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POE-Component-Proxy-TCP-1.1.1.1







POE-Component-Proxy-TCP-1.1.1.1

POE-Component-Proxy-TCP-1.1.1.1 07/28/2004 11:32 PM




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POE-Component-Proxy-TCP-1.1.1.1

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Risk by Proxy


Risk by Proxy 03/22/2005 04:58 PM

As part of my fraud detection work, I've been looking at anonymous network proxies (aka anonymizers) as a source of risk.  What is a proxy?  A proxy is, in essence, a man-in-the-middle (MITM).  If the MITM is a bad guy, then you've just invited a wolf in sheep's clothing into your house.

While there are many MITM attacks possible, including SSL certificate spoofing, most lucrative attacks are the ones that keeps the door open.  For example, a proxy can inject virus into any executables users download.  Once they are in, they can start harvesting passwords through keylogging or inject bogus certificates to monitor SSL traffic.

Come to think of it, this is a great way to deliver monitoring software into hacker's desktops.


IMAP Proxy 1.2.2


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YACY Proxy 0.32


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Felony By Proxy?


Felony By Proxy? 11/14/2003 05:14 PM
Aaron writes "So here's an interesting question. The latest MPAA anti-pi racy legislation to be introduced, the Artists' Rights and Theft Prevention Act, makes sharing ANY pre-released pirated films on an openly accessible network a felony. Offenders face jail time up to five years and up to $250,000 in fines. So what happens to users whose servers are taken advantage of and aren't aware they're sharing the files? ISP Planet explores the idea of "tagging" servers with directories for warez that can't be deleted without special software. Broadband Reports has an article wondering if the MPAA lawyers are going to buy the "I didn't know" defense as an excuse. That defense hasn't held up well in other unrelated hacking cases." And it won't hold up well in these cases either. The MPAA will state flat-out that almost everyone using such a defense is lying. While it is very likely that many illegal films will show up on someone's unsuspecting servers, the MPAA is not known for caring about little technology details like that. The only thing going in favor of the "I didn't know" defense is that it actually has been working in some cases where it seems fairly unlikely. Witness the recent string of cases using the chewbac ca style "a hacker did this to my computer, not me" defenses for everything from denial of service attacks to child porn to tax fraud. In the end, it will come down to how convincing an argument someone can make that they didn't really put the files on their own servers.

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Proxy power


Proxy power 04/19/2004 12:28 PM
One of these years, my bank will upgrade to a new system that's built around Web services. They'll probably offer a basic "rich Internet application" -- for Windows, Java, or Flash -- that connects to those services. When the bank announces the upgrade, it will stress the richer user experience and choice of interchangeable clients.

Those will be crucial benefits indeed. What won't be said, because it's harder to explain, is that the system will also have become radically extensible. Suppose I want to trigger an alert when a transfer exceeds some limit or when a duplicate amount appears. Today, if the system doesn't implement these rules, I'm stuck. In a services-oriented environment, though, I needn't depend on either the bank or my client software. If neither delivers the features I want, I'll inject an intermediary that does. Local proxies are geeky curiosities today, but someday we'll wonder how we lived without them. [Full story at InfoWorld.com]
As mentioned in this week's column, I've been experimenting with a local Web proxy that XHTML-izes and transforms Web pages on the fly. Here's an example: ...

Tie-Proxy-Hash-1.01


Tie-Proxy-Hash-1.01 03/19/2003 10:24 PM

eBay Proxy Firms


eBay Proxy Firms 05/03/2004 12:22 PM

Firms jump on the eBay wagon: Here's an article about eBay proxy companies — outfits that take your merchandise and sell it on eBay for you, taking a commission off the top.

We've talked about these before. This article explains how eBay is really working to help these firms instead of squashing them, which is what I thought they'd try to do. A good example of a company knowing a strategic resource when it sees one, instead of trying to kill anything that touches any part of their enterprise.

ISold It may be just the beginning. Scores of companies are springing up to do everything from helping computer neophytes sell the dusty Tonka trucks piled in their basements to assisting Best Buy auction its surplus DVD players and laptops. There are even companies whose only function is to help eBay buyers and sellers get better prices.

Hello, eBay economy.

I was interested in this quote as well about the power of the purchasing model that eBay has created:

This is what usually happens with most good business ideas. The invention of the automobile spawned industries such as oil, auto-parts stores, car washes and even drive-in theaters. Kodak's invention of low-cost photography gave rise to one-hour photo developers and even photos of the kids with Santa Claus at the mall. Each was a phenomenon in itself, but all were tied to the growth of the underlying industry.

EBay is proving to be the first invention of such importance in decades. More than $894 worth of goods were sold through eBay every second during the fourth quarter of 2003. There are about 95 million registered users, which is larger than the population of France, Italy or Germany.

