The Anonymous Widower

Has HMRC Moved To Brazil?

This spam e-mail wasn’t written by the sharpest knife in the drawer.

Tax Refund Notification

After the last annual calculation of your fiscal activity, we have determined that you are eligible to receive a tax refund of 973.90 GBP. Please submit the refund request and allow 5-7 days for processing.

Click Here To Claim Your Refund http://ocenomato.com.br/pantanal/galeria/xxxxx.xxx

Best Regards,
HM Revenue & Customs

But it might fool someone.  Let’s hope it’s not you! After all, they’d stop sending them, if they didn’t find a mug in each batch they send.

But do note the Brazilian web site! The xxxx’s hide a dangerous web page, so don’t try and access it.

June 5, 2011 Posted by | Computing, World | , , , , | 4 Comments

An Alternative Approach To Stopping Spam

This article based on research done by three eminent Universities; University of California-San Diego, the University of California-Berkeley, and the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, shows that the best way to stop spam might be to go for the banks who process the money for the spammers.

It would appear that just a few banks are involved. Here’s what the article says.

However, when it comes to banking, the bottlenecks are far more severe, and switching is far more difficult. One bank alone was used to settle more than 60 percent of all transactions, and the top three banks—Azerigazbank in Azerbaijan, St Kitts & Nevis Anguilla National Bank in St Kitts &Nevis, and Danish-owned DnB Nord in Latvia—together accounted for more than 95 percent of all money paid to spam vendors. The implication is that many banks simply won’t deal with spam outfits. Even when switching does occur, it’s disruptive, with payment processors typically introducing delays of days or weeks for due diligence to be performed.

Surely, no honest person would trust these banks with their money.

So we shouldn’t give up on our spam filters, but constantly chase the routes that the money takes to get to the criminals. After all the researchers used just 100 purchases to obtain their findings.  So shouldn’t Western and other governments pool some researchers and money to find more rogue banks and then eliminate them from payments systems worldwide.

June 1, 2011 Posted by | Computing | , , , | Leave a comment

A New Toy

This is my new Acer Iconia W-500.

Acer Iconia W-500

It’s a tablet computer that runs Windows.  When I get my network sorted, I’ll use it to demonstrate Daisy and also to browse on my travels to access my bank account, Zopa and GMail.

I think I might write some stroke-friendly software for the device. Of course, it will be in Visual Basic 6. You might ask why I don’t want an iPad.

The reason is simple.  Real programmers don’t use Apple products and anyway, I’d need to learn a whole new set of progrmming tools.  As it is virtually all of the software, I’ve written will run on this machine. I won’t need to buy anything else, except possibly a case to protect it.  But it does fit my manbag.

Here’s an old joke.

Q: How do you make an Apple go faster?

A: Drop it from a higher building.

May 29, 2011 Posted by | Computing, World | , , , | 6 Comments

Faster Rural Broadband

It has been announced that the first round of funding has been agreed for faster rural broadband.

I am not a high consumer of broadband capacity, as most of my on-line activity is e-mail and blogging. 

However, I’m a strong believer that every home and business should have superfast broadband, as this will be one of the ways to create employment everywhere.

It can’t be installed everywhere too soon!

May 27, 2011 Posted by | Computing, News | , | 2 Comments

Phishing Scams From Someone Claiming to be HMRC

We all get these and some look like they come from sensible addresses like alert@hmrc.gov.uk.

Here’s a typical content.

Date 21/05/2011
A tax refund of 1560.10 GBP .(Still Pending) Due to invalid account record we were unable to credit your account Please submit a verified tax refund request.

A refund can be delayed for a variety of reasons. For example submitting invalid records or applying after the deadline.
Click the “Refund Me Now” link below and follow the on screen step in order to have us process your request.

Refund Me Now Note: For security reasons, we will record your ip-address, the date and time,Deliberate wrong inputs are criminally pursued and indicated.

 
Best Regards,
HM Revenue & Customs

They are all a scam designed to get your login asnd password to the HMRC web site.

They show all of the typical mistakes of scammers.

  1. Why would they say 2510 GBP, when the £2510.00 would probably be used?
  2. The English is a bit clunky.  But then so is a lot of Civil Servant-speak!
  3. I especially like the last bit saying “Deliberate wrong inputs are criminally pursued and indicated.” What do they mean about indicated? Does a nice young lady all dressed like Lady Gaga in leather come round and give you a ticking off?  Now that will be fun!
  4. And then there’s the Best Regards bit! Very HMRC! I don’t think!

So what should you do with these e-mails, other than comply with what they say?

The real HMRC have a page which says what to do.

Note this clear statement on the page.

HMRC will never send notifications of a tax rebate by email, or ask you to disclose personal or payment information by email.

You should never disclose your personal and/or payment information in reply to an email that may look like it’s from HMRC, you may well be revealing your details to a fraudulent website.

