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Entries in Internet (48)

Tuesday
Jul222008

FireFox 3 Bug??

Like most security conscious people I use Firefox (FF) for my everyday browsing on the Internets. So when the Mozilla guys released version 3 I installed it on all my machines (2 Windows and 2 OSX platforms).

It was a bit getting used to. The underlying FF part had been changed. Bookmarks, history etc are all stored in sqlite databases. So no more flatfiles. This took me a couple of hours to figure it out, but finally I got 'there'.

Using FF was business as usual... Apart from one very annoying bug; Opening new windows (not new tabs) results often in an empty bookmarks bar. And this is happening on Windows and OSX versions of FF.
The bookmarks are 'there' but not click-able. Using the right mouse button (on OSX: ctrl-mouse click) on the bookmarks bar and selecting 'Open All in Tabs', FF opens every bookmark in the bar.

The only way of restoring the proper bar is the completely shutdown FF and restart it. After that it works for a certain amount of time.

The problem isn't isolated to my environment. Just google on the issue, and you'll find more people. There's one suggestion I haven't tried yet. Starting with a fresh/clean profile, but I do need my settings/passwords/bookmarks. I'm lost without those :(

UPDATE: I tried a new profile, and this seemed to work. After this I started to repopulate the new profile with the old settings, etc. Everything went fine until the point where I added the extensions. It seems that even old / not active extensions (SwitchProxy in my case) are still able to f*ck things up.

Friday
Jul042008

Massive Blog Spam

I, and probably the rest of the world as well, am being hit with spam in the comments at this moment. Over 100 comments a day are intercepted by Akismet.

It seems that all the spamjerks have found a way of creating userprofiles on public websites/forums/blogs and are referring to those in the spam. Below are some examples URL's which were active at the time of me writing this:

I send an e-mai lto Lonely Planet descibing their problem. Let's hope that they fix it soon.

In the mean time; All hail Akismet!!!!

Thursday
Jun262008

Firefox 3 Bookmarking

Mozilla released Firefox 3 during my holiday. So the first thing I had to do was upgrade v2.x to the latest version. Initially everything seemed fine.... INITIALLY...

The trouble began when I tried to add bookmarks. The new bookmark interface (it's called Library) showed up empty. When I tried to add a bookmark, it was impossible to remove it.

"Why would you want to remove a bookmark??" Well, because every bookmark I added ended up with the URL to some ad. At first I thought I had some weird virus or trojan on my Mac. But it seemed that every Mac had the same problem.

E.g. If I added the SnipURL button to my toolbar (which is basically a javascript) it would work, but when I pressed the button, it would show a Google ad. There was also no way of removing or changing it.

Click to read more ...

Friday
May162008

A Slow Week

Biggest (techno) news in the Netherlands was probably the failure of the Internet. The largest ATM Internet backbone massively failed in the Netherlands. This resulted in thousands of people without any Internet access for 1-3 days.
Currently the problems are temporarily patched, but they are still on high alert.

For the first time I wasn't affected. Normally this only occurs to me.

Purely coincidentally, I found a South Park episode (s12e06/Over Logging) in which the Internet fails. This results in mayhem in South Park (just like it did over here).

Furthermore, I drove 170 kilometer today, and it took me about 5 hours. Traffic jams due to spring rain (????) were to blame (according to the traffic information services). Basically, because people are egoistic when they're driving, and won't anticipate (when they're reading the paper, shaving, and/or applying make-up using the rear view mirror) on their surroundings.

So no Internet (for large parts of the Netherlands), and traffic jams from here to Tokyo. So 'slow' might be an understatement.

Friday
Dec212007

VDSL Roll-out Starts in 2008

W00t... KPN is finally starting to upgrade their network to support VDSL. This COULD mean a major speed upgrade for me. Currently I only have a 4Mbps ADSL2 line (but with a 1Mbps upload, thanks to XS4ALL). This is the maximum throughput for me, since I live too far from the distribution hub. Other interesting news is that KPN won't charge their customers for MOBILE data connections made from the 21st of December till the 30th of December 2007. So, it's all you can download via GPRS, UMTS :-)

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Oct242007

Gmail Goes IMAP

It seems that Gmail is going to enable IMAP support for their free mail service. The gmail application for mobile devices is nice, but it IMAP is nicer to have. It seems that the IMAP option isn't available on my account (yet). Guess I have to wait a little longer.

