Archive | November, 2003

Best Freeware

Geek News Central points out a fine selection of freeware. These are obviously all for Windows but well worth checking if you are a Windows user. For more freeware check out Nonags it is brilliant.

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Gallery v1.4.1

The Gallery team recently released the latest version of their product and I must say it is rather nice. They have done some nice work, from the release notes the following ones are in my mind the most important:

  • New image frame styles
  • Cleaner, easier to follow Config Wizard
  • Nineteen different looks for your gallery

The new themes look a lot nicer than before, take a look at my Gallery for a example of it.
I really wish you could have per album themes that would make it perfect for a multi user hosting system like I am using it for, but I guess things happen in small steps. If you use gallery, it is time for a upgrade!

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Google “Florida” update causes wide spread havoc

If you are a Google watcher in even the slightest sense of the word you will have seen the absolute up-roar going on at present over the changes in its search result policy. This change affects many sites and is one of the things Google is trying to do to cope with various poison tactics that is being employed by dodgy webmasters.
Lots of theories have seen the light, a good write up can be found here

On Friday, 21st November, Google decided to tighten the “filter”. All hell broke loose as tens of thousands of sites disappeared from positions they had held (in some cases) for years. We noticed some of our client sites plummeting for their major key phrase from being #1 to total invisibility. Yet this was only in highly competitive areas, not for their secondary phrases. These sites were, in most cases, not highly optimized, had not sought reciprocal links but had achieved their rankings through being on the web for 4 or 5 years. The bad news was that their company name and domain included the key phrase, sites (including directories) linking to those sites included the key phrase in their links and Google interpreted this as over-optimization and down they plunged. In many areas all the top 20 ranking sites disappeared, including industry leaders, to be replaced by educational sites, news review sites, government sites, major shopping portals or directories. Something major had happened – but what?

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Spam Wars

We all know how frustrating Spam is, currently i am subjected to spam on the following mediums:

  • E-Mail – In the order of 4500 per month
  • Pop-ups, Pop-unders, Spyware and other malware. Thanks to the Mozilla Adblocker and its pop-up blocking this is not a big problem anymore either.
  • Blog comments, luckily not by my own blog yet but soon it will no doubt since I recently enabled comment posting ability, about 3 a week currently on other blogs I host
  • Referer log spams, 10 a week
  • SMS Spam used to be a problem for me, but now thanks to TPS that is not a problem now anymore, but TPS is voluntary and if the UK didn’t have strong laws protecting people this would still be a problem.
  • Snail mail spam, less of a problem now than before since my new living arrangements has a old lady who goes through my post and only gives stuff to me that is addressed to me, but in previous places I used to get about 15 to 20 snail mail spam articles a week.
  • Telemarketing calls on my mobile used to be a problem but also solved by TPS and I do not answer my land line so I won’t know about that one.
  • Instant Messaging spam on IRC and other IM systems, not a huge problem for me but others are feeling it badly.
  • Direct abuse of Microsoft’s pathetic Messenger service, this pretty much happens the moment you put a machine outside a firewall, thankfully you can disable this “service” and thankfully in XP SP2 it will be disabled by default.
  • Physical annoyance by sales people, charity beggars and other such types, I have my “get the fuck out of my way” look down pretty well so they run circles around me now.

As far as e-mail spam goes I keep track of time spent checking email for spam using iScan. This year I checked 311 611 emails for spam and spent 13 700 seconds of system time to do so. Of the 311 611 emails I checked 41 470 of them were tagged as spam. Of the 12 Gb of email I processed this year 300 Mb was spam tagged. Those are large figures and I am running a pretty small system for only a handfull of people, I would hate to imagine the impact that spam has on large ISPs.
So given all of this it does not surprise me at all to read stories such as the one about a ongoing war between a blog hosting company in the Netherlands and a spamming outfit in the states, people threatening anthrax attacks on spammers and the various name-and-shame tactics that anti-spammers are deploying to make the lives of spammers hell. I can sympathize with them and understand their rage.
Our only hope will be legislation and strong legal prosecution, there is no clear way to protect us from a technological point of view from attacks on all these fronts, the protocols we use such as SMTP and HTTP are all too weak and easy to abuse from a meta data point of view. The current spam laws leaves much to be desired, the people who are heading up government initiatives are clueless on a level I never thought possible so the future is looking pretty bleak. It seems that anyone with a desire to remain freely contactable will have to suffer as a result.

Read full storyComments { 0 }

gmane.org NNTP 2 RSS converter

Ever since I started using Sharpreader I have been missing out on some feeds I used to read. Newzcrawler has the ability to read NNTP and show it in the same style interface as RSS feeds which is really nice for reading mailing lists via gmane.org‘s SMTP to NNTP service.
At the moment I read FreeBSD Stable, FreeBSD Security Announce, NT Bugtraq and Bugtraq through this gmane.org so you can understand that it was rather traumatic to loose this ability.