 

It also says you should forward them to phishing@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk

I shall be sending a few today, so let’s see what happens.

May 26, 2011 Posted by | Computing, World | , , , | Leave a comment

Does the NHS Computer Records Fiasco Create an Opportunity?

I am certainly convinced and there are many others out there of the need to have a wordwide on-line database with the important details of my health records.

In my case, I think it should contain such things as.

  1. GP and specialist contact details.
  2. A health summary.  Most people could write that themselves.
  3. Repeat prescriptions. 
  4. Test results for things like INR, B12 etc.
  5. Eye and hearing tests.
  6. X-ray and other images. It is getting commonplace for specialist to give you these, but all we need is for them to be in a standard image form. 
  7. E-mails from health professionals.

You would be responsible for the uploading of the data.  In many cases it would just be ticking a box or writing a simple sentence.

Suppose someone was to provide such a service, then I would use it a shot. Someone might already have created such a database, but I’ve not heard of it.

People will worry about privacy, but then look at the average Facebook page.  A lot of much more confidential information is often published there.

So go for it! There is a lot of money to be made!

And money to be saved by health consumers.

Imagine on a simple level you lose your glasses on holiday.  If you’ve uploaded your prescription, you could probably walk into any optician and get new glasses quickly.  Whether they’d want to supply without giving you an expensive eye test, would be up to the optician, but in most cases you’d be fixed up without trouble.

May 18, 2011 Posted by | Computing, Health | | Leave a comment

The NHS Computer Records Fiasco

Fiasco is not too strong a word for it, as this report shows.

Isn’t the whole NHS records missing project something here?

If I deal with my bank, solicitor, utility and phone companies, or many shops, I can go on-line to see what is there and communicate directly by e-mail, telephone or post as I require.

Where is that objective in the specification?

After all we can’t let patients see what’s wrong with them as it would be a breach of their confidentiality!

But my body and mind are generally under my control, so why shouldn’t I have the right of access? In some ways, it’s going that way, as my previous GP let me read my past records without any cost or hindrance. Also nearly everything about me from Addenbrooke’s has either been copied to me directly by post and in some cases e-mail.

Interestingly, when the practice nurse and I went through my records a few years ago, we could see the pattern of coeliac disease , which no-one had picked up. I know this was with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight and nothing really serious was missed, but is the reason doctors don’t like patients seeing their records, is that they might get sued? Doctors have told me my atrial fibrillation is fairly obvious, so perhaps I should have been referred to a cardiologist before I had the first stroke?

But what is the past is best forgotten!

I should say one thing though.  In Hong Kong when I had the stroke, they wanted to know my cholesterol levels, to check them against.  As I put them on this blog, they were able to read them.  So now, I put things like that up here, so that if I need them at any time, they are there.

Surely, this illustrates the power of an on-line database, where we all have a simple ID/Password system so that we can access the data.

If I could access my bank records from any Internet connection and a browser, why can’t I do the same with my health records?

May 18, 2011 Posted by | Computing, Health | | Leave a comment

Super Injunctions and Deep Searching Software

I have written software that in the past has been used to deep search the Internet.  I did it when a company asked me if I could help trace anybody stealing their IPR.  I didn’t find anything at all and in that case that was a good result, as it meant there had been no theft.

However software like that could be easily written to deep search the Internet for relationships that shouldn’t be happening.  Let’s say two well-known Premiership managers decided to have a good lunch together after the season in a good restaurant. As well they might! Someone might see them and put the story in a blog or tweet and unless someone else was searching for it deliberately it wouldn’t be found.  But the deep search software would find it, if it was properly set up, say with a database of the names of all Premiership managers and footballers.

So just as Google tracks the links with its search terms, other software can be written to find relationships.

So celebrities had better be even more careful.

May 9, 2011 Posted by | Computing, News | , , | Leave a comment

CFX Group

I’ve just had this e-mail from someone purporting to be the CFX Group.

Dear Customer

Your order has been accepted.

Order id: 879305.

Terms of delivery and the date can be found with the auto-generated msword file located at:

http:/www.noarconsulting.com/xxxx.xxx.xxx

Consult2 Group. Tel./Fax.: (831) 842 06 366

The link which I have replaced with safe xxx’s, pointed to a .zip file, which probably would have infected my computer with who-knows-what!

I have since heard from the owner of the URL and they have said this.

Our website was recently hacked by spammers to distribute malware.

You can safely ignore any email referring to an order placed with us.

 

We are sorry for the inconvenience caused.

So whatever you do, don’t click the link.

May 6, 2011 Posted by | Computing | , , | 17 Comments

Google 10th Anniversary Awards Centre

I received an e-mail saying I’d won.

 It’s a scam.

If you don’t believe me!  Just think why it’s not been on the news!

May 3, 2011 Posted by | Computing, World | , , | 1 Comment