Online Networks

The Elottery System Assures a Lotto Prize to Every Last Player in the Elgordo

When you first come across the Elgordo Loteria, part of the Euromillions Euro lottery, you definitely need to find out more. With payouts that can be as high as 2.6 billion Euros, the El Gordo Lottery offers one of the world’s richest jackpots. However that’s not where it ends. There’s quite a lot more you will want to know . The El Gordo Lottery puts more than 13,000 prizes up for grabs, making for a one in six chance to win a prize. Pretty good by the standards of the prizes offered by other major lotteries.

To enter the draw, your first choice is a full ticket, called a “serie”. Also available for purchase is a “d©cimo”, worth one tenth of a full ticket. This is the cheaper option. These options have an equal chance of winning, but of course their share of the payout is proportional to how much you spent to begin with. That’s why many people playing the Elgordo lottery instead use the e-lottery system.

Once a month the Euromillions Euro lotto holds its draw. Three months each year see special drawings promising way more substantive prizes. To be perfectly precise: January’s “El Nio”, Summer’s “San Ildefonso”, and the Xmas “Elgordo” i.e. “the Fat Cat”, with the Christmas draw being the grandest of the twelve.

Unlike typical lottery systems, the El Gordo Lottery employs balls with five digits printed on each one ranging from 00,000 to 84,999. During the draw a ball is selected from a bowl to identify the winning number while a second is drawn from the second bowl to decide the prize value.

This system promises a prize to every participant. Just buy into the Euromillions Euro Lottery syndicate and they’ll sort you into teams. Each team is assigned a number from 1-9, the last digit of the winning number in the draw being used to identify the team that will receive the payoff. The prize is then divided among the members. In anticipation of next month’s draw, the syndicate once again takes subscriptions and the e-lottery continues.

E-Lottery And The Elgordo Lotto — The Secret Sauce

We strongly suggest you surf to our marvelous site for - e-lottery syndicate system - infos…

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Taking Part in the Spanish Lottery with Virtual-world-direct You Can Rest Assured You Will Always Have the Best Chance of Winning the Lotto

When playing the Spanish Lottery with Vwd you can rest assured that you will be in very capable hands. My guess is Virtual-world-direct are amongst biggest customers of Camelot, if not the largest Spanish lotto ticket buyer.

They have over two hundred thousand paying customers playing the Spanish lottery, Euro lottery and the UK lottery of which the Spanish lotto is probably going to be the largest lotto syndicate. Established in 2002 and a long standing member of the lottery council virtual world direct (vwd) have all the credibly that is required, also a superb track record.

To play in a lottery syndicate you must pay £5.00 weekly for the Uk Lottery and the Euro lottery with the Spanish Superdraw costing £20 per 4 week cycle (Only monthly subscriptions). Being part of a lotto syndicate obviously reduces your particular share but then it does increase your prospects of winning and because of the unique way the numbers are formulated the possibility of winning is increased still further!

The business opportunity is another produced Virtual-world-direct provides and now they have dropped the signing up fee plus the annual subscriptions so that anybody interest in making an extra income can capitalize. The way it works is if an affiliate introduces a lottery player to any of Euromillions, UK Lottery or the Spanish syndicates, virtual-world-direct will give that affiliate 20% of that participants subscription, also, if that lotto player decides to become an affiliate, the affiliate that introduced them will gather 5 per cent of that player/affiliates earning, down to level seven. World-wide global revenue is another inducement that pays affiliates that get to a minimum level within elottery with a portion of the companys international profits.

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Discover How to Pick up the Right Broad Band for one’s Household

Essentially the up most all important choice with internet packages is that you pick up the top of the market one for you. What is great about Compare Broadband UK is that they primarily give unprejudiced home broadband & mobile broadband advice. Contrasting with other websites the corporation give out self sustained advice on a bunch of varied broadband providers, they assist you to discover the greatest offer for the client so the client can spend essentially the smallest proportion of cash attainable and nonetheless take on a great deal from across your broadband provider.