(more…)

Read full storyComments { 3 }
The Victorian Internet

The Victorian Internet

There is an amazing collection of ideas of what the Victorian internet would have been like over at www.b3ta.com.

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Bill Joy on Linux, Mac OS X and Open source

Wired has a interview with Bill Joy – co-founder of what used to be called Stanford University Network aka Sun Microsystems, Grandfather of lots of sexy hardware and also Java – where he makes quite a few interesting remarks.

Re-implementing what I designed in 1979 is not interesting to me personally. For kids who are 20 years younger than me, Linux is a great way to cut your teeth. It’s a cultural phenomenon and a business phenomenon. Mac OS X is a rock-solid system that’s beautifully designed. I much prefer it to Linux.

Later on he has this to say:

I’m figuring out a meditation wall for my apartment in New York. Eight feet high by 12 feet wide, with an array of overlapping rear projectors, each with a tiny Linux box and connected by gigabit Ethernet.

Even more sexy would have been Apple G4 Cube machines :-)
On Open source he says the following:

Open source is fine, but it doesn’t take a worldwide community to create a great operating system. Look at Ken Thompson creating Unix, Stephen Wolfram writing Mathematica in a summer, James Gosling in his office making Java. Now, there’s nothing wrong with letting other people help, but open source doesn’t assist the initial creative act. What we need now are great things. I don’t need to see the source code. I just want a system that works

As always I think he has his head on in 100% the right way.

Read full storyComments { 0 }

More blog spam

Another annoying vector for spamming bloggers is comments. The bots now do google searches for typical signs of Movabletype comment forms and then go spam them. They do this to up their google pageranking.
A few weeks ago Jay Allen wrote a system called MT-Blacklist that blocks based on blacklists. While blacklists isn’t the best way to blog spammers they are so far the best option that bloggers have due to the lack of unspoofable meta data in the HTTP protocol.
I installed the plugin into my Movabletype and have stopped quite a few comment spam attempts using it so I am quite happy with it and would recommend it to any MT user.

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Referer log spammers

I have been noticing in my referer log a couple of hits that looks to me like hits simply to spam my logs.
217.73.164.106 – - [13/Oct/2003:17:49:35 +0100] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 21978 “http://www.kwmap.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [13/Oct/2003:17:49:35 +0100] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 21978 “http://www.kwmap.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [14/Oct/2003:10:12:31 +0100] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 21978 “http://www.kwmap.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [14/Oct/2003:10:12:31 +0100] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 21978 “http://www.kwmap.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [04/Nov/2003:08:13:52 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 26409 “http://www.websearchde.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [12/Nov/2003:22:42:50 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27410 “http://www.wr18.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [15/Nov/2003:10:41:49 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27053 “http://www.malixya.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
141.85.3.130 – - [16/Nov/2003:21:34:49 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27053 “http://www.worldnewslog.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
141.85.3.130 – - [17/Nov/2003:03:23:07 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27053 “http://www.mikesspot.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
141.85.3.130 – - [17/Nov/2003:10:15:22 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27053 “http://www.a-b-l-o-g.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
141.85.3.130 – - [17/Nov/2003:17:12:02 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27360 “http://www.teoras.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [18/Nov/2003:04:10:25 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27323 “http://www.websearchus.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
217.73.164.106 – - [18/Nov/2003:22:25:51 +0000] “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 27323 “http://www.saulem.com/” “MSIE 6.0″
The thing that makes me think they are spam bots is that all they ever do is ask for the main page, none of my images, CSS or anything like that – and the obvious fake user agent.
I looked a bit at the IP addresses in various databases and they are from Romanian educational networks and all the sites being advertised are from Romania.
So I think it is time I add user_agent = “MSIE 6.0″ to my deny lists.

Read full storyComments { 0 }

Desktop Aggregators

I am sick of Newzcrawler. It used to have a really useful liberal parser that would work with most things, now is using the MSXML as its core parser and it has been turned into the worlds strictest parser. This is all fine and well in a perfect world however we do not live in one. Earlier today I posted a quote about the Technorati growing pains and it stated that it has 1.2 Million weblogs and is adding 4 000 to 5 000 new ones every day. For a feed reader to expect all these blogs to have valid XML is ludicrous.
The developers of Newzcrawler has stated that they are working on this problem and have released a Beta that has a new parser. Their previous “stable” release was a joke of crashes and instabilities and regardless of these being reported on their forums they still released it as a stable version. Now we are back in Beta stage and it is even worse.
So my search for a replacement reader got me to Sharpreader a rather nice looking aggregator for windows, it is written in .Net so you will need the 20 Meg worth of .Net framework but so far its been well worth the hassle. Sharpreader – while still Beta – is very usable and attractive and it is a lot better at parsging dodgy RSS but still not perfect, it has issues with sites like Rootprompt but their feed does indeed suck. The only feature that I am going to miss in newzcrawler so far is NNTP as I read quite a few mailing lists via Gmane. The Author believes in Parsing At All Costs so that is encouraging.

Read full storyComments { 0 }