Diluting the net


Contentless sites



This kind of site is related to Utterly Contentless Sites, but does offer some content. However, the offer is only a copy you could have obtained directly from the official source. This only dilutes the net, and though methods are legal the aim is still to deceive.

How to make a scraper-site,
and dilute the net:


1. Choose any popular term,
and buy a domain name variation.

2. Find a popular free template for the design, and use the template again and again. Remember, content is not to satisfy readers, but leeching links from search engines.

3. Look up the word in Wikipedia or similar, and steal the article. Never link back, but present it all as your own original stuff.

4. Present a list of 'Recommended sites' or 'Greatest hits', that only include your other scraper sites, pretending independence.

5. Add the money motor: Ads by Google sprinkled everywhere. The faked content is deliberately only a small portion or of lesser quality; the sooner people bore and click ads, the better for the scraper (and Google too).

6. Finally, sign up at major fora and shamelessly recommend your product,
using one alias after another to mascarade as a crowd of satified customers.

Here's a fresh example of scraping:
my-smoothie-recipes.com and a fresh example of a bogus reviewer praising her own product. The honest approach would use the 'Website owners own Comment'.

"Inevitably, when there are sites out there whose sole purpose of existence is to drive traffic to other sites for the purpose of collecting ad revenue... Most of these sites are clones of each other, offer no content of value and often don't even offer content that's relevant to the domain name."
Dean, Reviewer at Siteadvisor.

Detect scraping: www.copyscape.com.
The first 10 results are always free..

Look up a sites background information: Who owns it, when registrered, what's its real origin: www.domaintools.com



Find something interesting?


What you need, when you need it



This is a special kind of website, but in no positive way. Content is not their problem. Au contraire, they're utterly contentless. Offering phrases like: "Find something interesting", "Find what you're looking for" or "What you need, when you need it".
What you need, when you need it
But what do you find, and do you need it? Click the menu, but all you'll get is more ads plus another menu. Repeat ad nauseam...

More leeches..?



Update: Later DomainDetectives.net followed this trail further, and they did find more: Directi: Find Something Interesting? We did...

TheBigRetort has also been looking for leeches: Adleech parasite leads to Russia...

Digital Jungle


Short news and latest bits



InterClue - Link Preview Multitool



With this free addition to FireFox links will reveal much more, before you click: snapshot of page, summary of text, sizes and dates of linked files, useful stats and metadata and more: www.interclue.com

FireFox 3 has arrived!



Get the latest version of the fastest and safest browser here: www.mozilla.com/en-US/

A recent study reveals that almost every second surfer are in risk of malware attacks because of unsafe browser-versions...

Obsolete Versions = Insecure Systems



Normally recycling is a good idea, why waste things still working? But cyberspace is a big exception: old software versions, unpatched systems all have publicly known security holes, and such insecure environments will be exploited one day. Check if your system is up to date with Secunias free Online Software Inspector...

AVG 8 released



Remember to Upgrade your free version, before May 31. Anti spyware is now included in AVG, so if you already use Ewido anti spyware, you'll need to uninstall that first, to avoid conflicts.

Save Energy - Spare the Screen



Black Google saves energy: screen is black. Could save a fair bit of electricity: blackle.com

Farewell to Captcha



CAPTCHA means Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart. It was used to block spam and keep robots to pose as humans. But not much longer...

Both text and audio Captchas have now been broken, which means that we'll have to figure out something new and better. Preferably fast - before the Flood...

Here's more: Breaking Google's audio CAPTCHA and Google's CAPTCHA busted in recent spammer tactics

Name shopping



Google has been buying lots of domain names, it seems. Some names are quite weird, like thesecretofburritos.com or google-yahoo-porn.com, googlewarez.com, even googlepoo.com. Wonder what they're up to? The long List:...

Virus top 10


F-Secure's Virus Statistics
updated in real-time



Free security


Safe in Cyberspace?

You can be well protected
Security doesn't have to cost

All free versions (not trials or shareware) for private and noncommercial use on a single computer at home...

