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The Off-Topic Lounge APPROPRIATE FAMILY-FRIENDLY TOPICS ONLY - READ THE RULES! This forum is for posting anything (excluding topics prohibited by the forum rules) that's unrelated to email. General discussions, in other words. |
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5 Nov 2024, 09:51 AM | #1 |
Cornerstone of the Community
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International hub of fraud and misinformation
Some of the Web?s Sketchiest Sites Share an Address in Iceland
Kalkofnsvegur 2 in Reykjavik, Iceland, is the registered address for Withheld for Privacy, a company that allows operators of online domains to shield their identities By Steven Lee Myers and Tiffany Hsu The modern office building near the harbor in Iceland?s capital, Reykjavik, is best known as the home of the Icelandic Phallological Museum, which displays 320 specimens of mammal penises. To those who track cyber mischief, however, the building also has a reputation as a virtual offshore haven for some of the world?s worst perpetrators of identity theft, ransomware, disinformation, fraud and other wrongdoing. That?s because the museum?s street address, Kalkofnsvegur 2, is also the registered address for Withheld for Privacy, a company that is part of a booming and largely unregulated industry in Iceland and elsewhere that allows people who operate online domains to shield their identities... Withheld for Privacy and other so-called proxy services have turned Iceland into a global hub for illicit activity far out of proportion to the country?s size. The company ? created in 2021 by Namecheap, one of the world?s largest providers of websites ? has effectively shielded tens of thousands of sketchy internet sites. Even local authorities said they had tried and failed to reach the company?s representatives when problems had arisen... The internet is replete with similar sites trying to trick or bilk credulous users, and proxy services, when abused, make it even more difficult to catch or even identify perpetrators. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/09/b...ity-theft.html https://dnyuz.com/2024/10/09/some-of...ss-in-iceland/ https://www.thestar.com.my/tech/tech...ess-in-iceland |
6 Nov 2024, 10:04 AM | #2 |
The "e" in e-mail
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That's a service that is included with all domain registrations in Namecheap: Instead of having your contact details (street address, phone, email address) on the whois registry, you have the details of "Witheld for Privacy", and they are supposed to forward any email to you domain contact (perhaps after filtering spam and fraud. Practically all email sent to whois contact addresses is spam trying to sell various services to domain owners). Other registrars offer similar services. And since it's the default option probably most domain owners use them, and most of them are "sketchy internet sites". I know I am not one...
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20 Nov 2024, 11:14 AM | #3 |
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Is "bilk" a real word? If so, it's new to me.
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21 Nov 2024, 03:53 AM | #4 |
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Yep it is.
I find, and have found for quite a while now too, this site A.Word.A.Day Home Page : Word of the day, vocabulary, wordpower, words ... - https://wordsmith.org/awad/ to be 'really neat'. I get a newsletter from there. - Bruce |
30 Nov 2024, 01:42 AM | #5 |
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I have heard it before, but I think it's more common in the US than in Britain. It only just occurred to me that it must be where the name of Sergeant Bilko came from.
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30 Nov 2024, 05:49 AM | #6 | |
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Quote:
Bill |
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Yesterday, 07:03 AM | #7 |
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Do you have URLs of these sites? Are these worse than the Dark Web?More difficult to trace and shut down?
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