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Why I Myspace

Im a big myspace fan only because of family. Im addicted. I was blocked but I hacked around that. If I dont myspace my family will wonder what im doing on the net and they dont need to be on here. Keep them out of my real blogging life. ya know???

Toms Myspace Message

Latest Update:
Jan 2, 1:00pm PST

Happy New Year!  I've got a little gift for you all, made possible by 300 the movie!  
 
Some of you may have noticed already--the photo count has been increased to 300! You can now upload up to 300 photos. Enjoy! Next week we'll have albums so you can organize your photos. Enjoy and thanks to Warner Bros and 300 for making this possible!

myspace crap

Body: Please repost this message to everyone you know on MySpace... If you consider MySpace an important part of your Internet routine... this information is critical for you and for all your friends... This message has been reposted from another one of my Friends here on MySpace and sent out to all of mine... Repost instructions at the end of this message. Please include those instructions when you repost it to help your friends: This message is a repost: Here are some of the reasons your friends are disappearing from your pages. MySpace trackers - Against MySpace policy and MySpace is deleting accounts that have them. This includes ANY and ALL types of trackers. You people that are advertising free trackers need to stop that. Maybe you don't care about yourself but if a friend of yours signs up for one and has their account deleted who are they going to blame? NEVER give your password to ANYONE for ANY reason. MySpace Trains and Auto Friend Adders. They are all against MySpace Terms of Service. They can get you deleted. Spamming - Hackers are taking over a lot of accounts and using them to spam and hack your friends. MySpace deletes them if the user does not timely change his password and delete the spam bulletins. Spamming includes all those Ringtone, Free Stuff, Gift Card, and TRACKER bulletins. check your codes section often, and making sure our pages are safe for our friends to visit. Also using our common sense, don't open Spam bulletins, those Ringtones, Ipods adds are all Spam, they contain links and if you click on them you get one of those fake log in pages, and if you enter all your info there you get Phished (Phishing is when people hijack your account to send spam) Inappropriate content - MySpace considers links to inappropriate sites as grounds to terminate an account. I didn't realize this one myself until a re-read the "Terms of Service". If any of your comments in your comments section link to inappropriate content on someone else's site... you could and probably will be deleted... Using code to disable your contact box. I just found this one out too. You may not disable the "Block User" feature in your contact box. You cannot put a graphic in front of it so no one can click on it, it HAS to be visible and usable. This violates MySpace policy and may get you deleted. Recording artists who share their MySpace Music Players are violating MySpace policy and being deleted. Age listed. MySpace has become serious about people putting 99, 100 and things like that, especially if you are underage. If you don't want people to see your true age, go to Forums MySpace and ask for the code to hide your personal data. There are many people there that will help. You can be deleted for listing the wrong age. These are just a few of the things I see often in bulletins and on pages. If you have a lot of friends and don't want to lose them and have to start over, read the MySpace Terms of Service and make sure you are not violating any of those terms. The link is at the bottom of every MySpace page "Terms". I am not the MySpace police and do not work for MySpace. I just try to help you out when I can. I won't report you, unless you are a racist or a pedophile, but I will delete a lot of you from my friends list. This message is a repost -------- BULLETIN REPOST INSTRUCTIONS:------- To repost any bulletin.. it's easy... here's how: 1.) Click the "reply to poster" button at the bottom of the bulletin... 2.) Near the top of the new window, find the LAST instance of the line "----------------- BEGIN REPOST OF BULLETIN -----------------" and copy everything below it. 3.) Then, open up a new bulletin window and paste the text you just copied into that new bulletin window. 4.) Add the title 5.) Post your new bulletin -------- END OF BULLETIN REPOST INSTRUCTIONS --------

myspace spyware

Myspace Does have spyware called Zango. A security researcher on Friday blasted adware maker Zango for targeting popular social networking site MySpace as a distribution channel, a charge the company had previously denied. Chris Boyd, the director of malware research for security vendor FaceTime, provided TechWeb with a copy of an e-mail sent by a Zango representative to a potential affiliate of the Bellevue, Wash. firm. The e-mail outlined how to get MySpace users to download Zango's adware. "Zango is fairly new with myspace sites and it took me some time to see what works and what doesn't," the e-mail read. "I think I figured it out now by looking at small sites who are making incredible money with Zango right now." The e-mail was dated June 8, over a month after Zango spokesmen told TechWeb that the company -- formerly known as 180solutions -- was not deliberately using MySpace. "Are we targeting MySpace?" said Zango spokesman Steve Stratz earlier this month. "No." At that time, Stratz claimed that Zango adware found on MySpace was there by mistake, placed on the site by an overzealous company developer. "This is the smoking gun," said Boyd Friday. "It conclusively proves that they were indeed targeting MySpace." The e-mail TechWeb reviewed was sent to someone who had signed up with the company's ZangoCash program, but who had never set up a site to distribute the adware. In the message, the representative -- identified as "Josh" -- offered advice on how to push Zango adware on MySpace. "MOVING GIFS. This really gets people's attention and vistors [sic] love this sh**," one tip reads. Another: "Highlight the html code and embed one of the videos. This will make it automatically pop when the visitor reaches that page. This will lead to a lot more thinking to themselves: 'hmm, this looks like a cool video. I'll watch this. CLICK.'" Before users can view Zango-provided video, they must install Zango's adware software. The representative also recommended paying kickbacks to friends with popular MySpace profiles. "More profitably, go to a bunch of your friends who have popular profiles and pay them (it's up to you so much. One of my partners said 5$...maybe offer to split the money with them?) to put a zango video into their profile through your site. This will give you hundreds of extra installs a day," the e-mail reads. "This probably works even better than having them on your actual site." MySpace bans advertising on members' profiles and prohibits "accepting payment or anything of value from a third person in exchange for your performing any commercial activity on or through MySpace." "This e-mail highlights the inconsistencies and contradictions of various Zango representatives," said Boyd. "They can't be surprised then when they're dragged out and beaten up on complaints about how they distribute their adware."

