This one's a first for me: an eBay phishing email in Spanish, purporting to be from service@escrow-ebay.es, with accompanying fake Spanish website. (For the love of God, if you click on that link, do not attempt to sign in with actual eBay credentials. You probably shouldn't click on it anyway, though it doesn't appear to attempt to do anything evil other than phishing.)
COSIC has quite a few Spaniards; if I run into any of them before I head back to the States next week, I'll run the email by them and see if there are any amusing grammatical mistakes. (I will laugh my ass off if it turns out they're using, say, Mexican Spanish as opposed to Castilian Spanish.)
COSIC has quite a few Spaniards; if I run into any of them before I head back to the States next week, I'll run the email by them and see if there are any amusing grammatical mistakes. (I will laugh my ass off if it turns out they're using, say, Mexican Spanish as opposed to Castilian Spanish.)
- Mood:
amused
There's a post up on BoingBoing today (ok, yesterday for me) about open vs. closed search algorithms, suggesting that the search algorithms used by Google, Yahoo et al are bad because of their lack of transparency. It invokes a comparison to an important concept in computer security: "security through obscurity" is dangerous because an effective encryption scheme should be equally hard to break whether you know the internals of the algorithm that generated the ciphertext or whether you don't.
I think comparing this to search is a bad (or at best misleading) idea, and expounded on this in the comments. But I'm far more entertained by the fact that the two best comments on the post so far come from two sources with whom I am tangentially familiar, albeit from totally different directions:
jrtom and
radtea. Small damn world!
I think comparing this to search is a bad (or at best misleading) idea, and expounded on this in the comments. But I'm far more entertained by the fact that the two best comments on the post so far come from two sources with whom I am tangentially familiar, albeit from totally different directions:
- Mood:
amused