FREE ANTI-VIRUS
AVG: Anti Virus - Forum
Avast: Anti Virus - Forum
Bitdefender: On demand scanner - Forum
F-Secure: Online Scanner

FREE ANTI-SPYWARE
SpyBot: Search & Destroy
Spyware Terminator: Terminator 2
AdAware: Ad-Aware 2007
Microsoft: Windows Defender
SpywareWarrior: Rogue anti-spyware

FREE MALWARE REMOVAL
How to Remove Malicious Software:
F-Secure + Avast - Bitdefender - Microsoft

FREE FIREWALL
ZoneAlarm

FREE SCRIPT PROTECTION
Block malicious scripts from running.
NoScript

CHECK SUSPICIOUS SITES
Check a websites reputation ahead. Be warned before you enter a bad site.
McAfee: SiteAdvisor - Forum
WOT: Web Of Trust
CallingID: Toolbar - Forum
FireTrust: SiteHound
ExpLabs: LinkScanner
ExpLabs: LinkScanOnline
OpenDNS: Domain Tagging
MozDev: FireKeeper
GeoTrust: TrustWatch
InterClue: InterClue - Blog

CHECK SUSPICIOUS FILES
VirusTotal: virusTotal.com
VirusScan: VirusScan.jotti.org

OLD AND UNSAFE SOFTWARE?
Old versions and unpatched systems may be insecure. Check if your software is up to date:
Secunia: Online Software Inspector



Beware, be wiser


Better Safe than Sorry

BLOGS
F-Secure Kaspersky SiteAdvisor McAfee PhishTank SpamHuntress Ikillspammers

SPAM
SpamTracker: Wiki - Blog
Spam domain names: uribl.com
International Anti-Spam Sites: SpamLinks.net
TebWeb: Fight back against spam and scam
SpamNation: www.spamnation.info
Robert Soloways Rise and Fall

SCAM
Email Scams & Phishing: Scamdex.com
All kind of scams exposed: Scam.com
Global Scams and Frauds: GlobalScams.com
Phishing Clearinghouse: PhishTank.com
Network Abuse Clearinghouse: Abuse.net

SITE INFORMATION
Read Sites own Description: AboutUs.org
View earlier versions of any site: Archive.org
Find copies of your site: CopyScape.com
Whois-information: DomainTools.com
Report inaccurate Whois data: InterNic.net

Digital Jungle

Google abuse


Who feels lucky here?



Today I got this spam mail, that at first looked too simple. But when I looked twice, I noticed it was actually opposite:

"Check it out - I just found the best casino website! It has great games, tournaments, daily promotions and high bonuses. If you go there now you'll get a free beginners bonus of $555 - so you can start playing right away! Have fun!"

Casino spam is not news at all, but the deceptive link was. Instead of linking directly to www.casino-games-pro.com it used this:

http://www.google.com/search?q=
inurl%
3Agames-pro+
intext%
3Awon1+million+megabet+from+casino+online
&btnI=Lucky target="_blank"


(This query searches for sites with "games-pro" in the url + "won1 million megabet from casino online" somewhere in the text.)

This combination of words is found on only one website. And then Googles 'Feel lucky button' is abused to go directly to the site...

Result: the scam-site avoids naming itself in the spam mail, thus making it harder for spam-filters to scan for names of known scam-sites.

This is a new trick that I haven't seen before, but I read about it recently.

Here's the scam sites information:

Domain: CASINO-GAMES-PRO.COM
Registrant: Not avialable.
Creation Date: 26-Sep-2007
IP Address: 88.214.198.120
IP Location: United Kingdom - Real International Business Corp
Domain servers: ns1.hqhost.net + ns0.hqhost.net
Registrar: www.erdomain.com

How to complain:

Report abuse: abuse@erdomain.com

Report USA-spam: spam@uce.gov

Google spam report: google.com/contact/spamreport.html

Adding the ad


Different points of view



Ads are no longer just ads. Actually it's more misleading not to differentiate. Stumbled upon this debate, decided to follow the trail further:

Visually deceptive
advertisements
in web design

John G. Tylers: "The insidious problem

 of visually deceptive advertisements in web design, where advertisers fool users by displaying what appear to be user-control dialog elements but which really are links to their voracious marketing engines...

