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If my hunch is correct, most of us reading TIG have MySpace profiles. I know TIG has had one for ages, with over 7,000 friends. The site is a great resource for bands, but it's also a huge pain in the ass -- if we get one more "$500 Macys Card" spam message I might hurl. We've seen countless band and friend profiles get hacked by "phishers" and send out these dumb -- though seemingly pretty harmless -- spam messages and comments. Delete, and move on, right?
Not in this case. R&B singer Alicia Keys had her account hacked in a far more insidious way, and visitors to her profile who clicked about were redirected to a Chinese website that attempted to install malicious code on their machines.
From the article:
MySpace identified the problem last Thursday and within 24 hours had scrubbed Keys' page of all bogus links, according to MySpace's chief security officer, Hemanshu Nigam.
"Her profile was phished," says Nigam, "which means that whoever is managing her site probably input their user name and password where they shouldn't have," possibly by responding to a scam email, which would have enabled the hackers to install false links on the diva's page. The clean-up happened just in time for the Nov. 13 release of her new album, As I Am, but Keys' wasn't the only MySpace page that got hacked: Some two dozen other bands appear to have suffered the same security breach, including the indie groups Jet King, Wee Red Bar and Seagull Strange in the United Kingdom, according to the blog VitalSecurity.org.
The bolding is mine -- does it make it sound like the MySpace security officer is blaming the victim? Does to me, especially knowing just how many of our imaginary friends have had accounts hacked.
What about you? Has your Myspace profile been hacked? Do you even have a MySpace profile these days, or have you jumped ship to Facebook... or another, better social networking site? Do tell.
1 Erik Gonzalez said on November 13, 2007
Myspace is so 2004. Well, with 1998 web design. In fact, I honestly still don't fully understand social networking. Really. And I have to turn a crank to get my car started in the morning. Bah!
2 Deborah Barnard said on November 13, 2007
Myspace is like a social business card, something you can flash at anyone who wants to know a bit more about you. It's also a security sinkhole that rivals the suction force of black holes - the problems keep widening because the head honchos are more focused on adding new applications than improving the ones they have. However, I gotta say I love looking up music on there; aside from downloading an album, it's the easiest way to listen to a band you've heard about.
I use Facebook more for keeping up with friends, it's like an RSS feed for their lives. Also lovely: more privacy and no flash ads.
3 cosby said on November 13, 2007
not to defend myspace's stance, but anyone partially web competent cannot have their profile hacked. anyone who really wants $500 to macy's defends to look like a fool in front of their interweb friends.
4 cosby said on November 13, 2007
"anyone who really wants $500 to macy's DESERVES to look like a fool..."
what was i saying about web competency?
5 jesse said on November 13, 2007
What is this myspace everyone is talking about?
6 Levi said on November 13, 2007
I do have a MS page, and it hasn't been hacked yet (although once I tried to reply to someone who sent me a spam comment to let them know they'd been hacked, and myspace thought I'd been phished and made me change my password).
You know what's the shit, though? Virb.com.
7 Imaginary Kiku said on November 13, 2007
My myspace hasn't been hacked yet, but the homepage isn't working for me currently :/ Oh well, I've made the Facebook switch anyway
8 imaginary dana said on November 13, 2007
@kiku -- I haven't been able to log into MySpace all day cause the homepage is hosed. Ahh well.
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