Tag - Blocking



Some things we've missed: July catchup
Posted by absorbation on Mon 14 Jul 2008 (20:26 GMT)
New is slow, but it has been happening, while all this time I have been busy. So I think it's time for a catch-up post!

i'm Initiative concerns:
mess.be have discovered Microsoft have raised $1.5 million on the i'm Initiative campaign since its launch sixteen months ago. However, in ads on just one new campaign, the Talkathon Microsoft have spent $5 million! One could argue Microsoft aren't really raising money for charity, but are attempting to portray themselves in a favourable light to users, which in my book is a big no no.

TinyURL blocked:
The 3rd party company in charge of stopping viruses spreading though Messenger have come under fire again, when they blocked TinyURL links within messages. The system has been controversial since it blocked websites containing .info domains, or entire websites such as YouTube and eBuddy. The system is also ineffective as there are workarounds virus creators can implement and the poor coding means it slows down Messenger. This is probably not the last we will hear of the crazy blocking system either.

MessengerDiscovery Live update:
Version 1.5 brings webcam recordings, encrypted messages, pinable contacts and skinable alerts. Download the update from the official website. As always MessengerDiscovery is feature rich, containing many new and wonderful ideas. It is just a shame they are coded sloppy and this update continues that trend.

MSN Messenger UK stats: - Source

MSN Messenger has topped a group of 10 websites and applications which account for 30 per cent of the UK internet use.

Web users spend 2.6billion minutes a month on MSN, almost eight per cent of the UK's total of 33billion minutes.

EBay, Facebook, Google and iTunes are among the other "500 club" - sites who see users log at least 500million minutes online.


So there we are, a nice little wrap up of the news over the past week or so, but don't worry there is still more to come, some of which is more interesting than this dribble. But being honest, with no development updates, news has been and will remain slow until when Windows Live Messenger 9 is near ready.
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Microsoft release a statement about .info blocking
Posted by absorbation on Wed 15 Aug 2007 (12:20 GMT)
After the disaster of blocking .info domains a couple of weeks ago and the attention it got, Microsoft have released a statement justifying their reasons behind the controversial security method:

In order to prevent the spread of a malicious advertising effort that included Windows Live Messenger accounts as targets, Microsoft took steps to block instant messages that include the words '.info' and a few additional key words to protect our customers. The targeted accounts were sent either info or another URL, which led to a website asking them to provide their Windows Live user id and password. If the customer provided that information, the user's complete contact list also received a message with the domain site link. This was not a Microsoft sponsored effort, and in order to prevent the spread of it through our service, instant messages that include the words '.info' and a few additional key words have been blocked. This action may block some safe, reputable sites and we apologize for any inconvenience this may cause our customers, however, given the circumstances this action was necessary. In an effort to remedy this moving forward, Microsoft continues to investigate other ways to protect our consumers from this threat.

Microsoft recommends that Windows Live Messenger users do not provide their account information to third-party sites. To learn more about how to recognize a social engineering threat, more information is available at http://www.microsoft.com/athome/security/email/socialengineering.mspx. In addition, Microsoft continues to encourage people to follow the 'Protect Your Computer' guidance of enabling a firewall, applying all software updates and installing anti-virus and anti-spyware software. Additional information can be found at www.microsoft.com/protect.

Personally, despite the reasons behind the block still not valid in my opinion, the sloppiness of the feature has been changed so not every message with '.info' within it is blocked. Now '.info' is only blocked in things that Messenger recognises as URLs and turns into clickable, blue links. The user will also be notified that their message never went through, but they will not receive an explanation why.

Any virus creator can just encode the URL or use services such as TinyURL to work around this. The people losing out are me and you, who need to send non-dangerous messages to our friends and work colleagues every day.

I still believe things should be blocked on a case by case basis (if not blocked at all). The feature is still poorly implemented, but after the attention of the past week hopefully something will be done soon.

For me it wasn't that much of an annoyance, I've been receiving a swarm on hits since all this was revealed, maybe I should stop complaining?

>> Source: mess.be

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