Netcraft Releases Anti-Phishing Toolbar
AgainstHate writes "Netcraft has released an Anti-Phishing Toolbar that provides detailed information about the website you are visiting (sites' hosting location, country, longevity and popularity) at all times to help users to validate fraudulent URLs. It also natively traps cross site scripting and other suspicious URLs. The toolbar also enables users to report phishing attacks to Netcraft, thus blocking any other unsuspecting users from being harmed (Netcraft supervisor validation is used to contain the impact of any false reporting). Currently the toolbar is only available for IE but a Firefox version is under development."
This will have little affect because:
1) The people who really need it will never hear about it.
2) Even if 1 fails to return true, the people who really need it will never be able to find it amongst the 82 other toolbars that various companies have so helpfully installed for the sucke.... uh... users.
Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
Will this really protect people who succumb to phishing in the first place?
If you're going to fall for one of the oldest tricks in the book, I don't think this new-fangled anti-phishing toolbar is going to do you any help.
Excuse me, I don't mean to impose, but I am the ocean
are a little more tech savvy, on the whole. They have gone to the trouble to download a safer browser, and probably less likely to get sucked into a phish scam. OTOH, I have seen some pretty good ones, and I did click on a Pay Pal one, before I had second thoughts.
Save a Life. Donate Blood. Please.
And someone with a malicious website will have figured out how to use this anti-phishing toolbar as a vector for remote code execution.
fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
...that this is an old, outdated, and unfunny joke.
Hogwash.
Yes, I changed my own oil for years. Now I have better things to do with my life. Change a few words around in this reasoning, and you'll understand why "most people" don't want to fool around with their computers.
Sean