Mobile Broadband is the term applied to clarify many brands of gadgets, including the wireless dongle USB from Three Broadband, which provide you with wireless high speed broadband access without the wires and without a fixed line connection. Mobile broadband gives one the convenience to work on one’s laptop when ever and where ever you find yourself located. All one have to do is plug in your USB modem and off you go, simple wireless broadband where ever you are to be found. There are also lots of vaired offers to go for and abounding different packages to go for with many different internet providers. The broadband companies are O2, TalkTalk, T-Mobile and 3 These providers have all taken essentially the lead initiative on bringing in wire less web access. None the less all of these cell phone networks have initially concentrated in marketing the service to laptop, Wireless Broadband has become truly popular and near to 3 million UK broadband consumers presently connect wirelessly to the net at home, this is a statistic that is continuously shooting up as loads of individuals get in the know to all the hundreds of benefits of wire less net access. Wireless broadband is perfect for a property which comes with various people all keen to have access to the net, it means that even more than one person will be connected at the same period. And the great benefit is that you should not have a wire anymore. So no additional telephone tangled cables and phone extensions coming from the wall and being connected to your home computer, marvellous don’t you think. Get some help with finding Mobile Broadband deals with Compare Broadband UK.

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Identity Theft: Let Me Count The Ways

I received an e-mail message from “Paypal” not to long ago. The e-mail stated that PayPal needed me to update and verify my security information for their database. I didn’t. One of the sentences in the e-mail read:

“Complete the necessary verification tasks within 5 days, or
your account might get temporarily suspended.”

That didn’t sound like the PayPal I’ve been doing business
with for several years. The grammar of “your account might
get temporarily suspended” raised an alarm bell. Also the
logo while quite professional looked odd.

But the obvious giveaway was knowing Paypal would never contact me at an e-mail address I never gave them. I could have become a victim of a technique called phishing. Just another form of Identity theft.

The effort criminals put into stealing your identity
staggers the imagination.

With Phishing also called brand spoofing, criminals set up phony but legitimate looking websites then spam you with e-mails like the one described above in the hopes of catching a percentage of internet users. 2003 saw identity thieves target Ebay account holders, this year it’s Paypal’s turn but any company with a database of information remains a target.

Choicepoint a veritable clearinghouse for the insurance
industry finds themselves trying to explain how identity
thieves tapped into their system to defraud 145,000
customers across the U.S. Investigators in California place
that number closer to a half a million.

The hackers apparantly used previously stolen identites to apply for and receive business licenses then bought information from ChoicePoint whose database totals 19 billion public records.

The FTC estimates that this year alone identity
theft will cost the business community 4.2 billion dollars
and 8 billon by the end of 2006.

Easy access to computers provide more chances for identity
theft but the majority of cases according to the Better
Business Bureau happen offline. Telephone scams that target
the elderly, mail fraud, or public spying known as “shoulder
surfing” contribute greatly to this epidemic.

Many banks changed their ATM’s due to criminals rigging the machines. A person uses the ATM but after putting in the pin# the machine keeps the card. Usually when the person goes to report it, the thief strikes, taking card, pin # and most
importantly the victim’s identity.

The methods of madness can include something simple like
going thru your trash (dumpster diving) or an elaborate hoax similar to the one reported by the Associated Press.

A family in the Pacific Northwest posed as tax preparers and used stolen identities to go on buying sprees across several states that included millon dollar homes and luxury vehicles. According to authorities, since the thieves stole the social security # of children as well as adults, the damage won’t be fully known until these young people start applying for credit
later on.

Law Enforcement officials believe the next step with this criminal outfit involved applying for health care positions.
Hospitals and doctor offices provide a wealth of personal
information. Perfect for Identity thieves

These methods along with old fashioned robbery show why identity theft according to the Department of Justice
maintains it’s ranking as the number one and fastest growing crime in the U.S for 5 consecutive years. Unfortunately it will probably maintain that ranking for the forseeable future.

Daryl Campbell, President of Campbell Marketing, L.L.C. is a historian, screenplay and technical writer. He loves movies, music, his wife Kay, and internet marketing. His website http://www.winthemarket.com is a guide to everything needed to grow and protect a business on-line.

