Hey, I just noticed that the earliest post still available here was posted two years ago today, so happy birthday to me! (There were a couple of earlier ones, but I had a spot of backup trouble with those…)
Monthly Archives: November 2004
Comments back on
I’ve seen a drastic drop in referrer-spam and I’ve made a few minor changes to my writebacks plugins to close comments after 14 days, so I’m going to enable the plugin again and see what happens. I think I’ll make a couple more improvements yet and I want to see if it all works as I think it should, so I’m going to hold off making my adjustments public just yet. When I’m happy that it’s all working I’ll post the code in case it’s of use to anyone else.
Appropriate Google ads
Alongside Nick Barlow’s musings on missionaries, mindsets and morons Mormons (among other things), I was amused to notice google ads for “Bookbinding for Witnesses” and “Jehovah’s Witness Singles”.As you may know, these ads are targeted based on site content, as Google put it themselves in the adsense FAQ: “Based on a sophisticated algorithm [...] we know what a page is about, and can precisely match Google ads to each page.” You might be inclined to take issue with the “precisely” in that statement, but it’s not a bad guess. Still, although content-matching makes this sort of thing that much more likely, I thought this matching so perfect I had to mention it.
Shoulder surfing trojan
This looks nasty: Banker-AJ, a trojan which shoulder-surfs as you browse your online banking account logging keystrokes and taking screenshots before sending the information to its distributors, potentially enabling someone to access your account and empty it. Keep those anti-virus definitions up-to-date! (Via the Register.)
Website access frustration
I’ve just spent an intensely annoying half hour or so trying to get car insurance quotes online. I finally managed to coax a quote out of one of the four sites I tried. What follows is a boring rant on the subject.
The problems mainly stemmed from poor site design and rather badly implemented user-agent sniffing. (This is when a website tries to assess what browser you are using and tailors content based on their guess.) Something in the javascript on the Direct Line site breaks when entering additional driver details, and it becomes impossible to get any further. Both esure.com and Tesco (the car insurance bit of the site, anyway) refuse to let me in based on my user-agent, helpfully suggesting that I “update” by browser to version 4 or above of either Internet Explorer or Netscape(!). When I’m using the brand-spanking-new Mozilla Firefox released in the last week and, it’s probably fair to say, at the cutting edge of browser development, this is rather idiotic. I did manage to get a quote from Churchill, so well done them. Funnily enough, they seemed to use an almost identical system to Direct Line, so I’m not sure where the difference was that broke one site but not the other.
Still, I suppose that Firefox has only just come out of beta testing, so perhaps it’s a bit premature to expect across the board support just yet. I decided to send off a quick note to the offending sites pointing out their lack of support for Firefox, just to let them know potential customers do use browsers other than IE. At the end of the day, they’ll want to know this if they care about their customers. Or at least you’d think so, wouldn’t you?
Attempting to do this results in yet more hurdles. Tesco seem quite reluctant to give out email contact details, but they do provide a form you can fill in to request technical support. Although aimed primarily at their online banking customers, I thought that I’d give this a try. No luck – you have to specify your browser and operating system from a menu with very limited choice and no “other” category. Pretty much all Windows versions and the last three Mac OS releases were your OS choices. The browser list was longer, but only contained versions of three different products – Netscape, IE and AOL. So, no Tesco customers use Linux, Opera or Mozilla, then. Or maybe they just don’t give a shit.
This indicates to me more than just a delay in catering for a comparatively new product – more of a complete mindset. The designers of the Tesco website must have been aware of the existence of other tools and platforms, but have chosen not to cater for them to the extent of not even providing an “other” category on their technical support form. Is this the sort of company you want to use for important financial matters? I think not. The details matter, and Tesco has skipped on those in my view.
BOFRA: email link virus
The BBC covered this today. Here’s a Clue: don’t use HTML for email. Look at any links you are sent in emails very carefully before loading them in a browser – not at the text used to display the link, but at the actual address targeted. Disabling the display of HTML in your email client should reveal this information to you. You should already be doing this anyway if you’ve been paying attention to the recent phuss about phishing.
Indymedia server seizures: it still stinks
Just a quick follow up on this post: the Register reports on the legal process in the US to find out who actually seized the servers and why. Some fairly complicated legalese essentially boils down to this:
In the specific circumstances of Indymedia, a process that was started in Texas resulted in the removal of servers in London, knocking out numerous Indymedia web sites. According to the US, Inydmedia has no standing to complain about this or to seek redress, or to find out what it was supposed to have been doing, or who said it was doing it. The UK Government insists the whole matter is nothing to do with it, while the US Government says the matter is closed, flashing the T-word to be on the safe side.
Pretty sick.
However, legal wrangles in the US and their hideous implications aside, what really gets to me is the fact that the equipment was seized in the UK by a foreign power on dubious legal grounds and our government doesn’t seem to want to know. It seems that the rest of the world can’t even voice their views over the US election without being told to shut up and mind their own business, but if the FBI wants to waltz over here and help itself to anything it likes they’re welcome and there’s nothing anyone can do or say about it.
Banksoniain 4
Issue 4 of this new(ish) Iain (M.) Banks fanzine is available for download (PDF, 218kb). (Thanks for the heads-up, Dave.) Older issues are available from the homepage. Lots and lots of Banksie trivia, plus discussion of Consider Phlebas, notes on the publicity tour for The Algebraist (which I missed out on due to a conspicuous lack of dates in the south-west), and news of the DVD release of The Crow Road which I’d like to see.
(Posting this, I look through my sf posts and realise I don’t write enough on this topic. My degree thesis centred on SF, so I must be able to come up with something interesting to say on the subject. BTW, I’m not going to publish the dissertation here. The word “postmodernism” is used far too often for comfort.)
Keeping out the idiots
Still got the comments disabled at the mo. I haven’t had the time to make the necessary changes to the code, but it’s pretty high on my list.
Grepping through the referrer logs shows that there’re still a lot of unwelcome visitors. I suppose that we should take some slight satisfaction in noting that the spambots aren’t at Turing level just yet, and have to reply on brute force. Wankers.
I have made a bit of a start by introducing some filters into my .htaccess file. I’ll post these in due course if they seem to do any good, but when both the IPs the spammers use and the site addresses they promote change so fast it’s a bit of a losing battle. Still, there are definite patterns to the domains so that gives us somewhere to start.
Anyone surfing past this post with any helpful suggestions or comments is especially encouraged to mail me. Cheers.
A suggestion for Al
Al’s a friend of mine who works in the music biz. He tells me to make alternative suggestions when I imply that the mainstream music industry have a pretty screwed idea of how to market their product in the age of the internet. Fair enough. A guy called Mark Cuban has an articulate set of suggestions I might just send him a pointer to.
Can the music industry cry wolf any longer?
This is the only industry in the world that can see thousands of its retailers close, reduce the number of products it sells via cutbacks in artist rosters and albums released, cut back marketing and promotional dollars and then blame a reduction in sales on someone or something other than themselves.
That big bad boogieman of piracy is blowing down everyone’s house. The poor music industry. Except of course that there is nothing more than anecdotal proof that Peer to Peer networks hurt music sales, and to counter those, there are studies and anecdotal evidence that the sampling opportunity that P2P networks create actually help sales.
(Via Scripting News)