Microsoft Tool To Help Users Avoid Typo Domains
blueZ3 writes "ZDnet is running a story on a new tool from Microsoft that aims to inform users when they reach 'typo domains'. Apparently, there's concern in Redmond that IE users are being exploited by companies running ad farms on typo domains. The tool uses an automated search routine to look for domains with particular types of typographical errors--transpositions, incorrect TLDs, missing letters--and then adds the domains to a database. The eventual goal (though this isn't clear from the article) seems to be something akin to Verisign's URL redirecting, where typo domains are blocked."
Anyone who does that job is most definitely a tool.
"www.google.com"
Did you mean "search.msn.com"?
There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
:wq
Apparently, there's concern in Redmond that IE users are being exploited by companies running ad farms on typo domains.
How dare those other companies! Nobody's allowed to exploit Microsoft's users except Microsoft!
will typing pron.com send me to porn.com? or vice-versa?
Tom
Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
Microsoft domain corrector has detected that you may have mis-typed your desination address.
You were trying to access, "whitehouse.gov".
Did you really mean, "whitehouse.com"?
The article isn't entirely clear whether the app reports back to MS your web surfing locations.
Yeah. Thank God, we can rely on Google to not do anything like that. Can you imagine what potential for misuse there would be if a company like Google recorded your web surfing habits?
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
Hi there, I noticed you are about to visit a TLD web-site.
The address www.apple.com/macosx appears to be a misspelling of the address of a legitimate site http://www.microsoft.com/Genuine/.
Sites that use spelling variations of legitimate sites and companies may be used in "phishing" schemes to trick users into revealing their access accounts, credit card data, and other personal information.
We think you are trying to type in 'www.microsoft.com', please wait while we take you there.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
"Apparently, there's concern in Redmond that IE users are being exploited by companies running ad farms on typo domains."
It occurs to me that the only people dumb enough to use MSIE these days are precisely those sorts of users who would be susceptible to the advertising on linkfarms.
I'm not sure whether to praise Microsoft for trying to protect the retards from themselves, or to curse them for defeating the net's version of Darwinian selection...
--
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