Archive for the 'social networking' Category
…but it doesn't necessarily want you to be free.
Since Cameron Camp and I have written here and here about the implications of the UK government's meditations on curbing civil unrest by curbing social media services, it's interesting to see that the estimable Kim Davis, who previously categorized UK Prime Minister David Cameron's pronouncements as bluster, has also expanded … Read More…
You may be aware that Cameron Camp and I regularly write articles for SC Magazine's Cybercrime Corner: here here's a catch-up list of the most recent, in the hope that you might find them of use and interest. At any rate, it'll give some idea of the range of content covered.
Ten years later, still the same malware?
Cameron … Read More…
Introduction
Facebook and Skype announced the launch of Video Chat on Facebook using the Skype platform. Users must download the newest version 5.3 (although 5.5 beta is also acceptable). If a person takes the plunge and installs the new version, logs in and grants Skype permission to one’s profile on Facebook then pay attention please. The … Read More…
Facebook recently launched a facial recognition feature that allows you and others to “tag” photos with your name. As has been the norm for Facebook, this “feature” is turned on by default and users must take their own initiative to limit, or turn it off. The implications are wide-ranging, so if you or anyone in … Read More…
Survey Reveals Chasm between Users’ Concerns and Behavior
A recent Survey commissioned by ESET and conducted online by Harris Interactive from May 31-June 2, 2011 among 2,027 U.S. adults 18+ found a startling disconnect between user concerns about privacy and security and their actions on social networking sites.
To start, the study found that 69% of online … Read More…
Introduction
As the sun is setting and I breathe some of the night time air I am inspired to write about Facebook. Yes, *the* Facebook, the third largest country if it were a physical place with boundaries under a common rule of law and government. When many people use a service such as this, it bears … Read More…
The death of Osama bin Laden has gone viral, with blogs, social media and search engines pumping terabytes of rumor, innuendo and conspiracy theories at the speed of light, along with the occasional kilobyte of truth. As the number of people searching for pictures and videos of bin Laden’s execution has skyrocketed, the criminal syndicates … Read More…
[NOTE: As we were publishing this articl, our Latin American office discovered another Black Hat SEO campaign incorporating promises of Osama bin Laden videos on Facebook. Click here to view their article in Spanish. We will follow up on this shortly. AG]
The malware phenomenon started by the announcement of Osama Bin Laden’s death continues unabated, … Read More…
Not using Twitter or Facebook is, in these times, akin to not owning or using a mobile ‘phone. Last night’s events – the reported death of Osama Bin Laden – proved that we are well and truly in the Twitter era (Twitter reported that over 4000 tweets per second were made immediately preceding the President’s … Read More…
Many Facebook users are annoyed to discover that their names and faces can be used in sponsored FB ads. Indeed, according to Dan Tynan in IT World, the next phase will to allow 3rd-party advertisers to do the same thing inside Facebook apps.
I'm not a great fan of the FB principle of all your datum … Read More…
- David Harley (741)
- Randy Abrams (431)
- Cameron Camp (111)
- Stephen Cobb (62)
- ESET Research (56)
- Pierre-Marc Bureau (51)
- Aryeh Goretsky (31)
- Andrew Lee (15)
- Robert Lipovsky (12)
- Jeff Debrosse (12)
- Paul Laudanski (11)
- Sebastian Bortnik (8)
- Dan Clark (6)
- Righard Zwienenberg (6)
- Sébastien Duquette (5)
- Alexis Dorais-Joncas (3)
- Tasneem Patanwala (3)
- Aleksandr Matrosov (2)
- Peter Stancik (2)





