botnets

There’s a lengthy but interesting article at the Washington Post about botnets. Brian Krebs interviews a guy who makes quite a lot of money running such botnets and infecting people’s computers. He gets paid by spyware companies as he installs spyware on the computers of his unknowing victims.

The article is good, but has one gross omission. There is not a single mention of the fact that this problem ONLY affects windows users. Shame on you, Brian Krebs. You’re a reporter, you should not live with your head in the sand. Windows is not the only option!

If you are a Windows user, read the article. If you also use Internet Explorer and/or Outlook, read it twice, and then see if you still dare to use IE or Outlook. Then go and download some safe software – the Firefox web browser and Thunderbird e-mail client are a good start. And don’t forget to check out Ubuntu, too – they will even ship you an installation cd for free.

If you’re not a Windows user, go read the article anyway to see what you don’t have to worry about as much, because your operating system is designed properly.

And to fend off the ‘but Windows has such a bad security record because it is deployed much more widely than other operating systems, and hence is a much bigger target’ people: if you would manage to infect a GNU/Linux, Unix or Mac machine – which is much harder than infecting a windows box – you’re not going to get further than a user account. It’s much harder to get root (i.e. superuser access). Unlike Windows, which is basically a free-for-all, once you infect the box.

Posted in Free Software/Open Source | Leave a comment

vitals

If you’ve ever read Greg Bear‘s Vitals, you might find this article about mind control parasites more than a little disconcerting…

Posted in Books | Leave a comment

wasteful

Our tea kettle broke. It’s an electric model. I took it apart, and sure enough, the heating element inside that was supposed to have a 10 Ohm resistance now has an infinite resistance.

So I thought I’d get a replacement part, and I’d be all set. Google’s my friend, right? Forget it. I couldn’t find spare parts for any tea kettles – let alone ones made by the obscure Chinese manufacturer that produced ours. So what happens? It breaks, you throw it away and buy a new one. Our society is ridiculously wasteful.

Posted in Everything else | Leave a comment

German

OK, today I learned a most impressive German word from a Spanish friend. In German, when you want to say ‘receding hairline’, you say Geheimratsecken. It sounds mysterious, doesn’t it? Litterally, it means ‘the corners of the secret council’. How cool is that!

Posted in Everything else, Personal | Leave a comment

network neutrality

The Google blog has a short entry today about Vint Cerf’s excellent testimony [PDF] before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. He was speaking in defense of the crucial network neutrality principle. Go Vint!

In other news, the Post reports on how the greedy management at Verizon thinks that they are entitled to get paid twice for the use of their network. The people pay them for broadband access, but they think that content providers should pay too, or risk having their traffic treated as second-rank data flowing across the Verizon network. The more I hear from Verizon and SBC these days, the more they sound like the arrogant evil empire that AT&T was before the breakup. I really, really hope that Congress understands the importance of network neutrality, and acts accordingly. If not the innovative, open standards based internet as we know it is doomed.

Update 2006-02-12: Larry Lessig’s testimony [PDF] before the same committee is now also online, and an equally good read.

Update 2006-02-13: The BBC’s Bill Thompson weighs in as well, with a more European perspective on the issue.

Posted in Open Standards, Politics | Leave a comment

Doc Searls on the Producer Electronics Revolution

The first in a series of reports titled “The Producer Electronics Revolution, Part I” by Doc Searls is an excellent read, and it touches on a lot of the pressure we’ve been seeing to close and lock down our open world – be it on the level of content, network infrastructure, or software. Doc says we are going to win – I really hope so, or this world will become a very boring place. I think we are winning when it comes to software – Free Software is clearly on a roll. We’ve been making some inroads on the content level with things like Creative Commons, but open content is still pretty much a fringe phenomenon. Lots of work to do there. The network infrastructure has traditionally been open, but some greedy telecom companies (AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, etc) are lobbying hard to reduce the internet to some sort of shopping highway under their control. They want to kill network neutrality, which would be a very, very bad thing. This is a major threat, which is clearly outlined in this excellent The Nation article.

Posted in Free Software/Open Source, Open Standards | Leave a comment

IE Chauvinism

Paul Murphy asks what the costs of IE/Windows chauvinism are. For me, that’s quite simple – any organisation that is so braindead that it only supports IE and/or Windows clients loses my business. Can’t buy airline tickets on your site with Firefox on GNU/Linux? I’ll go elsewhere.

Fortunately, things have improved quite a bit lately. It’s now pretty rare to come across a site that does not work (well) with Firefox. But they exist. Interestingly enough I find them more often where the organisation at fault is in a (more or less) monopoly position. The LSAC site is an example – they require a Windows-based browser (Firefox does work, actually) to fill out the law school application forms on their site. Ridiculous.

I even tend to go further. If I have the choice between two online retailers, and one of them is an obvious 100% Microsoft shop, I’ll buy from the other one.

Posted in Free Software/Open Source, Open Standards | Leave a comment

Challenger

I remember this day, 20 years ago. Rest in peace, astronauts.

Posted in Everything else | Leave a comment

record label against RIAA lawsuits

An important Canadian record label, Nettwerk Music Group, has decided to join a RIAA lawsuit against a 15 year old Texan – on the side of the defendant.

Quote from Michael Geist’s excellent blog:

Nettwerk CEO Terry McBride says:

“Suing music fans is not the solution, it’s the problem. Litigation is not ‘artist development.’ Litigation is a deterrent to creativity and passion and it is hurting the business I love. The current actions of the RIAA are not in my artists’ best interests.”

Fascinating. Here’s a record label that is worthy of support! It’s about time, too, that someone stands up to those RIAA clowns – it’s their actions that are hurting artists, not filesharing.

Posted in Copyright, patents, and trademarks | Leave a comment

silly mailing lists

I really wonder what list I’ve ended up on. I’ve been getting ‘business subscription’ offers for the Wall Street Journal in the mail. And for Men’s Health. Yes, I believe it was a business subscription offer to Men’s Health.
But the weirdest one came today, via e-mail. The subject of the message was

Early Bird Discount Finishes on Friday

So, a conference registration offer. For which conference? The Bird Flu Summit. No kidding.

I really wonder what these people are thinking. Making cheesy puns about their conference doesn’t exactly inspire much confidence. But sending me an invitation seems, well, rather stupid. I would be about as useful at such a conference as a bicycle would be to a fish. Come on, I’m a computer guy, not a biologist!

Posted in Everything else | Leave a comment