What are you doing to protect yourself? Get more free information at http://digbig.com/4cmcg

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Google’s New Found Fascination With RSS

Google, a company which revolutionalised the Internet search has
finally started to use RSS in a big way. It was more than an
obvious move for Google to start looking into this ever-growing
market. As the other web giants Yahoo! and MSN keep on enhancing
the different uses of RSS, in this article we analyze how Google
is contributing to “operation syndication”.

Google News Feeds

Previously, the term “feeds” was synonymous to Google News,
another big service provided by Google. Since Google didn’t give
any support to RSS or Atom feeds, programmers started to scrap
headlines off Google News. And these headlines were then
displayed on another Web site.

However, now you see Google supports both RSS and Atom feeds.
Reportedly Google News team had been receiving a lot of feature
requests for RSS feed support. And that’s why the company
decided to give a dose of news through both the syndication
flavors, Atom and RSS. This shows that even Google couldn’t
ignore the growing popularity of RSS.

It still took Google a long time before they actually started on
with the Google News feeds. But even now Google’s support has
only been added to Google News content and has not been extended
to it’s standard web search. Even though Yahoo! has started to
provide News feeds just for that one specific keyword. For
example, if you would like to follow news that mentions “George
Bush”, you can do that perfectly. This hasn’t been implemented
by Google as of yet, but might be soon.

Re-use of Google RSS feed content is officially limited to
non-commercial uses and requires complete credentials of all the
individual sources included, Google itself and the publication
of the search terms and criteria used to create the feed. Will
these restrictions really help Google to harness the true power
of RSS? Well, now that’s another question!

Google’s RSS Ad Patent

“Google Files for RSS Ad Patent” - That seems to be the hottest
topic been going around the Internet for some time now. Another
classic example of the web getting “Googlized”, as the world’s
biggest search engine revs up to dominate the RSS ad market.

If you still didn’t get what exactly I’m talking about here,
Google has filed for a patent with the US Patent and Trade
Office (USPTO) for embedding advertisements into syndicated RSS
and Atom feeds.

According to the abstract, the patent is all about a method for
“incorporating targeted ads into information in a syndicated
presentation format in an automated manner.” This goes beyond
RSS or Atom feeds, as it pertains to syndicated formats on the
whole.

However, Google wasn’t the first to jump in the RSS ad
bandwagon. Companies like Pheedo and Kanoodle had already
started trying their hand at it long back. If we see the
positive side of this, Google taking it’s own protection
measures in the RSS ad bracket, is itself a big proof about the
potential of this growing technology. The filing is not
astonishing though, for a firm of it’s size can delve much
deeper.

Quoting from Pheedo’s official blog “Google is not going to own
RSS advertising. At best, Google may gain some protection for
its specific techniques and methods of inserting and tracking
ads in syndicated content.” All I can say is, Google is surely
making huge strides in the RSS sector but everything does have a
limit.

Google RSS Reader

After heavily betting upon RSS by filing a patent for the ads,
Google wasn’t surely gonna stay behind when it came to RSS
readers. It was very predictable for the company to launch it’s
own aggregator, another step towards bettering the syndication
lifestyle.

What’s common between Google’s reader and its other services is
the simplicity of use. The way Google designs it’s services,
(doesn’t matter if it’s Gmail or Adsense) is what wins over
everything else. That’s exactly what one gets to see in Google’s
reader. The ease of use and how simple it is.

The web-based reader, which is in its beta stage, requires a
login similar to Gmail. Once logged in, feeds can be added and
organized very effortlessly. The feeds can be organized by
various names or the user can also import subscriptions from
other RSS aggregators or online services and easily subscribe to
feeds just by entering the RSS feed’s URL. They have also
started to distribute the trendy “Add to Google” button, an
addition to a collection of many others provided by different
readers.

Google’s entry into the RSS reader market will definitely shake
well-established companies like Newsgator and Pluck. Since
Google has complete power over the sponsor ad listings in the
search results, advertising this new service wouldn’t be a big
deal. Just type in “RSS Reader” in Google and you’ll know for
yourself.

