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  • Security implications of MyBlogLog vs. BlogRovr

    According to a TechCrunch story , Citibank is putting a warning message up for users of comment and blog tracking services. As it turns out, there is a known issue with the coComment plug-in and, though I'm not familiar with the service, it sounds like BlogRovr also has a browser extension. Since...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 11-27-2007
  • The Pros and Cons of OpenID

    The Radar team has a good post up about the pros and cons of OpenID . So what does all that mean? It means that there are a lot of people who have OpenID, but they don't have many places to use them and they probably aren't aware that they have one. It is a good step towards solving some key online identity...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 03-02-2007
  • Streamburst offers innovative DRM for video

    I've already discussed the German music store using watermarks to discourage piracy , and now it seems another service is applying the same principle to video . Instead of handcuffing viewers who want to view films they purchase on multiple devices and otherwise use content legitimately in ways DRM blocks...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 02-28-2007
  • Google launches Google Apps Premier Edition

    As rumored yesterday , Google made a major announcement : a subscription package of premium, hosted business applications. (Man, Arrington's sources are scary good). The service combines GMail, Google Calendar, Google Talk and Google Docs & Spreadsheets for $50 per user annually. I still insist that...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 02-22-2007
  • OpenID gaining momentum

    On the heels of Microsoft's announcement that it will support OpenID in CardSpace , AOL has become the latest major player to support OpenID . "Every AOL/AIM user now has at least one OpenID URI". This is big news. We made the decision to use OpenID as the sole authentication mechanism on a product we...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 02-17-2007
  • An Introduction to OpenID

    OpenID, which describes itself as "an open, decentralized, free framework for user-centric digital identity", has been gaining momentum and getting press in the Identity 2.0 space. The fundamental idea of OpenID is that a URI is necessarily unique and thus a good way to identify users. If you say you...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 02-15-2007
  • If you can read a file, you can copy it

    Raymond reminds us that there is no "Copy" access mask because copying is not a fundamental file operation . Copying a file is just reading it into memory and then writing it out. Once the bytes come off the disk, the file system has no control any more over what the user does with them. Something to...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 01-09-2007
  • JSON and XML

    Back at the PDC, I mentioned that Microsoft chose JSON over XML in Atlas, its AJAX framework. The debate has reared its head again recently, prompted largely by Tim Bray's post . Tim says that JSON is great for its single intended purpose, "to put structs on the wire." Dare, who used to work on the XML...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 01-05-2007
  • Would you trust Zamzar with your data?

    Kevin writes about Zamzar , a free web-based service that converts audio, video and documents from one format to another (via Download Squad ). Sounds cool, but would you trust them with your sensitive data? I don't know about you, but I barely trust Google or Microsoft with this information. Should...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 11-03-2006
  • The Prevalence and Danger of SQL Injection

    Michael Sutton looks at the prevalence of SQL injection vulnerabilities ( via Bruce Schneier ). He tested 708 different servers and found verbose SQL errors on 80 of them (11.3%) - numbers that are not, as Michael says, surprising but are certainly sobering. Michael acknowledges that his method is imperfect...
    Posted to Tim Marman's Loosely Coupled (Weblog) by Tim on 10-12-2006
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