on a case-by-case basis, the post of a blogger who receives cash or in-kind payment to review a product is considered an endorsement.
"Thus, bloggers who make an endorsement must disclose the material connections they share with the seller of the product or service."
The guides are not binding by law, but rather interpretations of law that hope to help advertisers comply with regulations.
The new policy will also apply to Twitter, Facebook, Yelp and other forms of new media advertising.
"The new rules on bloggers are the most far-reaching attempt to stamp some guidelines of conduct on the blogosphere, which in general operates according to informal codes and the notion that "inauthentic" bloggers - including those not disclosing commercial relationships - will suffer in the web's court of public opinion," wrote Michael Learmonth of Advertising Age.
'Trust'
Reaction from the blogosphere to the FTC's new guidelines over what has been dubbed blogger payola has been mixed.
"The concept of disclosure is not new to BlogHer. The trust of readers is everything," said Elisa Camahort Page, a co-founder of BlogHer the main news, entertainment and information network for women online reaching more than 15 million each month.
"We have never been in favour of a universal code of conduct but we think that what the FTC has introduced is simple and achievable for anyone who wants a professional relationship with the market and to retain the trust of the reader," Ms Camahort Page told BBC News.
Wayne Sutton, who is a social media strategist and hosts a social media podcast at TalkSocialNews.com agreed.
"We're in a time when companies will try (to) leverage individuals who are community leaders or have a large audience for brand awareness...but if you want to keep them (readers/followers), being honest or "transparent" is the best way to do so."
Jeff Jarvis is a professor of journalism at New York's City University and long time blogger and sees things differently. In a blog post he attacked what he called "the FTC's misguided, dangerous ad/blog endorsement rules."
"I think that openness is the best fix for questions of trust and advise companies and politicians and certainly governments to become transparent by default as enlightened self-interest.
"But mandating this for anyone who dares speak online? Foolish," wrote Professor Jarvis.
On Twitter the issue became a trending topic.
"New FTC proposed rules on product endorsements are big-brotherish in extreme, unworkable and downright dangerous," tweeted Dan Gillmor, director of the Knight Centre for Digital Media Entrepreneurship.
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