|  | Posted by NPR Fan on 03/06/07 08:17 
Kaid wrote:
 > On Mar 2, 2:57 pm, "ufo" <ufoexpre...@gmail.com> wrote:
 > > "How far has 'Vladuz' hacked into eBay?"
 > >
 > > http://redtape.msnbc.com/2007/03/how_far_has_vla.html#posts
 >
 > Meh, you could spill your coffee on that article and you'd only drown
 > a few facts. But you could massacre a whole bunch of guesses,
 > suppositions, innuendos and opinions. Sheesh, couldn't they at least
 > find a true expert rather than "Online auction activist Rosalinda
 > Baldwin". I mean check out her site! http://www.auctionguild.com/ This
 > is obviously someone who has a bone to pick with eBay. What a joke.
 >
 > "Baldwin, who closely tracks fraudulent activity on the site"
 >
 
 yea right! and dances at Vinny's from midnight to 3:00am.
 Runs a poodle grooming service. Teaches Sunday School.
 And is running for Mayor.
 
 Elect "Side of Hash Browns".
 
 
 
 >
 > Umm....How? What methods does she use? Are they statistically valid or
 > are they simply "I found a whole bunch more items that I think are
 > fraudulent this week than I did last week!"
 >
 > "Even if eBay ends them, they are re-listed within an hour or so," she
 > said. The only logical answer, she argued, is that someone can raid
 > eBay identities at will."
 >
 > This has got to be one of the stupidest statements in the article. Ask
 > any decent computer security expert and I am sure that they could come
 > up with several other ways just off the top of their head! I'm not an
 > expert and I already can think of one. It's called a phishing email.
 > Every big company that deals with financial issues has a problem with
 > this.
 >
 > This is one of the reasons I really don't like blogs. They have less
 > time or resources to check facts than the old time newspapers did
 > (which have really gone downhill as well) and so you find more
 > opinions/guesses/so-called-experts.
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