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Oct132007

ISP's Blocking Childporn on the Internet (part 2)

Oke, it seems that UPC has already implemented the so-called child pornography filter. There's no fancy filtering software. They are using their own DNS servers to re-route traffic. This means that when your using other DNS servers (e.g. openDNS), a modified hosts file, or just browse to the filtered server based on the IP address you'll be just fine. As I've mentioned before; with casual browsing you won't end up on child porn websites. Only if you want to find it you'll probably end up getting it. So a awefully simple DNS protection won't stop the real perverts. It's just another false sense of safety.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Oct102007

ISP's Blocking Childporn on the Internet

UPC, one of the bigger ISP's in the Netherlands, will start will the filtering of child pornography on the Internet. This resulted in a (public) debate about the how and why, etc. First of all, I surf the web (intensively) since the dawn of the Internets :) . And with surfing I don't mean the newspapers, and other general information most people search for and read. No, I mean the dark and far corners of the Internet, where every page you enter might be the last you visit (before you may have to reinstall your PC because of all the faul spyware and virusses you may attract). Searching for the leaked video's of Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee Jones in the late nineties, and searching for warez, cracks, hacks, virus generators, and passwords for XXX-rated websites. During my 'quests' I've seen a lot. A lot more than the normal Internet user may ever see in his whole life. But during those 'quests' for certain content, I have never ever found one piece of child pornography. I did however stumble across a picture on a dutch forum (in the old days). This was the result of a vendetta between a forum user and the forum owners. The particular user started to post those images, which were removed almost immediately, and the user reported to the proper authorities and banned for life. This is something you can't prevent by filtering websites. It just results into Denail of Service attacks. Second. The filtering (at this moment) only concerns webtraffic (http), so the childporn might still be received through MSN, P2P networks (KaZaa, eDonkey, etc.), IRC, Newsservers, e-mail, etc. Third. Who decides what the to-be-filtered list may contain? Is this a private organization? The government, a judge? What are the criteria? A one time posting/sighting? Who decides what websites we can view and which websites we can't? Fourth. There a reasonably good services available (NetNanny, Cybersitter, etc.) who offer their service in filtering Internet content, which goes beyond the normal http filtering. Some of them also filter IRC, MSN etc. The downside is that you need to sign up, and PAY for the service. PAYING for something online is not something we (the Dutch) like to avoid. An alternative is to get an ISP, who offers this as a service (content filtering). There are a couple of those around. Mostly with a religious background. The only thing I see, is that the filter can easily be bypassed with a limited amount of knowledge on how the Internet works (proxies anyone??), and that it only 'protects' a very small piece of the Internet. Namely the WWW (normal webbrowser traffic). This still leaves a gap (with the size of the grand canyon) for the other Internet applications like IRC, MSN, AIM, etc. Which means that YOU (as a parent) still need to supervise/monitor the chatsessions from your kids on the Internet if you want them to be safe. The real perverts still know how to get their hands on it. This doesn't limit them in any way. This doesn't solve the problem, it only hides it from the public eye. The problem of pedophilia still exists. It just creates another way for the government to control what we are allowed to access on the Internet. The parents should take responsibility and teach their children what's good and bad on the Internet (and in real life off course). One shouldn't need a government (or a private organization) to make that decision for you...Got something to do with freedom of choice, freedom of speech, dictatorship, 1984, China, etc.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Oct082007

Google Search Results

By default, the Google search page is displayed in the language from the country you're in. You can change this in the 'preferences' on the Google page. The actual text near the language preference is:

Display Google tips and messages in: [<LANGUAGE>]

According to me that's only interface related and (at most) tips/local event related (like Queen's Day etc.). But it also influences the search results. Just try it by switching to several different languages.

Shouldn't search results be the same?

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Sep202007

Teh Internets Are Gone!!1

OK... Disaster struck... Yesterday morning I had a flashing DSL LED on my DSL modem. Flashing ain't good. A stable green light is good, flashing is bad, very bad. Flashing means it tries to connect to teh Internets, but it can't. Thankfully, I have a nice neighbor with no encryption on his wireless. Downside is that I need to sit in the hallway to use it. Hopefully the problem will be fixed tomorrow. If not you might be reading this somewhere next week (if ever). UPDATE: Well things are improving (a very tiny little bit). Statistics show, that the website is available 15% of the time instead of 2%. An optimist would say; 'an improvement of 750%'. My opinion is not that optimistic I might say...... UPDATE#2: No idea what's wrong with the Internets connection. Last night it downloaded three movies worked without any problems. This morning I had to switch it off and on to get it going again. I must say that the modem itself is running awfully hot. In the mean time I have two different types of modems in spare (510i and a 546i). Strange thing is that the logs show disconnections due to idle time?? Idle? The thing hasn't been idle ever since I installed it. UPDATE#3: Well, the techies suggested a downgrade path to check if it might help. Off course, I'm against this. This means slower lines, slower downloads etc. It's like going back to the digital stone ages. Furthermore, it worked perfectly over the last 7 years.... The performance didn't degrade over time. The performance just said 'poof'. Anyway, in the meantime I'm back to 4Mbps, and things seem to look good, but it also looked good yesterday. So until further notice this website might be online (or not, or whatever).

Click to read more ...