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JoomlaDay New England USA
Sunday, 29 January 2012 13:35

Joomla! New England USA
Join us for the fourth annual Joomla Day New England, held on March 31, 2012, from 9 AM to 5 PM at the Marlboro College Graduate School in Brattleboro, Vermont.

Once again, we'll feature a great mix of speakers from our local user group, as well as well-known Joomla speakers based in the US. We'll be focusing on Joomla 2.5, mobile for Joomla, and great ways to extend and market your Joomla site.

Some quick facts about our sixteen speakers:

  • One is an OSM board member
  • One is a Production Leadership Team (PLT) member
  • Five are members of Joomla User Group New England, while eleven are visiting us from elsewhere
  • Five are current or future book authors
  • Eight have spoken at Joomla Day New England before, while eight are new this year
  • Six are talented developers, five are amazing designers, four are brilliant strategists, and all are talented instructors
  • Four are alumni from Marlboro College Graduate School
  • Five are current or past instructors at Marlboro College Graduate School

With speakers like these, you're bound to learn something new at this year's Joomla Day!

Also new this year, we will be offering a Friday night workshop on March 30, from 5-8:30 PM, all about creating custom templates in Joomla 2.5. Taught by the talented and cutting edge Barb Ackemann and Matt Thomas, you'll learn how to create a custom template, but also some advanced concepts, including template and layout overrides, how to customize a commercial template, the Construct Template Development Framework, and much more!

Visit our website at www.joomladaynewengland.org for registration. We're limited to 100 Joomla Day attendees and 50 attendees for the template workshop, so don't wait -- sign up now!

Read more: http://community.joomla.org/events/joomla-days/1544-joomladay-new-england-usa.html

 
"For Dummies" Book Implies Facebook and Twitter Gets Seniors Laid [Video]
Friday, 27 January 2012 11:00
You probably spend a good amount of your time explaining tech problems to old people, or young people who are simply dumb. But those few who are old and dumb? Here's a guide book that will lead their charge onto social media, and if we're reading that video correctly, start having lots of social network-enabled sex with each other. [Amazon via Buzzfeed] More »


Read more: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/YCTCwYeS3b8/for-dummies-book-implies-facebook-and-twitter-gets-seniors-laid

 
PayPal Phishing Spam
Wednesday, 25 January 2012 17:18

Just a heads up to anyone else getting the occasional PayPal phishing spam.. Usually it’s pretty easy to spot one of those crafty phishing emails, just hover over any links before clicking to view the real URL in the status bar. You know, the link says something like, “click here to restore your PayPal account,” but you know that’s garbage and could easily prove it by checking the actual link URL, which is usually something completely bonkers, like:

http://luqomu-qiry.freewebportal.com/puvermiqer.html

Yeh right, stuff like that isn’t even close to PayPal.com or Chase.com or any other authentic website. There are a million ways to identify these sorts of phishing scams, including:

  • you don’t do business with that particular company
  • the email just looks weird (poor graphics/design)
  • email is poorly written (grammar, syntax, tone, etc.)
  • anything that sounds too urgent or important
  • they don’t address you by name, but request some specific account action
  • Disguised links (links go to phishing site)

That last one is a fast, easy way to discredit even the most well-crafted phishing spam. Here are some examples showing the obviousness of most phishing emails — notice how hovering over links reveals the true URL in the status bar:

[ PayPal Phishing Spam Email ]

[ PayPal Phishing Spam Email ]

Obviously “http://qan-ajidyt.virtue.nu/hsdadria.html” does not equal PayPal.com, so dismissing this kind of garbage is a no-brainer. But watch out, because the little bastards are getting sneakier about how they craft their phishing links. For example, this email rolled in the other day and hovering over the link almost fooled me:

[ PayPal Phishing Spam Email ]

..and here is another that arrived recently:

[ PayPal Phishing Spam Email ]

Look at that — it says “paypal.com” right there at the beginning of the URL, so it must be legit, right? So instead of clicking the link that I think might be real, I copy/pasted into a plain text file to examine further..

Here is what a typical legitimate PayPal URL looks like:

https://www.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_flow&SESSION=MpHa_hHUj321dZnjFYN4xbFElxhCr0_HYlLwhbFkxWKE6uq9GjK3dpwe&dispatch=38ebb9cf0857de5aa44fd01837204ea000ee2a3114de1a3b2f88683c1178a267c59c90680d

And here is the disguised URL from the phishing email:

http://paypal.com.us.cgi-bin.ebscr.cmd.home.general.dispatch.0db1f38432c9462fe7313791b4c12e10393700.viemzaza.com/sas/cgi-bin/ias/A/1/FGT/ibd/IAS/presentation/pm_token=C2886KJEHD89483JSO3829ENDHU8392OJD/

As you can see, they are strikingly similar, with the main difference that periods/dots are used in place of forward slashes. With a carefully constructed series of subdomains, the phishing link looks like it goes to somewhere at PayPal.com, but the real domain is viemzaza.com, using the following subdomain structure:

paypal.com.us.cgi-bin.ebscr.cmd.home.general.dispatch.0db1f38432c9462fe7313791b4c12e10393700

I’m guessing more than a few people fall for this sneakier tactic, so hopefully this post will help raise awareness. Keep a close eye on those URLs and assume every business/bank/account/whatever email is bogus until proven otherwise.

More..

Here are more examples of phishing emails. And for reference, here are screenshots from the phishing emails that sparked this post:

© 2012 Perishable Press

Read more: http://perishablepress.com/paypal-phishing-spam/

 
Tips for effective French Translation
Tuesday, 24 January 2012 05:37
French translation services are required for different purposes. Different types of french translation services are: legal french translation, medical french translation, technical french translation, certified french translation etc.

Read more: http://feeds.dzone.com/~r/dzone/snippets/~3/teBxj8ZBd_A/14459

 
Excuse Me Sir but I Believe There's a Giant Spider on Your Back [Video]
Monday, 23 January 2012 23:00
Those of you with arachnophobia may want to turn away from your monitors. This enormous inflatable spider puppet was built by UK artist Tim Davies for street and carnival performances. Details are still scarce on its inner workings or controls but Davies mentions that the legs are "air-powered." [TD Artwork via Technabob] More »


Read more: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/6zogQQfzgwQ/excuse-me-but-theres-a-gigantic-spider-on-your-back

 
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