nice
The phishers made news at slashdot!"
[ drivel spewing forth from a computer nerd ]
Recently, a group of researchers at IU did a phishing experiment to see how many people would fall victim to a clever FaceBook scheme.
Apparently gmail helps prevent phishing attacks by putting an obnoxious notification on suspect emails ... and also removing clickable hyperlinks! This is cool, I must find more info about this, though their tactics are probably secret on purpose.
For the last few days, once a day, some "unknown caller" has tried to reach me on my cell phone. I answered it tonight, and was asked if I wanted to take a survey. I said I would if they told me how they got the number... "Discover Card provided us with a list." I asked if they were aware it was a cell phone and they were spending my money as we spoke, and the guy on the other end kindly told me he'd remove me from their list ... and then hung up.
I gave a lecture at the University of Minnesota on the 15th, and it was loads of fun. I was relatively surprised, though, that none of the faculty showed up for the talk -- if not only to heckle me. I talked about visualizing secure protocols... including a private polling method known as Randomized Response Technique (for the mathy people). This is kind of cool, being invited and all, I feel important.
I opened up a Reese's Peanut Butter Cup today (mmm) and it was triple-cupped. That is, it had three of those paper things holding the yummy chocolate and peanut phlegm together. Do I win a trip to the factory?
Browsing the web tonight I found a couple of things from my past:
Today I stumbled across a couple of quotes from a talk I saw on March 10. Simson Garfinkel provided some insight to usable security.
Wow. "New dual-core Pentium thrashes through speed tests." Is this good? This headline makes all the OS nerds out there cringe -- thrashing is a BAD thing, not a good thing. Anyway, do this: put a mental image into your head of an intel exec thrashing.