On a last note, Google is surely taking in on RSS and is trying
to take the technology to new level. This clearly shows that RSS
is here to stay. Something for all of us to sit up and take
notice!

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Understanding RSS - Part Five - How the RSS Feed Works & Some Programming Constructs

This is a continuation from my articles on RSS

  • Part One - “RSS Mania Addiction - An Introduction to RSS and the Terminology”
  • Part Two - Outline of How to Create an RSS Feed”
  • Part Three - The Template File”
  • Part Four - The Basic Elements of the Channel Element”

In my last article on the major aspects of the “Channel” element, I promised to continue with the sub-elements of the Channel. This I will do in the next article. The time has come to explain how an RSS feed works, as it is critical to understand just what some of the RSS template commands want from us as well as our readers (in their options command.) No doubt towards the end of the series I will return to this information, however before getting into some possibilities in the template file, it is important to understand just what is going on “behind the scenes.”

Years ago before the Internet, Windows and all HTML hit our PC universe, most of us were plugging and possibly blogging away with our computers if we were programmers. I certainly was one of those nutty programmers trying to decipher the innards of Dbase II. At that time instead of the Unicode sets and the various language sets, you were basically limited to the 256 code table of “ASCII”. So what that meant was if you had special characters they sat in the Ascii table above the 128 margin (as below was reserved for English and special characters). That was great for those who wanted to see only English. But in languages such as Hebrew, not only did you have a right to left orientation, but there came to be known, for years, the infamous ALT-141 character problem. Alt-141 was assigned to a Hebrew character “mem-sofit”. The problem was it was also assigned to a “back space”. So instead of users getting a “mem-sofit” when they hit the character they would invariably erase the letter before! So if you were programming a database for instance, and you wanted the user to input information, you literally had to write an entire key-map utility to trap keys and to re-map them while the user was typing in order to display the correct character. It was a royal pain in the butt.

Why do I suddenly go into nostalgia of ASCII and pre-windows? You think we have come a long way? Think again!

One of the most annoying, impossible, crazy conventions is what HTML does with four specific characters. (Indeed to format this document correctly for an article I must go through a great deal more typing.) These are:

  1. < (less than sign) which is created by typing "&"+"lt;" (A plus was added as otherwise the system will interpert it as a < less than sign and reproduce it. You ignore the quotation marks and the plus but don't forget the semi-colon ; at the end!.)
  2. > (greater than sign) which is created by typing “&”+”gt;” (A plus was added as otherwise the system will interpert it as a > greater than sign and reproduce it. You ignore the quotation marks and the plus but don’t forget the semi-colon ; at the end!..)
  3. & (The ampersand sign itself) which is created by typing “&”+”amp;” (A plus was added as otherwise the system will interpert it as an & and reproduce it. You ignore the quotation marks and the plus but don’t forget the semi-colon ; at the end!..)
  4. ” (quote character) which is created by typing “&”+”quot;” (A plus was added as otherwise the system will interpert it as a ” quote and reproduce it. You ignore the quotation marks and the plus but don’t forget the semi-colon ; at the end!..)

The normal “Ampersand” which we use often “&” is not beloved by HTML and certainly RSS. Indeed try putting the innocent & into your RSS file “text” without normal conventions and the feed wont validate. You will “grrrrr” and curse up a storm, if you are like me and use the & every other word. HTML and all programmers are familiar with this “little annoyance”. Most are not. After all we do see the & all over the web.

So an IMPORTANT RULE FOR NON-PROGRAMMERS. Do not incorporate a plain “&” into the “TEXT” areas of your document, or the right and left “<>” signs (which are often used in programming).

The Cache
Okay NEXT piece of information which you really should understand about RSS and the RSS feeds.
You come across one of those beautiful little orange buttons and say “Oh Boy! GREAT! Here goes another feed into my Parser!” Or you are even more tricky and smart, and incorporate one of those feeds into your web pages (we will discuss how to do this in a later article!) Before you just go on your happy way, there is one term you should understand and know - CACHE.

