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Social Edge Gets Rickrolled

by Social Edge last modified 2008-05-13 09:29

If only we had been Rickrolled.

But no, we had something else happen that was worse than having an 80's British pop star appear unexpectedly on our screen. Truth be told, I always kind of liked Rick Astley. Okay, fine, I admit it. I owned the album. On cassette.

Nope, we had a different kind of surprise sprung upon us, and just like when I'm the butt of a practical joke, I feel stupid today. I hadn't kept up with all of the security updates for our software here on the Edge, and some hackers took advantage of a loophole to send traffic through our site to other sites with what we'll call a less philanthropic, more capitalistic site with fewer discussions about social entrepreneurship. No content or user data has been compromised, just our bandwidth and my pride. As regular visitors know, SocialEdge.org has been very slow for the past week, and this appears to have been a major contributing factor.

Why do people do this? In this case, the exploitive method used somehow increased SEO results of this less than respectable site by taking advantage of our more respectable nature. At the end of the day, it's the same reason that you get SPAM in your inbox telling you that you can get a cheap prescription online or that some Nigerian nobility has died and their kin wants to give you a ton of their money. Somebody clicks the link and somebody else makes money.

I'm tempted to hand out the IP addresses of the folks involved to the internet community at large and see what kind of mayhem could be brought to bear on the perpetrators, but I don't need the headache that comes with misguided retribution. Instead I'm working with their ISP to try and shut them off. I've also upgraded our software to block the exploit and have removed what never should have made it's way onto our systems. There is still some clean-up to do, so bear with us and we'll be back to full speed shortly.

This process has also revealed some other issues that we can address that will allow us to make some improvements that should result in a better, faster and more reliable Social Edge. In the end I'm going to choose to view the glass as half-full and filling up. I'd almost like to thank the hackers for helping me to make Social Edge a better site. Almost, but not quite. I'd rather have them sit and watch the same Rick Astley video over and over again for as many hours as I have wasted figuring out what they did and how to fix it.

But hey, can you blame them? We can't all have jobs with a purpose that we believe in. Some people are left to peddle their misbegotten wares via thievery and deceit.

So hang in there, and we'll do our best to make sure that Social Edge performs as well on the back end as you do on the front end. You're an amazing community filled with amazing people, and you deserve nothing less.

Me too!

 Posted by Susanne Goldstein at 2008-05-14 07:32
I too have been victim of these abhorrent people who are using the popularity of my site to redirect traffic to theirs. I write a blog called The Social Age (google it if you'd like to find it, I'm proving here, that I'm not trying to drive traffic to my site, but just make a comment). My site addresses the landscape of our changing and more socially oriented world. One that I hope is moving toward a new era of human development
one that would succeed "The Information Age", that I call "The Social Age". There's a category in my blog called "The Anti-Social Age" that addresses the actions of the types of people who make it challenging for some of us to keep the faith in humankind. I just don't get them. Luckily, there is an organization called StopBadWare (www.stopbadware.org) that is monitoring the Internet and trying to let administrators know when their site has been compromised. This consortium between Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet & Society and Oxford University's Oxford Internet Institute with the support of several prominent tech companies, including Google, Lenovo, and Sun Microsystems. Consumer Reports WebWatch is serving as an unpaid special advisor. We count on the good-natured support of organizations like this one to keep the rest of us safe and secure. They are how I found out my site was in trouble. I've spent countless hours and a few weeks stripping my blog of all the bad code that was maliciously placed there. I can only hope that my site stays secure and that these misdirected people find something better to do with their lives.
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