Jakob Nielsen: "Yes, ads that masquerade

 as dialog boxes or other useful user interface elements are deceptive and probably unethical. But they are also self-defeating: sure, you can trick the user into clicking on an ad in the belief that it is a dialog box, but that user's first reaction upon arriving at your site will be one of disgust - and an immediate click on the Back button..."

Mads Dam: "There are 3 kinds of deception, but only the last kind is illegal: Mild manipulation,
'Always going to the line'
and Outright fraud

Mark Twain: "A man is never more truthful than when he acknowledges himself as a liar. Often the surest way to convey misinformation is to tell the strict truth. Truth is the most valuable thing we have. Let us economize it."

Read more...

Do you feel lucky?



Google has such a clean design, and never looks cluttered and confusing. Other engines have suffered from "portalitis", but not Goggle. Except from a minor adjustment of their original logo, and the seasonal logo-joke, they have always looked like that. Clean, simple and efficient.

But if you have always seen something, most likely you've never thought about it. In this case: you have probably never wondered why Google has this extra "Do you feel lucky"-button. And you have probably never used it either. So why is it still there..?

Because users love it? They don't. Many use it? Only 1 %. Google profits somehow? Au contraire, that button may cost $100 million annually in lost ad revenue, source American Public Media's Marketplace.

Problem: If people use that button, they also bypass the ads Google is spinning gold from. If all users felt lucky, Googles ads would never be viewed.

So why does Google keep the button?

Well, here's a lesson of layers:

Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google: "The reason it's called "I'm Feeling Lucky," is of course that's a pretty damn ambitious goal. I mean to get the exact right one thing without even giving you a list of choices, and so you have to feel a little bit lucky if you're going to try that with one go."

Marisa Mayer, Google's vice president: "Larry and Sergey had the view, and I certainly share it, that it's possible just to become too dry, too corporate, too much about making money. And you know what I think is really delightful about Google and about the "I'm Feeling Lucky," is that they remind you that the people here have personality and that they have interests and that there is real people."

Web usability expert Jacob Nielsen says this serves another business purpose: 'Oh we're just two kind of grad students hanging out and having a beer and having a grand old time,' not you know, 'We are 16,000 people working on undermining your privacy.'"

Typosquatting


Naming as gaming



If you mistype a domain name,
you 'd expect to get a variation of
"oops : unavailable / not found".

However, if it's a popular domain you'll probably get something nevertheless. There are 3 degrees:

1) Harmless: If you type "gogle.com" you'll be automatically redirected to the correct name "google.com". You wont even notice errors silently corrected in the background.

2) Annoying: If you type plitiken.dk instead of politiken.dk (a popular danish newspaper), then your mistake will not be corrected. You'll get a gallery site gallerysee.com which is completely unrelated to what you wanted. At least obvious faking - lose time not money.

3) Fraud: If you mistype the name of your online bank, and arrive at a site that looks exactly like the original, but isn't, then you'll not lose time but probably all your money.

Read more in Wikipedia...

Urgent urgent..!



Yesterday I received an email with "Urgent! Urgent!" as title. The message was a forwarded warning of some new virus, being distributed by mail and hiding in an attached pdf-file. Don't open that file: then this virus will erase all information on your harddisk, and you'll never ever get it back. This nasty little program was supposedly created by a german programmer. Forward this to all your friends...

Hm, I thought, this sounds like a message from a "friend of a friend". And what does that remind me of? Urban legends! Now, think about this: there's more than 100.000 viruses around now, and more than a hundred new appearing each week. What sense does a single email make, warning about a single virus? How about the other 99.999..? Well, here's reality: If you don't have anti-virus, and your pc is not updated, you'll be infected in less than an hour if you go online.