You see every time you happily tell your parser to re-read the RSS file, it says to itself, “Okay. This owner of ours is a real nuisance. Once again we have to go travel on the Net, find the file at the web site, make a connection and download the information.” And of course having no ability to tell you to have patience, it goes on its happy way. So it shakes hands with the file on the web and downloads that information. HOWEVER, a few thousand other people are also shaking hands with that same file. And every time it shakes hands it adds to bandwidth usage. Now the creator of the file knows this. What the creator also expects is that your RSS reader sets its cache to something normal like only “reloading” its memory once every 60 minutes or 120 minutes or even only once a day. That is the reason, by the way, that Parsers have a cache command, and RSS templates have Date commands, and even as you will learn a “TTL” - “time to live” command.

And if you are one of those who puts the RSS feed up on your web page, and set the cache to “0″ then every single time someone hits that web page, the page has to go out to find the feed and update the contents. Thus you are adding to bandwidth usage and some RSS farms request that you are careful how and when you set your cache.

Now maybe this fifth piece should have waited. But in our next piece on sub-elements, and then following that on the “items” the nature of the text and understanding how RSS works is critical.
I hope this helps.

Copyright © 2005 Ted W. Gross. All rights reserved. (You may publish this article in its entirety with the following author’s information with live links only.)

Ted Gross - EzineArticles Expert Author

Ted W. Gross owns Virgin Earth, a real estate brokerage firm in Jerusalem, Israel. Virgin Earth represents residential and commercial real estate all over Israel. The web site for Virgin Earth is: http://www.virginisrael.com Virgin Earth also maintains an RSS Feed on its current properties which can be found on most pages in the web site of Virgin Earth. Virgin Earth also operates an Israel Tourism Portal. Virgin Earth - Israel Tourism & Information Portal on the same site. Ted Gross can be reached at: virginearth@gmail.com

Ted Gross is also a published author and maintains a web site for his works. This can be found at: http://www.virginisrael.com/twg/iw.html

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Lockspam Free 3.0 Released!

6 August, 2004: Polesoft Inc., home of Professional anti spam software, announced today that Lockspam Free 3.0 (see also Lockspam Pro 3.0 in the end) is now available.

Some features of Lockspam Free 3.0 antispam software:

1. Function with Most POP3 Mail Clients
Lockspam Free 3.0 can work with mail clients like Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Eudora, Incredimail, Mozilla, Pegasus Mail, The Bat!, Foxmail, i.Scribe and many other mail clients.

2. Support Multi-User Mode
Lockspam also support multi-user OS, like Windows XP, install once, works for all.

3. Apply Advanced Filtering Rules
Lockspam Free 3.0 has a 6-step filtering process for probable spam messages.
Allowed List > Allowed Keywords > Blocked List > Blocked Keywords > Polesoft Security Pack > heuristic Polesoft Anti-spam Engine.

a) User definable Allowed/Blocked Keywords
In addition to the sophisticated lists contained in Lockspam Free 3.0 and updated daily.

b) Polesoft Security Pack
More and more emails contain viruses. To combat this growing problem Polesoft have made available the Security Pack.
The Security Pack contains pattern files of recent virus attachments and those scanned by Anti-Virus products. If any attachment matches the pattern files the message is regarded as spam and sent to the Polesoft Antispam folder.

c) Polesoft Antispam Engine
Polesoft Antispam Engine is based on Bayesian filtering and heuristically learns users’ preferences and follows their logic in differentiating spam and normal mails.

Polesoft Behavior Pattern Recognition* and Polesoft Beneficiary Black List (BBL)* are core technologies that can be applied and updated only wth registered copy of Lockspam Pro.

4. Automatically Scan Incoming Mails
Lockspam Free 3.0 starts to work and deals with incoming mails automatically.

5. Automatically Import Contact Lists
Right after installation, Lockspam Import Wizard will fetch all your contact lists from Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Express.

6. Automatically Check for Updates
Lockspam will check for updates automatically, thus ensuring your mail box is equipped against the latest spam.

7. Free and Frequent Updates
For Free users, updates for these services are available:

a) Polesoft Security Pack, which can easily spot and quarantine virus spam.

b) Polesoft heuristic Anti-spam Engine.

