Posted by on December 12, 2009 · Leave a Comment
The story about the Oversock.com theory that anyone who is “friends” on Facebook is part of a naked short selling conspiracy keeps getting weirder. It was bad enough that former Overstock.com employee and paid stalker (paid by OSTK CEO Patrick Byrne, nonetheless) Judd Bagley has created a database of Facebook users and their friend lists. Bagley has gone further than anyone realized, but we should have expected this. Journalist Gary Weiss writes : Seems that Byrne’s paid thug, the eternally nauseating cyberstalker Judd Bagley, posted a list of critics of Overstock and Byrne, along with a spreadsheet of their Facebook friends. The list contains 7,483 names, mostly people in the media and friends thereof, their relatives and friends — all to be tracked, stalked and lied-about by Bagley and Byrne’s other pigs, down to the last babe in arms. Still more issuer retaliation and critic-harassment from my favorite corporate crime petri dish. Evidently it was first noticed by Reuters columnist Felix Salmon on his Twitter feed , and then spread like wildfire among people who don’t ordinarily follow Byrne and his nutters. Gary Weiss is exposing the pretexting scam used by Judd Bagley to get access to the friend lists of people on Facebook. Often users have their accounts set up so that you can’t see their friend lists unless you’re already a friend of theirs. So why not set up a fake account and try to friend the people he wants to stalk? That’s exactly what Bagley did. He set up an account for one “Larry Bergman”, complete with the picture above. He filled in some telltale details, such as the email address sellrshort@gmail.com and he claimed he was an employee of Goldman Sachs. “Larry Bergman” then proceeded to friend people on the Overstock.com enemies list because he wanted access to their friends lists. And he didn’t stop there. He even went so far as to try to friend family members of those on the enemies list . The data he collected from the people he duped into accepting his Facebook friend request went into a database and has been shared with the world. How’s that for slimey? This guy tried to friend me three times on Facebook. I had no idea who he was and ignored his requests. But others accepted and thus Bagley got access to their Facebook data as if he was a friend of theirs. And believe me, none of the folks targeted by Bagley ever would have accepted a friend request from him if he had been truthful with his identity. And Facebook makes it hard to protect your list of friends . After all, being a social networking site, they want you to see the friends lists of others so you can add more friends, and thus the participation grows virally. But it gets worse. Gary Weiss actually had his Facebook account hacked into right at the same time this whole Larry Bergman thing was going on. He writes: Oh, and one thing I almost forgot to mention: before I got the friend request from “Bergman,” I found that somebody — gee, I wonder who? — hacked into my Facebook account and uploaded photographs of “guilt-by-association” presentations Bagley has drawn up over the years, one of which was made the picture associated with my account. Now that ain’t legal. And yes, I will prosecute. But here’s the best thing about this whole pretexting project of Bagley and Byrne: It completely disproves exactly what they were trying to prove with the project. Their theory was that anyone on their enemies list who was “friends” with one another on Facebook must be part of a conspiracy. After all, Facebook is the perfect tool for co-conspirators to show love for one another, Bagley would have you believe. Except the fact that people were accepting the friend request of a fake person named Larry Bergman, shows that people on their friends lists don’t even have to exist to get there. They may have “friends” on their lists that they’ve never met and don’t even know. Which completely disproves the theory that “friends’ on Facebook are automatically part of a conspiracy. What idiots. Who in their right mind wants to shop at Overstock.com when this is the kind of nonsense that CEO Patrick Bryne promotes and pays for? Do you really think any of your private information is safe with them? Do you want even one cent of your hard earned money to go to sleazeballs like this? Read the original: Overstock.com stalks critics, hacks into Facebook accounts, and disproves own conspiracy theory

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Overstock.com stalks critics, hacks into Facebook accounts, and disproves own conspiracy theory
Posted by on November 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment
Video Professor Tries To Bully Washington Post, Fails Washington Post They go for the big kill: $190 ¿ $290 charged to your credit card on time. I haven't found the Video Professor scam on Facebook social games since the … Read the original: Video Professor Tries To Bully Washington Post, Fails – Washington Post
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Video Professor Tries To Bully Washington Post, Fails – Washington Post
