The Roundup: Jan 6, 2004 | ||||||||
|
=========================================================== Table of Contents
1. Editor's MusingsHappy 2004 everyone. The crazy days of the holiday season are behind us, and it's back to work, and back to facing winter in the Northern Hemisphere. I'm sitting in my Vancouver home waiting for a major snowfall that is expected today. Big snowfalls usually disrupt the city for days. However, lucky people like me escape most of the madness. 2. Slimy But Legal by June CampbellThe Internet's ticking me off these days. I'm weary of the sleazy, but legal activities that detract from our enjoyment and productivity while we're online. Sure, there's plenty of illegal activity happening on the Internet. However, most of this stuff is easy to avoid if you develop a degree of cyber-smarts. If it sounds too good to be true, it is. I really won't make $20,000 a month stuffing envelopes. I also understand that the pitiful, disenfranchised African price isn't being totally honest when he sent me that heartfelt request for a money transfer. It's the sleazy, but legal stuff that bugs me. Unlike the above-mentioned scams, these annoyances are difficult to avoid. The Jailhouse SiteThese web sites hold you captive by seemingly disabling your browser's Back Button. Suppose you're at a page with an array of links to various sites you hope to visit. You are happily clicking through to the sites, then using your Back Button to return to the link page when you're ready. Suddenly, when you hit the Back Button, it doesn't work. Instead, the current page refreshes and you cannot return to the original site. If you're using a recent version of IE, there is good news. Click on the little arrow to the immediate right of the Back Button, and you will get a menu of recently visited sites. Choose the one you want and you escape the Jailhouse. If your browser doesn't have this handy function, you will have to manually enter the URL in your browser address field. If you haven't memorized the URL, you'll waste time running a search or accessing your browser's history. But what if you can't see the Back Button? Some webmasters code the link so that the page opens in a new window in which the Back Button is not visible. In this case, you can hunt through your browser's menus looking for the toolbar function. In IE, the Standard Toolbar item in the View menu toggles your Back Button on and off. Ensure there is a check mark beside that item, and voila! Your Back Button returns. Site Nasty One solution, although not a perfect one, is to install software that prevents popup windows from displaying. For information about specific software applications that keep the popups away, visit Tucows web site (no affil) and run a search for "popup blockers". (www.tucoows.com) Site Bait & SwitchYou click on a link to a seemingly benign web site, and Eureka! You've got Po~n! It's likely that someone allowed a domain name to lapse, or put it up for sale. Another person bought the domain name and used it to publish a po~n site. Since the domain sounds innocent, you have no clue that you're going to land on po~n when you click through to it. Worse, any web sites that had linked to the original site do not know what has happened, and therefore have not removed the links. I learned this the hard way when a site visitor blasted me for linking to po~n from my family-friendly web site. I am not aware of a solution to Site Bait & Switch. However, it is important to realize that accessing a po~n site is not always intentional. (There's a message here for spouses, parents and employers.) Site Sneaky EULAThese are the sites that annoy me above all else. Site Sneaky EULA tricks you into agreeing to something you wouldn't agree to if you understood the implications. You download and install some (often free) software, music or other media. During the installation, you are shown an End User Legal Agreement (EULA). You are asked to read a long legal agreement, then indicate you agree to the terms. Almost every software publisher asks you to agree to a EULA, so that in itself is not the problem. At Site Sneaky EULA, the publisher has buried some offensive little gem within the legalese. One of the more blatant examples occurred in October,
2002, when a marketing company called Permissioned
Media sent out emails telling the recipients they
they had received an ecard from a friend. When the
recipient clicked on the link to view their ecard, they
were taken to a web site where they were told they
would need to download and install a plugin to view
their ecard. During installation, the recipient was asked
to agree to a EULA. Little did they know that they were
agreeing to let Permissioned Media raid their MS
Outlook address book and send messages to everyone
found there. The solution to Site Sneaky EULA lies in being discriminating around what we download and install, and being on the watch for trickery. Boring as they are, its wise to browse through EULAs before indicating approval. Site Big BrotherSimilar to Site Tricky Eula, this site installs tracking technology on your computer, allowing the site owners to track your surfing habits. Typically, the information gleaned is used or sold for marketing purposes. Annoying at this is, there is a relatively effective solution. Software applications like Ad-Aware (no affil) allow you to monitor and remove the privacy-invading technologies. The first time you run Ad-Aware, you'll be shocked at the number of tracking technologies installed on your machine without your knowledge. www.lavasoftusa.com. I wonder what they'll think of next to make the Internet less helpful and more annoying. ================================================ 3. Recommended Product: *** None Today ***No recommended product this week. I have taken some vacation days and have not had time to research. I do receive dozens of pitches for products to recommend, but I rarely bite. The world does not need yet another miraculous e-marking course, IMHO. Internet Sites -- reviewed by June Campbell *** Music Downloading Declines in 2003 *** Consumption of Information Goods and Services
in the United States *** What Americans do Online *** Top Internet Searches 2003 4. Freebies and Good Deals a. Where Writers, Publishers & Online Entrepreneurs Connect b. Learn How To Profit on the Internet... c. Create A New Feature For You d.My Own Ezine - Dedicated to helping you start your own ezine and build your online business. Savvy strategies, sure fire tips and ideas, fresh articles, free promotion and more in every weekly issue of MOE. Send any email to: myownezine@subto.us or visit us at: www.myownezine.com for more info. e. Need Exposure for Your Ezine? Visit us at www.myfavoriteezines.com and add your ezine to a very fast-growing and popular ezine directory. Join our "Top Picks" mailing list and qualify your ezine for even more free exposure. To subscribe, send a blank email to: myfavoriteezines@subto.us 6. Joke: A Consumer IssueA painter named Jack used thinner to save money. He got away with it for the longest time. Eventually, he won a huge job, repainting a church. As usual, he thinned the paint. He was working away when suddenly the rains fell. Jack was knocked to the ground by lightning, while the thinned paint was washed from the church. And a mighty voice roared: "Repaint. Repaint. And thin no more." To subscribe to this newsletter, visit this link. "How to Booklets"-- topics include business proposal writing, business plan writing, brochure writing,an independant contractor's agreement, a sample joint venture agreement and more. Click www.nightcats.com This Ezine is listed in The Free Directory of Ezines |
|||||||