For Lockspam Pro users, there are two more available:

a) Daily updated Beneficiary Black List (BBL).

b) New Add-in Installation Packages for Outlook and Outlook Express

8. Weed Out Spam in East Asian Languages
Polesoft Anti-spam Engine can easily analyse the content of emails in East Asian languages, as well as English.

9. Training Lockspam Is Easy
Lockspam is easy to teach. By Blocking spam and Unblocking innocent mails, Lockspam will learn your preferences and judge mails in line with your logic.

10. Looking for Probable Spam Is Easy

a) Emails identified as spam are stored in the delete folder.

b) Emails identified as probable spam are stored in the Polesoft Antispam folder with [Polesoft Antispam] added to the subject line.

Lockspam Free 3.0 is available in a full featured 14 day evaluation version from the Polesoft site. To learn more about the differences between Lockspam Free version and Lockspam Pro version, please visit Lockspam Version Comparisons http://www.polesoft.com/product_lockspam37.html .

To summarize, Lockspam Free Version 3.0 answers the urgent need for safe anti spam software on the desktop. Lockspam Free 3.0 can update to Lockspam Pro 3.0 ($29.95) and will continue to receive free updates for the lifetime of the product ensuring that your mailbox is always safe from spam.

The CEO of Polesoft, Lytton Liou said, “We hope our patent-pending technology will help to bring back the ease freedom of communicating through the internet without the irritation and timewasting caused by the spammers”.

Safety should be the key ingredient regarding spam issue. Polesoft, your safe antispam way.

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

RSS Round-Up: What’s Happening with Simple Syndication?

Have you been following the explosion of RSS — Really Simple Syndication — activity online? Seems this new method of “getting the word out” is picking up steam. Why? Partly because of the Davids, and partly because of the Goliaths. The “Davids” — the little guys — are able to deploy the technology since it is easy to use and usually is a feature of Blogging software (Blogging is another emerging trend — for more articles on Blogging, visit WebFadds.com). You just click the option and send your RSS feed (broadcast your articles) out to subscribing sites. And the “Goliaths”, the likes of Yahoo, Google, MSN and others, are all catering to it in various ways. Let’s look at some of the latest ways this is playing out…

Microsoft joins the battle with an RSS Service

Information week reported in March 2005, that Microsoft is now testing an RSS technology that will allow users to choose the RSS feeds they want to see. They are doing this to keep up with (Microsoft always seems reactive, rather than proactive as a company) Google, Yahoo, and Ask Jeeves who already offer similar services.

You can review the test site at the super secret test site — www.start.com/1/ (well… it was published in the Information Week article).

So, Microsoft Enters the Game? Ho hum for Microsoft, as they lag once again, in leading the wave. But, this is an indication of how seriously this Goliath is taking RSS, and you know where that leads… direct into the next release of Windows software.

Poddcasting, RSS, & Attachments… Oh My

Now here’s a high octane way of using a combination of syndication feeds, and “Podcasting” (think of Broadcasting, but doing it from your computer to other devices like Apple’s iPod) to get your message out. Maybe that’s why one entrepreneur using this method, Steve Wirrick, calls his stock insights, sent via an audio attachment to an RSS feed, “High Octane Trading.” You can read more about it (and get the feed) at Mr. Wirricks site (www.stevewirrick.com), where he describes it as, “a dynamic audio learning tool that takes advantage of a grassroots media revolution called, podcasting.”

How to listen: To listen to a Podcast (and there are others — check out iPodder.org), you need a free program called “iPodder — Cross Platform podcast receiver”… get it at http://ipodder.sourceforge.net/index.php.

RSS meets PodCasting: Power to the people! Most people are just waking up to RSS syndication as a means to distribute the written word. They forgot about attachments. Watch this technology… with a free method of creation, and distribution, Radio could be set to learn from PodCasters what Print & TV journalists already understood from Bloggers — the power is shifting. What are you going to Podcast?

BEEP… your RSS Feed is Calling…

RSS feeds on your cell phone — who’d have thunk it? Now there’s a service called “Feed Beep” which allows you to sign up and receive your crucial feeds, from employment information to medical, to Auctions. Looks like a start-up, and it appears to be free (for now) — see www.feedbeep.com/.

