Nov 24

I really hate AT&T sometimes. Not having the iPhone do MMS messages is about the dumbest thing they could have done. Not that MMS messages are something I do everyday, but on occasion it happens. AT&T has this stupid website that you have to go to retrieve your MMS messages called www.viewmymessage.com/1. Then you have to type in some random username and password all to get some picture you probably didn’t want in the first place. Not to mention you can’t copy and paste crap either, way to go Apple. Copy and Paste, who does that? Now I realize that this is old news to everyone, I just needed to vent for a second. I thought I would share an error that I got when trying to receive a picture from the wonderful www.viewmymessage.com.

The url location is:

http://www.viewmymessage.com/en/webnonsubscriber/viewmessage.do

The content of the page displays:

Invalid path /1en/en1/en/1en/en/1en/en/1/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1n/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/1en/en/2en/en/2en/en/webnonsubscriber/actualviewmessage was requested

Nice directory structure, is that some attempt at obfuscation? This site sucks so bad, who knows what the intent of having a structure like this is. This is the first error I have seen from this page. I have had it just not work, but never give back any errors. I know other people have had errors on this site, so I am adding to the stack. For people who may stumble across this post, it isn’t an Apple issue, well maybe indirectly due to the fact the iPhone doesn’t support MMS. This is an AT&T site, so the error belongs to them. Anyway, just wanted to share something stupid for the day.

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Nov 05

Business social network LinkedIn announced their LinkedIn Applications today. The applications directory can be viewed here There are only several applications to chose from at the moment. I am sure that number will grow soon. LinkedIn uses Google’s OpenSocial just like other social networks such as MySpace, Orkut, hi5, etc. I only spent like 5 minutes looking at a couple of things. So, the following are only my quick thoughts and impressions.

The applications are delivered though the domain lmodules.com. This makes them easy to identify and block if that’s what you would like to do.

At first glance it appears that the vetting process for LinkedIn is higher than some of the other social networks. They appear to only want known businesses to create applications for their network at this time. This would help root out some possible malicious users. A vetting process is a good first step in thwarting that type of malicious behavior. I didn’t look at the difficulty in attaining a developer account, but I am assuming it is much more difficult than other social networks like MySpace, Facebok, etc. Now, whether this vetting process will stay this stringent will remain to be seen. These procedures may be relaxed in the future due to demand.

Just because the name has changed doesn’t mean the threats have changed. As a matter of fact there may actually be more on the table. Business networks such as LinkedIn are more likely to contain real information about people vs other non-professional social networks. Not that people don’t share enough about their real self on other social networks. This means the same threats exist for the capture of information as on other social networks.

There are still technical threats from social network applications on LinkedIn as well. These are the very same issues as other social networks that we have discussed in the past and demonstrated. Malware distribution, social engineering, attacking clients, information harvesting, click fraud are just some of these threats from social network applications. Moral of the story is be careful. Don’t install apps you don’t need, even though you may do so on your iPhone ;)

So all in all the threats are the same with LinkedIn as any other social networks that employ applications. However, with a more stringent vetting process this should reduce the possibilities for malicious by making accounts harder to get.

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Nov 03

For those of you that care, there is a caricature of me on the cover of the November issue of CPU Magazine. In the back of the magazine there is some Q&A with me mostly about social networks. It’s probably stuff you have heard Shawn and I say before, but cool nonetheless. So if you are in your favorite book store check out the magazine and see what you think.

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