Archive for the ‘Links’ Category

Link roundup for 5/31/08

Coding Horror: Designing For Evil: Jeff Atwood discusses some of the problems Craigslist has with spammers, some of the automated tools people can buy to spam Craiglist and some of the protections Craiglist has put in place to defended its community from spammers. Many of the problems and solutions apply to other community messaging systems.
Email [...]

Link roundup for 5/28/08

Choosing the right email listserv: David Strom’s Web Informant provides a brief overview of free and inexpensive mailing list management tools suitable for individuals, groups, and small businesses. These services are often great improvements over attempting to manage a list directly from an email client. Strom is using Listserv in the generic sense as he [...]

Privacy, spam, and anti-social networking

New Sites Make It Easier To Spy on Your Friends: The Wall Street Journal has a piece on services and social network tools that can be used and abused to discover and extract information about individuals that would often be difficult to obtain otherwise.
The Dark Side of Social Networking: Questions for Brant Walker: The Voice [...]

Link roundup for 5/6/08

mail-trends: Mihai Parparita’s tool to let you analyze and visualize your own Google-based email collection. The software is still in its early stages and requires a Python installation and a Google Apps or Gmail account. Mail-trends is open source under the BSD license. Hopefully, Mihai will update the package to support other IMAP servers in [...]

Link roundup for 5/4/08

Cory Doctorow: How to stop your inbox exploding: In the Guardian Cory writes covers a set of simple tips for keeping messages to your inbox to a minimum. The five tips are: Sort your inbox by subject, color-code messages from known senders, kill people who make you crazy, half-resign from mailing lists, and keep a [...]

Link roundup for 5/1/08

Struggling to Evade the E-Mail Tsunami: Randall Stross at the New York Times writes a refreshingly entertaining piece on the often overdone topic of email overload. He provides nice comparisons the habits of Thomas Edison and H. L. Mencken for responding to the overload of communication in previous times.
Not Using Tweetscan to Manage Your Brand? [...]

Link Roundup on Identity Management 4/13/08

Understanding CardSpace | : As part of his Perspectives series, Jon Udell interviews Vittorio Bertocci, the author of Understanding Windows CardSpace. The interview is interesting and covers a number of current identity management topics. In addition to the audio of the interview, a full transcript is available. The inline audio player requires a Microsoft Silverlight [...]

Link roundup for 4/5/08

The Conversation Has Left the Blogosphere: ReadWriteWeb has a nice summary of a variety of tools, that aggregate many of the new messaging services such as Twitter along with messaging and updates from social network services such as Facebook and new collaborative new services such as Digg.
Careful What You Text or Tweet: EmailTide covers the [...]

Link roundup for 3/30/08

The theme of today’s link roundup is about obtaining access to data you may have stored on one web-based service from another web-based service or an application. The name “data portability” is becoming a popular label for this type of interoperability. As the data people store in online services with Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, and other [...]

Link roundup for New Types of Spam

419 scams hidden in Google and Yahoo calendar messages: There is a piece on the Commtouch blog about spam arriving in the form of .ics calendar invites. I have received a number of these myself. Users who have their calendar application such as Outlook, Google Calendar, and Yahoo Calendar set to automatically accept calendar invitations [...]