Saturday, June 04, 2005

Corey Rudl - Internet Marketer dies


corey rudl dies

Pioneering Internet marketer, Corey Rudl, aged 34, died in an auto racing accident yesterday morning. As the founder and CEO of the Internet Marketing Center, Corey was credited with creating enormous wealth through lengthy action-orientated website marketing pitches. His writing style has been studied, copied and used by literally millions of other webmasters over the years. The Internet Marketing Center generated over $7.5M in revenues last year and Corey often claimed to have made over $40M worth of Internet sales in the course of his decade long career.

Corey was one of the legends of Internet marketing and was considered among the most influential webmasters of all time. His success is often cited as a reason many online marketers entered the field. Corey was the passenger in a 2005 Porsche Carrera GT which veered off the track at the California Speedway and crashed into a safety barrier at over 100 mph. The driver, Miles Keaton was airlifted to Loma Linda University Hospital where he died about an hour after being admitted. Corey died at the scene of the accident.

We will miss Corey Nicholar Rudl. Pictures of the crash at NBC

Friday, June 03, 2005

Customer Effective Websites - Jodie Dalgleish

I'm picking up this book for my reading pleasure tonight. Bought it at a MPH warehouse sale last month.

Customer Effective Websites by Jodie Dalgleish

Yahoo Search Marketing

Got this from Site Reference Newsletter.

Yahoo has announced its new pay-per-click product: Yahoo Search Marketing (SM). This product was formerly known as Overture, but you may also recognize it as Goto.com, the name it went under prior to 2001. In our experience, advertising with Google AdWords has resulted in higher conversion rates than with Yahoo Search Marketing (SM). However, both programs have advantages and disadvantages. How does Yahoo SM compare with Google's AdWords? Let's start by looking at how they differ (all amounts are in USD). More at Site Reference

Make $100,00 Blogging about the Jessica Simpson "Dukes of Hazzard" movie

ProBlogger reported a couple of months back that there was $100,000 available for a blogger to blog about Dukes of Hazzard. It seems that Country Music Television has appointed their ProBlogger:

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Rare sexual disease in Canada

||A rare sexually transmitted disease some are calling the "new AIDS" has made its way to Canada.

There have been 22 cases of lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV) reported in Canada in recent months, all in homosexual and bisexual men with high-risk sexual practices, according to a report published yesterday in the on-line edition of the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

In fact, the way LGV is spreading -- among men who have anonymous sex in bath houses (and the latest variation, encounters arranged via Internet chat groups) -- is eerily similar to the beginnings of the HIV-AIDS epidemic.

Unlike HIV-AIDS, however, LGV, a bacterial infection, is easily treatable with antibiotics. But the symptoms -- small painless lesions on the genitals and swollen glands -- are probably not familiar to most doctors. What's more, an infection with LGV increases the risk of contracting and spreading HIV-AIDS and hepatitis, partly because it creates sores, making it easier for viruses to enter the bloodstream. ||

via GlobeAndMail

paris gas 1

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

Editor of TheGadgetBlog.com

I start my official duty as Editor of TheGadgetBlog.com

Check out the site for the latest Gadget Reviews and News. It's part of the WebLog Empire.

Colbert

Gadgets Blog, Reviews and News
http://www.thegadgetblog.com/

The Super Guide for Mobile Downloads and Tech News
http://www.TheSMSGuide.com/

Focus on the worm Mytob.DN, and the Trojans Gorgs.A and PGPCoder.A

Mytob.DN is a member of the well-known Mytob family of worms, responsible for several waves of attacks on computers worldwide. Mytob.DN is a worm with backdoor characteristics, which connects to a server remotely, waiting to receive commands from a malicious user to carry out certain actions on the affected computer. It also downloads another malware to the affected computer, detected by Panda Software as Faribot.A. Mytob.DN also modifies the infected computer's HOSTS file, preventing users from accessing web pages belonging to antivirus companies.

The worm spreads both by taking advantage of the LSASS vulnerability, which it tries to exploit by launching attacks to randomly generate IP addresses, as well as through the MSN Messenger messaging application, by using Faribot.A. Mytob.DN can also spread via email, in a message in English with various formats, sent to addresses that the worm obtains from the affected computer.

Gorgs.A is a Trojan with keylogger characteristics, that is, it logs the keystrokes entered by the affected user in the infected computer. Once installed on the system, the Trojan uses a series of resources to try to go unnoticed by users. Thus, on Windows 9x computers, Gorgs.A uses a function in order not to have its process displayed in the Task List, whereas on Windows 2000/XP computers the Trojan injects itself into the system process EXPLORER.EXE to hide its presence to the user. If the Trojan cannot take any of these actions, it will still run on the computer, although visibly to the user. Once run, the Trojan logs all the keystrokes entered by the user and saves them to a file. When this file reaches a certain size, it is sent by email to an address belonging to a Russian domain. As is usual with Trojans, Gorgs.A cannot spread by itself but needs to be distributed manually through other channels.

PGPCoder.A has started a new trend in computer malware, the so-called "ransom-ware", that is, malicious software whose purpose is to obtain money through extortion. In this particular case, the Trojan digitally encrypts files with certain extensions: DOC (Word documents), JPG (images), XLS (Excel spreadsheets), HTML (web pages), or the most common compression formats, ZIP and RAR. Then, PGPCoder.A creates a TXT file in every directory in which it has encrypted a file. This file includes an explanation of the Trojan's action and asks users for $200 for their files to be released, as well as giving them a contact email address. Finally, PGPCoder.A creates two keys in the Windows Registry: one to ensure it is run on every system startup, and the second to monitor the progress of the Trojan in the infected computer, counting the number of files that have been analyzed by the malicious code.

To prevent infection from this or other malicious code, Panda Software advises all users to keep their antivirus software up-to-date. Panda Software has already made the corresponding updates to detect and eliminate these malware specimens available to clients.

Sunday, May 29, 2005

Danica Patrick's run at Indianapolis 500 History

Woman at Indy 500. So liberating. Incredible looks and fast corners too. Can she win today's race ?

|Twenty-three-year-old Danica Patrick, the only woman in the 33-car lineup and only the fourth female to race in the big event at the Brickyard in its 89-year history, is squarely in the spotlight heading into the 500-mile race.

``If she wins, it could mean so much to the IRL and the whole open-wheel sport,'' said Tony Kanaan, the pole winner and the reigning Indy Racing League champion. ``That's a lot of weight for a little girl to carry on her back.''

It seems, so far, that the 5-foot-2, 100-pound ``girl'' in question is up to the task. She possesses a tremendous amount of grit, determination and focus, commanding an intense presence and often firing steely glances at the phalanx of reporters and fans that follows her everywhere she goes.

The former high-school cheerleader isn't all business, though. She has been known to smile and even giggle at times.

``I like to have fun, too,'' she said. ``But I put all that away when I'm in my race car or talking with my engineers.''

Oh, and another thing: She's fast.

Patrick has been among the quickest drivers since rookie orientation began on the famed 2 1/2 -mile oval on May 5. Only a bobble on the first lap of her qualifying effort kept her from winning the pole, and she will take the green flag from fourth on Sunday, the best starting position for a woman at Indy.

Patrick was fastest with a lap of 225.997 mph to lead the one-hour ``Carb Day'' practice on Friday, the only time the cars got on the track during the week between the end of time trials and the start of the race. |

Via Yahoo |