My ID theft!

ID theft growing concern for MySpace users..... MySpace devotee Kary Rogers was expecting to see a gut-busting video when a friend from the popular online hangout messaged him a link. First, though, he was directed to a page where he was supposed to re-enter his password. Rogers realized that someone was trying to steal his information, and he didn't take the bait. At best, he would be spammed with junk e-mails; worse, the Web thief might steal his real-life identity. MySpace bills itself as a "place for friends." Increasingly, it is also a place for unfriendly attacks from digital miscreants on the prowl, luring users to sexually explicit Web sites, clogging mailboxes with spam messages and playing on the trust users have when speaking to "friends" to obtain passwords that could lead to identity theft. Managing the risks that come with rapid growth is an enormous challenge for MySpace, now part of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. media conglomerate. The site can't afford to drive away users, who might defect to one of a growing number of alternative sites, or advertisers, who pay top dollar to reach the growing MySpace audience. Last month, MySpace inched past Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) in U.S. page views, recording 38.7 billion, according to comScore Media Metrix. A key reason behind the popularity is its ease. Simply by adding a few lines of computer code, users can create elaborate profiles and personalize them with photos, music and video. A host of communication tools makes it easy to send messages to one person or a whole list of friends, who number into the thousands for some of the more popular MySpace users. Those same tools can be used by vandals to make it look like an innocent user has sent spam to the same long list of "friends." Programmers are writing scripts that take advantage of specific features on MySpace, including "friend request," where one user asks to be added to another user's list of buddies. One recent scam works this way: A spammer posts a number of phony profiles featuring pictures of cute women, often promising nude photos. A "friend request" with the woman's photo is sent to hundreds of users. Once the fake profile loads, a blue screen descends, saying the profile is protected by the "MySpace Adult Content Viewer." Unsuspecting users who try to download the viewer instead get a worm that installs adware on their computers. Social-networking sites make good targets because of the implicit level of trust users have when they're interacting with "friends." "The ongoing interaction lowers your reservations and security barriers," said Marc Gaffan, an expert in online fraud and security at RSA, the security division of EMC Corp. MySpace, which News Corp. bought last year for some $580 million, has recognized the threat and is stepping up security efforts, said Hemanshu Nigam, its chief security officer. The company is rapidly expanding its team of software engineers, lawyers and other experts who look for suspicious activity, educate users on how to prevent attacks and go after the worst offenders. Under Nigam's direction, the company recently formed a Content Assurance Team. Employees post fake profiles on the site, pretending to be vulnerable teens or clueless adults. The profiles are designed to keep tabs on everything from sexual predators to spammers. MySpace also is preparing to launch a more aggressive education campaign, urging users to take care and use tools that restrict the viewing of their profiles to only trusted sources. When all else fails, the company is also files civil suits and is increasing cooperation with law enforcement officials. "We're trying to take away the 'cool' factor of trying to attack us," Nigam said. Nigam came to MySpace after stints as a federal prosecutor specializing in child pornography and computer crime cases. He also led security efforts at Microsoft Corp. and the Motion Picture Association of America. MySpace hired him in May to strengthen security and safety efforts at the site and other Internet properties owned by Fox Interactive media. "Security is a top priority because it's critical for our community of users and for our business partners," Nigam said. "If advertisers feel uncomfortable being on a site that is seen as not as secure, not as safe, then we lose revenue." So far, no major damage has been done on the site, although some users, increasingly annoyed by the fake friends and messages, are seeking other social networking alternatives. "I don't have this problem on Facebook," Rogers said, referring to another popular site. The Internet has weathered several threats over the years, but as users move on, so do the attackers. Writers of malicious software used to count primarily on e-mail recipients to click on attachments to spread their wares. As e-mail recipients got more savvy, the writers looked to automate the process by exploiting vulnerabilities in e-mail programs, browsers and the Windows operating system from Microsoft Corp. As those security holes get closed, virus writers are looking elsewhere, including social-networking sites, attractive in part because of their size. "It's where the activity is and the attackers play the percentages," said David Cole, director of security response at Symantec Corp. "They go after the largest market share where there is the most activity."
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