Archive for the ‘viruses, spyware and hackers, oh my!’Category

Past Podcast February 09

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Rick Castellini has these podcasts posted over at HelpMeRick.com, but I thought I would post them here as well. If you have never tuned in live, you can do so on the third Wednesday of each month on KAFMradio.org or 88.1Fm in Grand Junction, CO from Noon-1pm.

We used to have a three hour nationally syndicated show that was much more rich in content, but we gave it up because we only made about $125 in the seven years we did the show together.

You won’t find these podcasts on iTunes yet but you can add them to your iTunes library by downloading them and putting them in your music folder.

New Twitter spam tactics

 

 

We are sure that someone has written about this new approach spammers are using on Twitter, but we haven’t seen anything about it.

Twitter spam needs a name so we are going to call it spatter (get it spam+Twitter – not that clever, but at least it’s something).

Twitter filters out spammers by measuring blocked users and also users who post a lot but have few followers. To get around this, spammers are setting up new accounts and posting content that is not spam.

The first hundred or so messages are about food, movies, humorous comments, etc. We assume that they are using content from other Twitterers to create these posts.

Once they have a few posts established, they start following people. Especially those who automatically follow back. Many users do a quick check to see if the user is posting real content or just spatter. Typically users don’t read many of the posts, they check to make sure that all of the posts aren’t made up of sales pitches.

Once the spammer has build up enough of a following, then they unleash their spatter. Typically stuff about how to work from home, porn, or other typical spam material.

To some, a follower is a follower, but eventually this could cause a problem for Twitter as bad guys setup automated systems to let spatter loose throughout the network. This could be one reason that Twitter objects so much to programs that automatically return follows. The more followers a spammer has, the more difficult it will be to distinguish them from legitimate Twitter users.

Top 10 things that make being a roving computer guy strange and wonderful

Being a roving computer guy is like no other profession. This week I have decided to list the top 10 things that make my job strange and wonderful.

10. Everyone wants to be your friend. Sometimes you are even treated like a celebrity and people are afraid to come up to you and ask you a question.

9. You get to hear dozens of apologies each week for cluttered offices. No one believes you when you tell them that clutter is the norm.

8. You meet dozens of dogs and a few cats each week. Dogs love computer guys. Many people have told me, “My dog never is this friendly with anyone!”

7. You are  asked by wives to help monitor husband’s and kids Internet activity and you are asked by husbands how to delete history and cookies.

6. You get to setup brand new computers each week and inhale that new computer smell.

5. You get to explain how problems happened with phrases like, “I told you last time that Norton Antivirus slows down your computer” or “Shady problems come from shady websites.”

4. After working on a computer problem for an hour and using every tool in your software bag to get rid of it, not to mention tweaking dozens of settings, you have to answer the question, “What did you do to fix it?”

3. You get to hear the phrase, “I am a computer illiterate,” “I know nothing about computers,” “I only know enough about computers to get into trouble,” “You know those Computers for Dummies books – those were written for me.” dozens of times each week.

2. You get to see how other people live their digital lives. No two computers or offices are the same and I get many ideas from those that I work for.

1. Job security. I try to never leave a problem partially fixed. I aim to meet every need of every client because I know that I will always be back eventually. Every computer has problems. Every computer user  needs help eventually. I spend my day helping people by fixing their computers. I am a doctor, a mechanic, a librarian and a teacher all crammed into one geek package.