Morale: Don't spread disinformation, don't pass unvalidated warnings, don't waste peoples time. Do check the source and credibility of information, do use your common sense. Here's a link to Hoax Warnings from F-Secure: f-secure.com/hoaxes/hoax_new.shtml

Surfing privately



If you're worried about Google hiding personal information (almost) for ever, try Blackdust - an anonymous Google proxy. Here's their own description:

"When we search the web with Google its easy to forget that they are recording every search and every IP address. In fact unless you're very careful with your cookies then Google probably knows you better than you know yourself. This freaks us out. And it should freak you out two. The fact that every aspect of our search behaviour is being recorded, and use of that data isn't really restricted by any laws or policies is a problem. Blackdust is the solution to the problem. Searching the web through the Blackdust anonymous proxy protects your identity and what Google can learn about you."

And they'll remove the ads as well...

Polar rose looks at images



How would you find a text on the net, if there was no Google, Yahoo, Ask or any other searchengine? Well, probably not. But we are more or less in that situation when it comes to images. A decade ago the internet was almost a text only resource. But now, almost 10 million new photos are uploaded daily, a number that more than doubles each year.

So how do you locate that image, that is somewhere out there? Yesterday I read of a new image based searchengine, Polar Rose. It's still a beta-version, but the perspective certainly looks promising! Have a look...

Searching for sense



Sometimes we have a question. And want an answer. However, this is not exactly what happens on the internet. When we ask a searchengine, we usually give it one word (or perhaps some more). In return we're presented with a looong list of sites that contains this word. But actually we're not looking for words, but for information, meaning, ideas, concepts. In short, something that makes sense. The searchengines we know are still working on a primitive 'keyword' level. Read more...

The law of more


In need of speed?



If development of cars followed Moores Law,
it would only take half a century
to attain the speed of light.
And then beyond...

Phishing, Virus, Spammer, Spy


Safe in cyberspace?



Taste without grace



Normally I would wonder what a domain name meant. And how it sounded. But I never worried about how it tasted...?

Just joking, here's the more serious point: be carefull when you search for a new possible domain, and NetworkSolution is asked. They may return the answer but keep the name. I just read this warning in webpronews.com:

"ICANN also specifically addressed the concern over NetworkSolutions' recent controversial practice of automatically registering domains searched for on their site, raising the price, and then returning during the grace period. NetworkSolutions defended the practice as a way to protect customers from frontrunners, but critics have had trouble deciphering the difference."

Only avoiding one specific company is probably only false security: avoid any instance that have a commercial interest in your choise...


Messenger phishing



If you get a message like this, then beware!

"Find out who deleted you from the MSN without noticing it. Check your MSN and verify who deleted you from their Messenger account." Is this possible..?


What is the true cost of spam?



The daily dose may seem petty, 1-2 minutes clicking delete in a whole day. Irritating but insignificant, like a few flies buzzing by, who cares. However, the real cost is grossly underrated for several reasons:

Spam filters devour their share of the mailstream, so we only see the tip of the iceberg. But each time you get a real email, 4 spam mails were sent but filtered out. That number is unfortunately growing. And the growth is accellerating...


Borderline business



Raising the bottom helps us all


Consider the present net, lots of pages filled with animated sound and vision. Less than ten years old and still exploding. Now 100 million websites and a billion pc's are out there.

When everybody get their own website, and every company and institution too, then we'll reach 10 billion sites (the mid nineties only offered 50000 sites). Similarly 10 times as many new computers will eventually arrive. And similarly many pc newbies born...


Consider thy Name



Nominal advice if you're
tired of spam and scam


Before you buy a domain name, check if you are creating it or if it has already been in use (or abuse). View old pages in archive.org and ask searchengines for references. Verify that it is not banned in some quarters. Verify that the sites corresponding email adress isn't blacklistet, for spam or phishing. Read more...


The Honey pot project



Stop spammers email harvest


Ever wondered where spammers got your email address from? Searchengines are continually scanning the internet, looking for original content. But that's obvious enough, and you can block their visits if you want to be invisible. However, other people are scanning the net as well, spidering site after site to harvest the email addresses people posted. They don't announce their visit, don't ask for permission and don't take no for an answer...

Spam mails can be stopped once they are sent, but no spam-filter gets them all. It would be more efficient, if they weren't sent at all. If spam spiders become visible, they can also be stopped. To stop them they need to be tracked and analyzed...


