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Facebook Enables Wall Post Responses, Finally

Comment On Wall Postings, No More Page Jumping
We're sure you've had a few encounters with people trying to strike up conversations via wall postings on Facebook (or comments on MySpace, if you're feeling old-school). But, more often than not, you've probably been inclined to ignore such things, since wall postings are not the most efficient method of communication. They quickly devolve into a series of seemingly disjointed phrases and sentences, spread across separate pages. Anyone interested in reading would have to open (at least) two different profiles, bounce back and forth, and filter out posts from other people. It's exhausting.

Do you like it when folks leave messages on your Facebook wall?



Thankfully, it looks like Facebook finally got the hint, because it is now allowing people to comment on wall posts. Now a wall post can be a jumping-off point for a conversation between several friends at once, instead of just an out-of-context click-fest.

We're really excited to have yet another avenue for completely meaningless exchanges with our fake friends. [From: Mashable]

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Computers, Back to School

Hackers Using Facebook Wall to Spread Viruses

Facebook Wall Used for MalwareUsually walls are used to keep things out, you know, like the wind, or bugs, or barbarian invaders. Ironic, then, that Facebook's iconic Wall, the thing that helped to set it apart from MySpace and grab a huge share of the online social networking space, is actually being used by some to spread malicious software capable of turning your machine into a zombie, so that others with bad intents can control it and make it do their bidding online.

The "attack" is actually rather unsophisticated -- just a link posted to the wall to a site that supposedly has a video of, what else, a celebrity caught in a private moment doing naughty things with a special someone. Naturally the site doesn't have any such video, just a fake version of the Flash plugin that is actually the malware itself. You're prompted to install it to view the video and, once installed, your machine is theirs for the taking.

So, as always, be careful where you click, keep your virus scanner up to date, and only install plug-ins like that from official sources, like Adobe.com. [Source: PC World]

Computers, MySpace, Google, YouTube

Need To View Blocked Sites at Work?

Blocked Sites At Work
Those of you working in cubicles may have encountered some Web sites your job doesn't want you to visit, like YouTube or MySpace. Sure, you should probably be working instead of watching videos of idiots throwing hot sauce at drive-through employees, but we all need a little reprieve now and then.

A Wall Street Journal article called 'Ten Things Your IT Department Won't Tell You' shares some helpful tips on how to get around these blocks to check your Gmail:
  • Try third party proxy sites to view sites, which let you look at sites without actually visiting them. Proxy.org lists more than 4,000 proxies.
  • Use Google Translate as a proxy. By performing an English to English translation you can make Google Translate act as a proxy. Just enter 'Google.com/translate?langpair=en|en&u=www.blockedsite.com'
If you have friends in the IT department, you can just ask them, as there may be holes in the wall purposely left open for testing purposes. We guarantee you all your IT guys know about it and use it everyday.

From Wall Street Journal and bookofjoe

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