I'm inclined to agree. A very wealthy Internet entrepenuer I spoke with a few months ago told me that eBay was the single best way he knew of making a million dollars in two years (interestingly, he made his millions in an entirely different method — he was just an armchair eBayer).

On a more personal level, my wife went on an eBay selling binge earlier this year. She offloaded scads of stuff I didn't even know we still owned, and has pocketed close to $1,000 to date. A thousand bucks for...nothing.

eBay is rapidly becoming the manifestation of the "global marketplace" cliche.

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Proxy Firm Suggests a Cap on Red Hat


Proxy Firm Suggests a Cap on Red Hat 09/20/2004 06:53 AM
TheStreet.com Sep 20 2004 11:27AM GMT

Frickin PPTP Proxy 0.9b


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Wardriving as a Proxy for Wi-Fi GPS
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Wardriving as a Proxy for Wi-Fi GPS
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05/11/2004 04:34 PM
Quarterscope converts Wi-Fi cards plus a wardriving database into a virtual GPS receiver: A few weeks ago, Wi-Fi Networking News talked to Ted Morgan, the founder and president of Quarterscope, a company which had just won an award at the cellular industry's big trade show for location services, finishing behind well-established Ekahau. Quarterscope's product is software that uses a database of wardriving records that it matches against the signals received by a Wi-Fi radio to produce an approximate set of coordinates, like a virtual GPS. "What got us started down this path is the density of public and private hot spots," Morgan said. "No one realizes just how many of these access points has been installed. They see the sales numbers, but they don't extrapolate the fact that people are going home and plugging them in." Morgan said that they have primed the pump of their database using existing information from research groups, hobby wardrivers, and collective databases. "We're aggregating from lots of different existing sources today," he said. Wardriving uses "stumbling" software like NetStumbler to record all of the network names and unique access point hardware addresses at regular time slices, like every second, combining that information with GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) receiver coordinates tied into the same laptop or handheld. Quarterscope is starting its own stumbling efforts by installing wardriving devices on vehicles in metropolitan areas that drive random paths, such as delivery vans. "If you have somebody who is scanning for a full day, in metro areas, they can scan over 5,000 a day, particularly in downtown areas," Morgan said. Oddly, he said, certain kinds of vehicles don't work because they drive similar routes every day, such as police cars. "if you really look at what a cop does all day, it's pretty revealing." Morgan said that they've had legal advice as to whether passively scanning or pinging for a beacon violates any laws int he U.S. "We've gotten consultation on the whole process, and it’s very clearly within legal bounds," he said. "If we have any concerns, it's more on a perception side of things. You can go to the FBI Web site and they very clearly state that passive scanning is fine. The problem is if you connect into somebody’s network." Quarterscope's software generates a virtual serial port on a Windows system, and uses the NMEA GPS protocol. it works with a variety of mapping...

Peter's Booklist-Proxy


Peter's Booklist-Proxy 04/24/2004 06:18 AM
Peter's Booklist-Proxy
http://hypatia.slis.hawaii.edu/~jacso/extra/picks-pans/ ALA/booklist-proxy.htm

In honor of National Library Week, Peter Jacso has posted a special gift for the National Day of Library Workers. His proxy script searches the 6,000+ full text reviews of Booklist left behind when the ALA Web site was reorganized and therefore, not accessible through the ALA search engine. The ALA help desk and the Booklist site seem to be unaware of the presence of the reviews in the ALA archive and steer you to the print version (see related story on Peter's website). This will be added to Academic Resources 2004 Internet MiniGuide and Research Resources Subject™ Tracer Information Blog.

Buy-Proxy.com - A matter of trust


Buy-Proxy.com - A matter of trust 06/22/2005 01:58 AM

buy-proxy_logo.gifWe're pretty good at this free market stuff—I go to the bodega, I buy a loosie, I go home. Everybody's happy. However, what if I want some hawt Japanese phone or a rare sex robot from Moscow. What to do?

Reader James sent us a link to a new venture he's attempting which seems like a pretty good idea. It's a marketplace for buyers and sellers of rare and hard-to-find tech. You post a request—one Russian sex robot with removable tractor, for example. A fellow in Moscow buys it for you, you put the money in escrow and release it when you receive the gear. I know you're thinking "Scam city" but Ebay ain't much better. Let's see how this works out.

Product Page [Buy-Proxy.com]

Update: That said, we can't endorse this, so be careful and stuff. We haven't used Buy-Proxy, as we intend you to test the service with money that isn't ours.


10.3: Use a proxy.pac file with Panther


10.3: Use a proxy.pac file with Panther 01/19/2004 11:43 AM
After getting squid nicely up and running, I was thinking about how to re-configure the clients to advertise the newly installed proxy. I have read before about using a so-called proxy.pac file, and to my complete surprise,...
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