The sand inside was frozen,
immobile, in mid pour...



The line above was the title line of a spam mail I recently received. The message itself was equally weird. It's amazing how much spammers will do to slip through the spam filters. Sometimes their efforts remind me of the weird author William Burroughs, who also used scissors to 'write'. Here's a recent example of spam cut up..


Fake surveys



Don't fall for this scam, that I've recently seen in growing numbers: "SomeBank will add $100 credit to your account just for taking part in our quick 5 question survey.". Sure! And when you've answered the very few and very easy questions, the money is all yours. They only need to know your accountnumber, password, pincode, mothers maidenname, etc...

Stop! And think: If someone wants to add money to your account, the number is all they need. But to get money out of your account...

Morale: There is no such thing as a paid survey! Why pay if most people answer freely, when you ask them politely..?


Spam from Hongkong



Ever received spam from a HK domain? Complain here: ofta.gov.hk/en/uem/main.html

June 2007 a new law went into effect in Hong Kong making spam and internet fraud illegal with regards to the use of .hk domains. Now spam and fraud can be fined up to $1 million and five years in prison...


Major spammer arrested



It looks like Robert Alan Soloway has sent his last spam mail, at least for some decades to come. He was arrested in May after a federal grand jury returned a 35-count indictment charging him with mail fraud, wire fraud, e-mail fraud, aggravated identity theft and money laundering. He's accused of using networks of compromised computers to send out millions of spam mails daily since 2003. He continued even after Microsoft won a $7 million civil judgment against him in 2005 and Robert Brauer (small Internet service provider in Oklahoma) won a $10 million judgment. If convicted of all charges, he could face up to 65 years in prison. Still it could be worse...

Microsoft: "He's one of the top 10 spammers in the world. He's a huge problem for our customers. This is a very good day."

Spamhause: "Soloway has been a long-term nuisance on the Internet - both in terms of the spam he sent, and the people he duped to use his spam service which has, in many cases, got them into trouble..."

And if you want to know more of Soloways past, here's a looong blog...



The practical internet



Creative commons is flexible
copyright for creative works.
Cybergeography of the Internet and other emerging Cyberspaces.

Favicon. Free 'favorite icon' online editor.
Google PageRank Prediction of any site.
Internetworldstats global view of the net.
Multiple search in several parallel sources
Touchgraph unfolds the structure of the Net.
What is my IP Address. Name to number.
Wikipedia is the free public encyclopedia!
Validate your html with W3C's Validator
Verify your links with W3C's Link Checker
World Wide Web Consortium. Top of the net...

The strange internet



Lots of useful things can be found on the internet. However a secondary aspect is all the weird stuff you stumble upon while looking for something completely different. Examples:
Scampton veterinary Optician. Art, gnomes, languages, theories, Daniil Kharms, cinema...
How to prank a telemarketer. Hello, hello...
What's in a name? Company etymologies...
Daze of our lives. What the Devil is all this?
Penguins in space. Spaceborn dust speck hints at penguins in Andromeda Galaxy...
Fainting goats. Some very nervous creatures...
Pigeon rank. Domestic pigeons (Columba livia) have a unique capacity to recognize objects...
Where did they land on the Moon? Visit our celestial neighbor. Happy lunar surfing...
Microsoft-splatter. Inside-joke that leaked...
In the beginning was chaos. It's still around...
Carpe diem? If fish could speak, it's fishy...
Uncyclopedia. Yes it's a parody...

Spam, spam, spam


When is enough..?



Spam is a growing problem. Unfortunately the growth is exponential, with no signs of decline. But the spam you receive is much less than the amount being sent, since spammers' lists often contain many invalid addresses. Spamfilters also devour their share. Here are the growing numbers:

1978: E-mail spam sent to 400 addresses.
1994: First large-scale spam sent to 6000 newsgroups, reaching millions of people.
2005: 30.000.000.000 each day (June)
2006: 55.000.000.000 each day (June)
2006: 85.000.000.000 each day (Dec)
2007: Even more... So, when is enough?