Can You Hear your RSS Feed Now?: Great. Now that noisy guy at the theater can also get calls about his eBay auctions. What next? The service also sends feeds to your Pager. Hmmmm. What could be so important? I’m not sure, but it looks like we’re destined to find out. But wait a minute… what about PodCasting RSS feeds to phones — your phone becomes a Radio receiver. Hmmmm.

Let the Whole World Know your Schedule…

There’s a Beta site (”Beta” simply means they’re still testing it, and it’s not quite ready for us Alpha people) up now where you can create an RSS Calendar. You set up your event calendar, create an RSS channel, then family and friends can view your calendar. Take it for a spin at RSSCalendar — www.rsscalendar.com… it’s free.

Calendar to the World: The site states you can share your Calendar with unlimited users. Hmmm. How is this different from calendars you can set up on Yahoo, MSN, etc.? Now, those who are too lazy to check a link you give them at those sites, can be force fed your calendar in their RSS Reader. OOPS… those same lazy people, will also have to go get and install an RSS reader (just do a Google search to find free RSS readers you can use). Fat chance if they are too lazy to simply link to a static calendar you might already have set up. But… if Microsoft builds this technology in… then… well! And, that takes us full circle on this edition of the RSS Round-up.

Scott Frangos is a writer, designer, and eCommerce marketer with over 20 years experience in Advertising. He has taught eCommerce, HTML, and Business courses at the college level in Portland, Oregon, and currently is Managing Partner of WebFadds.com. He also enjoys canoeing in the Pacific Northwest, with his wife and partner, Pepper. You can subscribe to the WebFadds.com RSS feed at: http://feeds.feedburner.com/Webfaddscom

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Spam Filters Explained

What do they do? How do they work? Which one is right for me?
By Alan Hearnshaw

Spam is a very real problem that many people have to deal with on a daily basis. For those that have decided to do something about it and start to investigate the options available in spam filtering, this article provides a brief introduction to your options and the types of spam filters available.

Despite the bewildering array of spam filters available today, all claiming to the best one “of its kind” there are really just five filtering methodologies in general use today and all products rely on one, or a combination of these:

Content-Based Filters

“In the beginning, there were content-based filters.”

These filters scan the contents of the and look for tell-tale signs that the message is spam. In the early days of spamming it was quite simple to look out for “Kill Words” such as
”Lose Weight” and mark a message as spam if it was found.

Very soon though, spammers got wise to this and started resorting to all kinds of tricks to get their message past the filters. The days of “obfuscation” had begun.
We started getting messages containing the phrase “L0se Welght” (Notice the zero for “o” and “l” for “i”) and even more bizarre – and sometimes quite ingenious – variations.

This rendered basic content-based filters somewhat ineffective, although there are one or two on the market now that are clever enough to “see through” theses attempts and still provide good results.

Bayesian Based Filters

“The Reverend Bayes comes to the rescue”

Born in London 1702, the son of a minister, Thomas Bayes developed a formula which allowed him to determine the probability of an event occurring based on the probabilities of two or more independent evidentiary events.

Bayesian filters “learn” from studying known good and bad messages. Each message is split into single “word bytes”, or tokens and these tokens are placed into a database along with how often they are found in each kind of message.

When a new message arrives to be tested by the filter, the new message is also split into tokens and each token is looked up in the database. Extrapolating results from the database and applying a form of the good reverend’s formula, know as the a “Naive Bayesian” formula, the message is given a “spamicity” rating and can be dealt with accordingly.

Bayesian filters typically are capable of achieving very good accuracy rates (>97% is not uncommon), and require very little on-going maintenance.

Whitelist/Blacklist Filters

“Who goes there, friend or foe?”

This very basic form of filtering is seldom used on its own nowadays, but can be useful as part of a larger filtering strategy.

A “whitelist” is nothing more than a list of e-mail addresses from which you wish to accept communications. A whitelist filter would only accept messages from these people and all others would be rejected

A “blacklist”, conversely, is a list of e-mail addresses - and sometimes IP Addresses (computer identification addresses) - from which communications will not be accepted.

