Memoirs of a Developer

A developer’s thoughts shared with the world

-->

Archive for May, 2006

Voip - Skype or Voip Buster?

Posted by Steven on 4th May 2006

With the advent of broadband, internet speeds now enable high quality voice and video streaming. Voip is a technology that was developed over the internet to enable people to communicate as easily as using a phone without incurring the costs a fixed land line would usually incur.

Over the last couple of months i have had a number of occasions where Voip proved to be very useful. Calling abroad from here (Malta) is expensive to say the least. Voip on the other hand is a standard rate for the entire world, provided that your internet connection is stable enough to support it.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Voip | Comments Off

Firefox 1.5.0.3 Update Released

Posted by Steven on 3rd May 2006

Yesterday the Firefox team released a securty update which should patch a DoS vulnerability (Denial of Service). This patch should be installed automatically for who ever has Firefox 1.5.0.2. Those who are running older versions should consider upgrading to this one.

Links:

Posted in Web Browsers | Comments Off

Spam Part 2 - When is Spam not Spam?

Posted by Steven on 1st May 2006

In this follow up I will be looking into the concept of bulk mailing and how users are lured into signing up for them. There is a tendency on the internet that most users like to sign up for online services or forums and end up receiving more than they bargained for.

Signups are the easiest means of filling your mailbox with unwanted mails. More often than not when downloading free applications like Adobe Reader or Quicktime Media player the user is asked for his or her details, including their e-mail address.  A tick box is usually made available to select if you want to receive news from this website (more often than not ticked for you by default). A common mistake that most users are sucked into is the fact that in their rush to download the desired application, they leave any tick boxes with their default settings which would entitle them to receive the much dreaded “community updates” (a very polite way of referring to spam i.e. unless the user actually did want to sign up for it).

Forum signups are more often than not yet another source of unwanted mail. Forums are spaces where people share and discuss their ideas in an open environment. Modern forums also support the facility (optional in certain cases … restricted in others) to have replies to conversations that the users sent posts to, sent to them by mail. This might be acceptable if the users receive maybe one post a day, but there are cases where if each user partakes in more than one conversation and all of these are forwarded to their respective mailboxes, it might be the case that the user might be receiving an unacceptable number of mails per day.

When signing up for services it is imperative that the user informs himself properly about what the sign up entails because you can never be too cautious when divulging private information such as an e-mail address.

Posted in Web Browsers, Spyware & Spamware | Comments Off