How to complain and where to do it


Contact registrar/host
and report abuse



Ever felt frustrated about the endless streams of spam? Do you wish you knew where to complain? Don't despair, here's how: The spammers aren't quite invisible after all, ask WHOIS who is behind. There are many possibilities, but try domaintools.com. Here you can read when a website was created, who did it, if it is blacklisted, and more. You can also read who is the registrar, responsible for registering the site in question. When you know the registrar, complain about the abusive site, and remember to document your complaint. To save you some time I am accumulating here the websites and email addresses you need...



Domain names


There are 3 levels



Global/National Top level.
Personal level.
And subdomains.
Read more...



Known spammers


Who is who and what did they do



Downloadable Software Scam
Canadian Pharmacy Scam
Rise and Fall of Robert Alan Soloway



Unwanted visitors


People I do not know...



Here is a list of people, that I do not know and don't want to know. Neither do they know me. Then why do they mail me again and again and again..? Alas, next time spammers scan the internet to search for new email adresses to abuse, it would only be fair if they harvested their own. And then spammed themselves. Bon appetit...



Abused/Abusive Registrar List


Hall of Shame



Top 50 Registrars with Blacklisted Domains for the last 5 days. See the list...



Stop email harvest


Stop harvesting of email addresses



If spammers had no email addresses to spam, they would be out of business. But what can be done? Several things it seems, and here's a few possibilities that I stumbled upon:

When spammers visit your site, they'll check all pages for email addresses. So, all you have to do is link to this page so when a spammer scans your page, they'll be sucked into this one: www.testmyfirewall.com/antispam.html

Spam is the electronic world's biggest problem. Fool proof methods to filter out spam doesn't yet exist, but we don't have to sit back and take it. Pages like this make spamming less profitable - our way to Fight Spam: www.auditmypc.com/freescan/antispam.html

A little trap for all those spam bots which harvest email and link addresses off the net. These links lead to other similar sites so those 'black widow' web spiders get their fill! www.isoliert.de/spamtrap.htm



Counter Scam


When the game is reversed



Artists Against 419: The Internet is great, isn't it? It's a magical place, where you can buy anything you want, meet new people, find information... and lose all your money to scammers. We've never liked that last part, so we started to fight back. Over time our art has evolved, and we now maintain the largest repository of websites used in 419 and Advance Fee Fraud on the internet.

Nigerian 419 scam baiting involves responding to these e-mails posing as a potential victim of their scam and getting them to trust you to the extent that they waste a lot of their time and hopefully some money trying to bilk you out of your hard-earned cash. With luck, scammers also provide for a few laughs along the way. Dedicated to this little-known but growing internet sport: 419Baiter.com

What is scambaiting? Put simply, you enter into a dialogue with scammers, simply to waste their time and resources. You'll be helping to keep scammers away from real potential victims, screwing around with the minds of deserving thieves: 419Eater.com

Fighting Scammers Worldwide for
Fun and Justice: TheScamBaiter.com



NoScript


Preventing malicious scripts



In my opinion this is probably the best addition to FireFox. If you surf a lot, you'll meet new unknown sites all the time. Should they all be trusted at first sight? Only if you don't care about security. However, asking your browser to disable all scipts permanently is not practical. Then again accepting all scripts simply isn't safe. A differentiated response would be optimal. Here NoScript comes to the rescue: "While its primary aim is preventing malicious JavaScript from running, NoScript can effectively block Java, Silverlight, Flash and other plugins on untrusted sites. Applets, Flash movies/application, Quicktime clips and other content won't be even downloaded from sites where you consider them annoyances, saving your bandwidth and increasing your navigation speed."
www.noscript.net
www.hackademix.net



Complainterator


Automated spam site complaint generator



Complainterator runs under Windows, and will drive your keyboard, mouse and screen as it looks up the spammed site's registrar, and also the registrars for the name servers for the site. It allows you to preview the messages it has prepared, so you can add your own additional evidence, and then you can hit "Send" to release them to the registrars. Complainterator has now accounted for the suspension of thousands of spammed and illegal web sites since its first release. www.complainterator.com



Valid HTML 4.01 Strict

Phishing statistics