Apr
12
2009
Miracle Jones writes “Amazon has instituted an overnight policy that removes books that may be deemed offensive from their search system, despite the sales rank of the book and also irrespective of any complaints. Bloggers such as Ed Champion are calling for a ‘link and book boycott,’ asking people to remove links to Amazon from their web pages and stop buying books from them until the policy is reversed. Will this be bad business for Amazon, or will there new policies keep them out of trouble as they continue to grow and replace bookstores?”

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Comments Off on Amazon Culls "Offensive" Books From Search System | tags: amazon, google, web | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Music lovers often are sensitive to design. This probably explains why so many music websites are so wonderfully designed and inspiring. In this article, you’ll be able to discover 30 beautiful music websites that stand out from the crowd.
Comments Off on 30 Beautiful Music Websites for Design Inspiration | tags: web | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Mikeyy Mooney, the 17-year-old creator of StalkDaily.com, has admitted responsibility for a worm that rapidly spread through Twitter. Twitter users were infected by simply visiting an infected users Twitter page. Following being infected, users began tweeting about stalkdaily.com. “I usually like to find vulnerabilities within websites…”
Comments Off on 17-Year-Old Behind Massive XSS Attack On Twitter | tags: twitter, web | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Simmons writes with news of research that demonstrated vulnerabilities in Skype and Google Voice that would have allowed attackers to eavesdrop on calls or place unauthorized calls of their own. “The attacks on Google Voice and Skype use different techniques, but essentially they both work because neither service requires a password to access its voicemail system. For the Skype attack to work, the victim would have to be tricked into visiting a malicious Web site within 30 minutes of being logged into Skype. In the Google Voice attack (PDF), the hacker would first need to know the victim’s phone number, but Secure Science has devised a way to figure this out using Google Voice’s Short Message Service (SMS). Google patched the bugs that enabled Secure Science’s attack last week and has now added a password requirement to its voicemail system, the company said in a statement. … The Skype flaws have not yet been patched, according to James.” Reader EricTheGreen contributes related news that eBay may sell Skype back to its original founders.

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Comments Off on Eavesdropping On Google Voice and Skype | tags: email, google, news, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
CurtMonash writes “Twitter was hit Saturday by a worm that caused victims’ accounts to tweet favorably about the StalkDaily website. Infection occurred when one went to the profile page of a compromised account, and was largely spread by the kind of follower spam more commonly used by multi-level marketers. Apparently the worm was an XSS attack, exploiting a vulnerability created in a recent Twitter update that introduced support for OAuth, and it was created by the 17-year-old owner of the StalkDaily website. More information can be found in the comment thread to a Network World post I put up detailing the attack, or in the post itself. By evening, Twitter claimed to have closed the security hole.”

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Comments Off on Twitter Gets Slammed By the StalkDaily XSS Worm | tags: google, network, news, security, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
In this showcase, you’ll see some of the best web designs that involve the use of paper elements and textures – for your inspiration.
Comments Off on 30 Creative Examples of Using Paper in Web Designs | tags: web | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
The Narrative Fallacy sends along a piece from the Telegraph on efforts by Goldman Sachs to silence a blogger who is posting commentary critical of the bank. “Goldman Sachs has instructed Wall Street law firm Chadbourne & Parke to pursue blogger Mike Morgan, warning him in a recent cease-and-desist letter that he may face legal action if he does not close down his website goldmansachs666.com. According to the C&D letter, dated April 8, the bank is rattled because the site ‘violates several of Goldman Sachs’ intellectual property rights’ and also ‘implies a relationship’ with the bank itself. Morgan claims he has followed all legal requirements to own and operate the website and that the header of the site clearly states that the content has not been approved by the bank. In a post entitled Goldman Sachs vs Mike Morgan, the blogger predicts that the fight will probably end up in court. He went through a similar battle with US home builder Lennar a few years ago after he set up a website to collect information on what he alleged was shoddy workmanship in its homes. ‘Since I went through this with Lennar, I’ve had advice from some of the best intellectual property lawyers, and I know exactly what I can and can’t do. We’re not going to back down from this.'”

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Comments Off on Goldman Sachs Tries To Shut Down Dissident Blogger | tags: google, Intel, web | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
An anonymous reader alerts us that an outfit called Magpie is paying Twitter users to tout advertisers’ products. Marshall Kirkpatrick of ReadWriteWeb has identified a number of household-name companies — among them Apple, Skype, Kodak, Cisco, Adobe, Roxio, PC Tools, and Box.net — whose products are hyped by identically worded, paid Magpie tweets. But comments to Kirkpatrick’s post, including one from a Box.net spokesman, make it sound likely that these shills were paid for not by the companies themselves, but by affiliate marketers. That may not matter. In the same way that Belkin recently got burned paying consumers to write complimentary online reviews about the company’s products, the makers of products and services touted through Magpie may find themselves tainted in the backlash from this new form of astroturfing. Kirkpatrick concludes his post: “So there’s the Twitter-sphere for you! Bring on ‘real time search,’ bring on a globally connected community, bring on vapid, vile, stupid shilling. It all seems pretty sad to me.”

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Comments Off on Paid Shilling Comes to Twitter | tags: Apple, consumers, google, news, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
The countdown has begun. Apple posted a Web page on Friday counting down (or actually counting up) to the one billion app downloaded milestone on the App Store.
Comments Off on Apple Begins Countdown to 1 Billion IPhone Apps Downloaded | tags: Apple, iphone, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
blackbearnh writes “Jeff Holden spent a decade at Amazon, where he was involved as Senior Vice President of Consumer Websites with the recommendation engine, Amazon Prime, and the product review system. He’s left now, and has started Pelago, a company that wants to help mobile users turn their lives into stories they can share on the web. Among the interesting effects he discusses in this interview for O’Reilly Radar is that users of their product, Whrrl, have talked about changing their lives to make more interesting stories. Holden also talks about some of the work he did at Amazon, privacy issues that arise when social networking starts to become ubiquitous, and why he thinks the Apple App Store review system is seriously broken. ‘One of the things that happens with an iPhone is when you uninstall an app, it asks you to rate it. And it defaults to one-star. … The problem is … there’s no kind of qualification. Anybody just downloads it and checks it out or doesn’t check it out, right? And I think a number of people run it and they see that you have to sign in and they just delete it. And you get a one-star rating out of those experiences.'”

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Comments Off on Sharing Lives As Stories On the Web | tags: amazon, Apple, google, iphone, mobile, network, networking, Phone, privacy, web | posted in technical news