A little humor – the lures of the phisherperson

A warning appeared in my mail box this morning. Writing a scam must be kind of an art – you obviously cannot offer that much information and yet you must convince the recipient you are attempting to address a very specific problem. I am tempted to write back and ask which of my accounts has generated this concern, but it is probably better to just ignore the request.

From emailaccount@antivirus.com

Important notice, harmful virus was detected in your account which can be harmful to our subscriber unit, you are to enter your password here{_______}to set in an anti virus in your user account to clear up this virus so we do need your co-operation in this, because providing us with this personal information we enable us insert in your account information into our anti virus machine for clean up. We are sorry for the inconveniences this might have cost you.

After 48 hours of providing this information you are advise to change up your password.

Failure to do this, we are sorry to let you know that, your account will be deleted immediately to prevent it from arming our subscriber unit.

Fellow fish and “subscriber units”, beware the lures of the phisherperson.

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Will the free ride on the cloud end soon?

Here is a comment on the present down turn in the economy and the web 2.0 resources we have been promoting for education.

Today, I read comments from several venture capitalists (e.g., Ron Conway) as they offered advise to those they support. The comments expressed concern that while the present financial situation did not originate with online apps and services (like the Internet bubble of a few years ago) tight money would eventually impact tech companies hoping to make their mark with Internet services. The advice was to economize.

Of course, those companies that can find a way to make it through the lean times will likely find they have less competition on the other side. It reminds me of the rise of the Bubba Gump shrimp company – this likely makes no sense unless you are fans of Forest Gump.

My concern is that I invest too much time and perhaps resources I have created in an online (probably free) service that has no way to generate funds. The idea that good services will be bought up by Google, Microsoft, etc. or catch the eye of those with venture capital may not hold in the short term. For example, Yahoo, owner of Flickr, fell below $14 today. Time to back up just in case.

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