Slashdot Mirror


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."

7 of 236 comments (clear)

  1. Nostradamus Predicts by the_mad_poster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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!
    1. Re:Nostradamus Predicts by The+Snowman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They really don't need a firefox version anyway..

      People who use firefox fall under those who don't really need it :)

      Maybe for the time being. Right now, Firefox largely is a geek browser. However, recent news shows that it is becoming more popular and mainstream. Software can only do so much to curb user ignorance. Firefox is not perfect, nor does it stop phishing and other scams. Plugins, such as this toolbar, could help prevent Joe Sixpack from scammers and phishers. After seeing enough message boxes about malicious sites, hopefully he will learn the skills he needs so he will not need the toolbar anymore.

      If Firefox does not keep the scammers and phishers away, new users will abandon it and go back to what they already know: IE.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    2. Re:Nostradamus Predicts by RangerRick98 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Software can only do so much to curb user ignorance.

      You make the point very well right there. I don't care what features a browser includes to curb scamming and phishing and the like, if the users don't pay attention to what they're doing it won't make a bit of difference. Toolbars are out of the way and require a conscious decision to check them, and so they probably won't do any good, and popup messages are so common for the most mundane of errors that a lot of users I know won't even read it before clicking OK, even if it's a popup they know they haven't seen before.

      Users need to learn not to assume their computer and the Internet are safe and instead educate themselves on how to recognize scams themselves.

      --
      "You're older than you've ever been, and now you're even older."
    3. Re:Nostradamus Predicts by the_mad_poster · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Except, for people to treat their cars the way they do their computers, they'd have to:
      • Never get an oil change. Ever. Everytime the oil burned into the pan and the car stopped running altogether, they'd just replace the whole pan and rebuild the block to clean the ooze out. They would also whine incessantly about having to do this.
      • Never check their tire pressure. Ever. They would simply drive the car until the tires blew, then continue to drive on the rims complaing about how hard it is to control.
      • Drive the cars around bad neighbordhoods all the time without taking any precautions. When they get caught in a drive by, or someone comes along and smashes up their car, they'd whine about the car getting damaged as if it were the car's fault.
      • Everytime someone offered to install something, they'd do it. This would include everything from cutesy stickers with corrosive backing to "engine upgrades" that make the car go half as fast, but lets you change the color of your headlights. All negative affects would, again, be blamed on the car.
      Computers are complex tools that require maintenance. Hell, some people pay more attention to their toaster's maintenance than the computer's maintenance. At least they clean the damn crumbs out of it from time to time.
      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
  2. Re:I would think FF/ Mozilla users by Errtu76 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    except for the people who use Mozilla/FireFox because their friend/relative have advised it. Can you think of anyone that wasn't too technical whom you advised they should use an alternative to IE?

    Btw, what's wrong with spoofstick?

  3. Netscraft confirms... by Stevyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...that this is an old, outdated, and unfunny joke.

  4. You're underestimating the effort involved. by sean.peters · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Most people would rather have someone else change the oil in their cars, even though it takes 10 minutes and half the money than professionals charge.

    Hogwash.

    • driving to the auto parts place to get oil, filters, etc - 20 minutes
    • draining oil, removing filter, installing new filter, adding oil - 10 minutes for this step only if you do this for a living. At least 15 minutes for ordinary mortals.
    • Driving halfway across the county to the only place that will take used oil for recycling - 45 minutes
    • Washing the clothes that got dirty while working on car - 30 minutes (with the possibility of doing other things during wash/dry cycle)
    • 45 minutes/$30 spent getting Jiffy Lube to do it, while I shop, read, etc... priceless

    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