Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

New Google Service Manipulates Caller-ID For Free 116

Lauren Weinstein writes to raise an alarm about a new Google service, Click-to-Call. As he describes it, the service seems ripe for abuse of several kinds. One red flag is that Google falsifies the caller-ID of calls it originates for the service. From the article: "Up to now, the typical available avenue for manipulating caller-ID has been pay services that tended to limit the potential for large-scale abuse since users are charged for access. Google, by providing a free service that will place calls and manipulate caller-ID, vastly increases the scope of the problem. Scale matters."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

New Google Service Manipulates Caller-ID For Free

Comments Filter:
  • by Salvance ( 1014001 ) * on Saturday November 18, 2006 @08:35PM (#16900634) Homepage Journal
    Finally, technology that gives power back to the teenage prankster. Now "Hey, did you know your refridgerator is running?" calls will be answered with "Yes Mr. President, I did ... Oh, and by the way, your voice sounds so much younger in person" instead of "Johnny, please hangup the phone before I tell your mother".
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 18, 2006 @10:00PM (#16901118)
    1. Use the strongest language possible. Calling names is always effective, and four-letter words show that you mean business.

    2. Having a violent opinion of something doesn't require you to actually try it yourself. After all, plenty of people heatedly object to books they haven't read or movies they haven't seen. Heck, you can imagine perfectly well if something is any good.

    3. If it's a positive review that you didn't like, call the reviewer a "fanboy." Do not entertain the notion that the product, service, show, movie, book or restaurant might, in fact, be good. Instead, assume that the reviewer has received payment from the reviewee. Work in the word "shill" if possible.

    4. If it's a negative review, call the reviewer a "basher" and describe the review as a "hatchet job." Accuse him of being paid off by the reviewee's *rival*.

    5. If it's a mixed review, ignore the passages that balance the argument. Pretend that the entire review is all positive or all negative. Refer to it either as a "rave" or a "slam."

    6. If you find a sentence early in the article that rubs you the wrong way, you are by no means obligated to finish reading. Stop right where you are--express your anger while it's still good and hot! What are the odds that the writer is going to say anything else relevant to your point later in the piece, anyway?

    7. If the writer responds to your e-mail with evidence that you're wrong (for example, by citing a paragraph that you overlooked), disappear without responding. This is the anonymous Internet; slipping away without consequence or civility is your privilege.

    8. Trolling is making a deliberately inflammatory remark, one that you know perfectly well is baloney, just to get a rise out of other people. Trolling is an art. Trolling works just fine for an audience of one (say, a journalist), but of course the real fun is trolling on public bulletin boards where you can get dozens of people screaming at you simultaneously. Comments on religion, politics or Mac-vs.-Windows are always good bets. The talented troll sits back to enjoy the fireworks with a smirk, and never, ever responds to the responses.

    9. Don't let generalities slip by. Don't tolerate simplifications for the sake of a non-technical audience. Ignore conditional words like "generally," "usually" and "most." If you read a sentence that says, for example, "The VisionPhone is among the first consumer videophones," cite the reviewer's ignorance and laziness for failing to mention the prototype developed by AT&T for the 1964 World's Fair. Send copies of your note to the publication's publisher and, if possible, its advertisers.
  • by BronsCon ( 927697 ) <social@bronstrup.com> on Saturday November 18, 2006 @10:34PM (#16901292) Journal
    Do you really read the subject line of the posts before you read them?

    Do you really read the posts? I only read his post to see what the rest of the sentence was. Otherwise, the subject lines are enough for me, like the summaries.

    Or are you implying that you read the articles as well?
  • by binarybum ( 468664 ) on Saturday November 18, 2006 @11:08PM (#16901442) Homepage
    I think that even the laziest person in the world wouldn't find pressing buttons on a telephone to be too hard of a task.

      but what if their fingers are too fat? [thisisarecording.com]
  • Well I think it's even more annoying...

Living on Earth may be expensive, but it includes an annual free trip around the Sun.

Working...