Email archives - Overheard in the tech blogosphere

Overheard in the tech blogosphere:

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Nov 16 2009   8:52PM GMT

Overheard - Vouch by Reference protocol



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Vouch by Reference, Email
URL spoofing substitutes an outlaw Web address for a legitimate one. A simple way to do that is to exploit the state of spelling among English-speaking people. A site like eddiebaur .com might fool the eye of a casual Web surfer looking for outdoor gear from Eddie Bauer.

John P Mello, ICANN move contributing to URL spoofing?

Today’s WhatIs.com Word of the Day is the Vouch by Reference protocol.

Oct 22 2008   7:06PM GMT

Overheard: Using disposable email accounts to see who’s selling your name



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Spam, Email, disposable email accounts
sharon-hurley-hall.jpg One good reason to use disposable email addresses is that it makes it easy to identify who has sold your details to spammers. If you use a unique address for each site you sign up with, then you will know instantly who to point the finger at. You will soon find out who can be trusted with your data - and who can’t.

Sharon Hurley Hall, Disposable Email Addresses


Jul 23 2008   4:06PM GMT

Overheard: Even spammers have to pay taxes



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Spam, Email
soloway.jpg “I built my entire life around a facade. I’m very embarrassed and I’m ashamed.”

Robert Soloway, as quoted in Spammer sentenced to 47 months in prison

The Zombie “Spam King” is going to jail for four years and has to pay over $700,000 in restitution.  It wasn’t the CAN-SPAM act that got him. Like Al Capone before him, Soloway was busted for failing to pay taxes. Soloway, who already had a $7 million judgement against him from Microsoft and a $10 million judgement against him from an ISP in Oklahoma,  pleaded guilty to mail fraud, fraud in electronic mail and failure to file a tax return. 

Ironically, the spam this guy sent out was all about how to send spam. His company’s name? Newport Internet Marketing. For $495, Soloway’s customers could have an ad sent to 20,000,000 e-mail addresses. He also sold $150 software for sending out unsolicited bulk email.


Jun 26 2008   12:29PM GMT

Overheard: PGP is just an envelope



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Security, Encryption, PGP, Privacy, Email
phil_zimmerman.jpg Perhaps you think your E-mail is legitimate enough that encryption is unwarranted. If you really are a law-abiding citizen with nothing to hide, then why don’t you always send your paper mail on postcards?

Phil Zimmerman, Why do you need PGP?

Phil Zimmerman is an interesting guy. You may remember that the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California tried to put him in jail for making his email encryption program, Pretty Good Privacy, public. It was a crazy story.

So what’s he up to now? VoIP security.


Dec 21 2007   2:11AM GMT

Overheard: Let’s all declare email bankruptcy and start over January 1



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Outlook, Email, Technology
anne-zelenka.jpg Did you ever wish you could delete all your email without responding? Maybe you can. It’s called email bankruptcy. You realize you are never going to dig yourself out from under the pile of email in your inbox so you just declare that you won’t. You start afresh.

Anne Zelenka, Before You Declare Email Bankruptcy…

I got another notification this morning that my mailbox is over its limit. Geesh. One of the best Facebook wall posts I read this year was from a developer at Microsoft who said that his mailbox is so out of control that he just periodically wipes everything out and just starts again — and if I wanted directions for how to do that, to email him. :-)