Filed under Lionheart Group · Tagged with 290-charged, bully, card-on-time, credit scams, facebook, fails, Lionheart Group, social-games, table-border, video, your-credit
Posted by on November 6, 2009 · Leave a Comment
VentureBeat Is Facebook a Paradise for Scammers? Newsweek To buy points, you send Zynga some money from your credit card . Yes, people really do spend money buying seeds for an online game. I have no idea why. … Facebook restates its zero tolerance for scam offers and ads VentureBeat all 13 news articles
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Is Facebook a Paradise for Scammers? – Newsweek
Filed under Lionheart Group · Tagged with buying-seeds, credit, credit-card, facebook, news-articles, paradise, restates-its, scam, some-money, spend-money, the lionheart group, venture, zero-tolerance, zynga
Posted by on November 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment
TechCrunch (blog) How To Spam Facebook Like A Pro: An Insiders Confession TechCrunch (blog) They sign up for Netflix, a platinum credit card , get an auto insurance quote, whatever. The industry term for type of traffic is called “incentivized”. … and more
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How To Spam Facebook Like A Pro: An Insiders Confession – TechCrunch (blog)
Filed under Lionheart Group · Tagged with auto-insurance, credit scams, credit-card, facebook, industry-term, insiders, insiders-confession, lionheart scam, netflix, platinum-credit, table-border
Posted by on October 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment
Bank Trojan botnet targets Facebook users CNET News … go directly to the site to check for important notices to customers, he said. This is the prompt Facebook users get as part of the latest phishing scam . … and more
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Bank Trojan botnet targets Facebook users – CNET News
Posted by on October 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment
Brief History Behind Koobface If you were to utter the word ‘Koobface’ for 10-15 times then you would probably realize that it has something to do with Facebook . That is because Koobface is actually an anagram for the word ‘FACEBOOK’. Even though it has got a cute name, Koobface is a highly dangerous computer worm. Koobface made its first ever impact on the Internet back in December of 2008. It then disappeared for a while but came back with a vengeance in March 2009. And this time it has gone big, in fact, very big. Where does Koobface hang out? As mentioned before, Koobface is most commonly associated with Facebook but it also targets other social networks, such as – hi5 Friendster MySpace and even Twitter. According to an official report by Facebook somewhere around 120 million registered users have fallen prey to the Koobface virus at some time. The Different Versions Of Koobface Even though Koobface only came to prominence in December 2008 it has in fact been around for much longer than that. Previous incarnations have been known by the following names – Net-Worm Win32.Koobface.a Net-Worm.Win32.Koobface.b WORM_KOOBFACE.DC and W32/Koobfa-Gen Over time this infectious virus grew more deadly until it became one of the largest threats on the internet today, garnering a similar amount of attention as the Conficker virus has. How can I spot the Koobface virus? You may be wondering about the way in which Koobface could find it’s way onto your computer. Well, by deception is the answer, much like most other computer viruses. You would get some messages or video links from your friends, or their friends, with catchy titles like “Look you were filmed all naked!”, “My friend catched you on hidden cam”, ”You look just awesome in this movie” and “My home video :)”. Once you click on those links, you would be asked to download some plug-ins like Flash Player. And if you did exactly that then you’d be in trouble! According to many Internet Security experts, Koobface is one of the most deadly and viral infections of all time. Kaspersky Lab, which stands out among the best of the antivirus organizations stated that “the worms transform victim’s machines into zombie computers to form botnets.” The most important reason is that it has targeted the social networking websites which have become an essential part of the lives of people in this cyber age we live in. Although all the Social Networking websites are enhancing their security parameters to ensure safety to their users accounts you still need to be aware of all the consequences of this deadly computer worm. There are a number of methods which can help you to keep your computer free of this particular infection – more on that in a couple of days. Stay alert and avoid clicking on links posted by strangers because prevention is always better than cure. Follow this link to discover how you can remove the koobface virus . View original post here: What Exactly Is The Koobface Virus?

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What Exactly Is The Koobface Virus?