While this may seem like a good idea from the outset, a whitelist methodology is too restrictive for most people and, as virtually all spam e-mails carry a forged “from” address, there is little point in collecting this address to ban it in future as it is very unlikely to be the same next time.

There are bodies on the internet that maintain a list of known “bad” sources of e-mail. Many filters today have the ability to query these servers to see if the message they are looking at comes from a source identified by this Internet-based blacklist, or RBL. While being quite effective, they do tend to suffer from “false positives” where good messages are incorrectly identified as spam. This happens often with newsletters.

Challenge/Response Filters

“Open sesame!”

Challenge/Response filters are characterised by their ability to automatically send a response to a previously unknown sender asking them to take some further action before their message will be delivered. This is often referred to as a “Turing Test” - named after a test devised by British mathematician Alan Turing to determine if machines could “think”.

Recent years have seen the appearance of some internet services which automatically perform this Challenge/Response function for the user and require the sender of an e-mail to visit their web site to facilitate the receipt of their message.

Critics of this system claim it to be too drastic a measure and that it sends a message that “my time is more important than yours” to the people trying to communicate with you.

For some low traffic e-mail users though, this system alone may be a perfectly acceptable method of completely eliminating spam from their inbox - one step above the “Whitelist” system outlined above.

Community Filters

“A united front”

These types of filters work on the principal of “communal knowledge” of spam. When a user receives a spam message, they simply mark it as such in their filter. This information is sent to a central server where a “fingerprint” of the message is stored.

After enough people have “voted” this message to be spam, then it is stopped from reaching all the other people in the community.

This type of filtering can prove to be quite effective, although it stands to reason that it can never be 100% effective as a few people have to receive the spam for it to be “flagged” in the first place. Just like its similar cousin the Internet black list (RBL), this system also can suffer from “false positives”, or messages incorrectly identified as spam.

Hopefully you are now armed with a little more information to be able to make an informed decision on the best spam filter for you.

For further information, consider reading the reviews and articles found at http://www.whichspamfilter.com

Alan Hearnshaw is a computer programmer and the owner of http://www.whichspamfilter.com, a web site which conducts weekly in-depth reviews of current spam filters, provides help and guidance in the fight against spam and provides a useful community forum.
alan@whichspamfilter.com

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink

Keep Your Website Contents Fresh by Adding RSS Feeds

RSS is a method that has been used by many webmasters and
publishers to publish information and news online. The readers
then be able to read the information and the news with their RSS
readers. But many webmasters also use RSS feeds from other
webmasters to provide dynamic contents on their own websites.

Usually, in order to provide contents on your website, you have
to copy articles and paste it on your website. Although using
this way you have better control for what you want to show on
your website, generating contents for your website automatically
could save your time.

You can generate dynamic contents using RSS creator software. A
software that I use is Carp (http://www.geckotribe.com). This
free software is written in php and doesn’t need complicated
database to setup.

You can install it easily. I have tried to add two or more RSS
feeds from different sources in a webpage without getting
technical problems. Just collect related feeds and put them in a
webpage. Visit any RSS feed directories to collect them.

If you want, you can use both an article and the content from
the feed that is provided by Carp in a web page. Just put the
article on the top of a webpage and put the content from Carp on
the bottom. This could make your webpage more targetted and more
dynamic.

I don’t real understand the Google policy of using contents this
way. But just for example, if you want to show RSS feeds from
Google News with the topic about “car repair”, you can put the
code like this:

http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&q=car+repair&ie=UTF-8&output=rs
s

If you want to use two RSS feeds in a webpage from different
sources with “car repair” as the topic, you can put the code for
Google News above and then put another feed below it. The code
for another feed could be:

http://rss.topix.net/search/?q=car+repair&xml=1

and your webpage will be updated automatically from two
different sources.

Finally, if in doubt, it is wise if you ask the RSS feed
provider/creator first before you use it. Make sure they allow
you to show their contents on your own website.

Happy trying…

Online Networks

Comments Off

Permalink