Bork Bork Bork! 1.8

My Mozilla Firefox & Thunderbird extension Bork Bork Bork! has been updated for Mozilla Firefox 3.5. Bork Bork Bork! is a Swedish Chef (of Muppets fame) travesty filter and URL blocker. View web pages or (junk) mail as spoken by the Swedish Chef like this…

My Muzeella Fureffux & Thoonderburd ixtenseeun Bork Bork Bork! hes beee updeted fur Muzeella Fureffux 3.5. Bork Bork Bork! is a Svedeesh Cheff trefesty feelter und URL blucker. Feeoo veb peges oor (joonk) meeel es spukee by zee Svedeesh Cheff leeke-a thees.

It is available directly from:

Shorter URL Links

Joshua Schachter has written an article about The Great Linkrot Apocalypse related to the use of URL shortening services (TinyURL.com, twhirl.nl, bit.ly, snurl.com, is.gd, digg.com, etc.). Chris Shiflett along with several others are actively discussing proposals such as A rev=”canonical” HTTP Header that a site publisher can use to specify their own recommended short URL, rather than rely on a 3rd party service.

Sites like PHP.net and Flickr have already added support for many of the ideas discussed. But what is really required is that there be more adoption by blogs, social network sites like twitter and identi.ca, and applications like twhirl and tweetdeck.

To that end there is already a WordPress plugin called Shorter Links, which having installed it here works very nicely and I assume the author will continue to track the developments in this space. There is also a tool to test self-published shortened URLs.

One can also follow the twitter discussion thread about #revcanonical.

Windows System Tools

I’ve been having some trouble with my Windows XP SP3 machine the past 72 hours. Suspect either a bad update to either Windows, the anti-virus scanner, or something more sinister. @n3wjack pointed me at some of the tools he recommends and figured I should share my favourites too:

  • Malwarebytes Anti-Malware – the best malware detection tool I’ve used to date that works! Will catch things that an up to date AV, adware, and spyware scanners fail to find. If you suspect you have a problem, get this tool, update it, and do a quick scan. Odds are this tool will save you from a tedious system wipe and rebuild.
  • Avast! Home Edition – free for private and personal use. This has been the one I’ve been using for a couple of years now. See AV Comparitives.
  • NOD32 – commercial AV with free trial, not yet tried this, but I’m told by a fellow sys.admin. friend that swears it is the fastest, least resource consuming. See AV Comparitives.
  • Vipre – another colleague suggested last night this AV scanner, but it appears to be completely unknown underdog. But I trust the source of the suggestion.
  • ClamAV for Windows – free open source anti-virus scanner; however it lacks an on-access scanner, which is essential for being alerted to problems quickly. Have tried to find add-on on-access scanners for ClamWin, but not yet found a suitable one. ClamWin is great for whole disk scanning though, but with modern disk being so big, how often do you bother to scan a whole disk or individual files.
  • System Internals Tools – bought out by Microsoft, they have a superior Process Explorer, and many many other neat power user / admin. tools.
  • Tweak UI – part of the Microsoft Power Toys suite and essential for customising Windows behaviour, like turning off the annoying “Ballon Tips” or disabling CD/DVD autorun to prevent installation of the evil PC Friendly (causes nothing but grief) or other potential nasties the studios try to slip onto a machine, like DRM root kits.
  • Registry Guide – formerly regedit.com and winguides.com, they used to provide a Windows helpfile download showing many many handy registry keys, but now it’s only available online (grrr). Documents much of what you can change using TweakUI or regedit.exe. Handy information for locking down a Windows computer. Here’s an out of date copy of the last free Registry Guide downloadable.
  • SiSoftware Sandra Lite – everything you wanted to know about your computer hardware.
  • Memory Testing – A comprehensive free memory testing tool.
  • SpeedTest – a handy bandwidth testing web site. BTW it helps if you know where your network provider’s “peering” is done in order to compute favourable results.
  • Ranish Partition Manager – a free tool for resizing and managing primary & extendied disk partitions. Handy if you want to setup dual boot systems.
  • Admin. Password Reset Tool – have you ever forgotten the admin. password for your Windows system or have you ever had to service someone’s machine to remove virii and needed admin. access.
  • Treesize Free – handy tool for seeing what the size of directories are and where you might be wasting disk space. Also handy for estimating CD/DVD backup sizes. I have a copy of the older TreeSize Pro 2.4 which is just brill.

When it comes to AV tools, I’ve given up on Symantec and McAfee. I think they’re past their heyday. Symantec Norton Anti-Virus is a resource pig that can slow a Windows machine down at least (I estimate) 20%, certainly noticeable; the user interface is slow; and frankly it misses catching virus, trojans, spyware, etc. In my humble opinion its rubbish. As for McAfee, I stopped using it some where around Windows 98, when it just stopped being as affective in identifying malware. At the time I switched to Norton AV and was happy for a long time until Windows XP and performance problems started appearing. I’ve not revisited McAfee since, but frankly if I’m going to pay for an AV, I’m going to trying something different, like NOD32.

Forget about installing adware or spyware detection tools; remove them if you have. Frankly I do not trust these tools to not be the actual source of adware and spyware themselves. This should be the job of a good and well known anti-virus scanner. The only tool I’ve come to trust that I’ve seen catch stuff that an AV scanner have missed has been Malwarebytes. I recommend running this even if you have an AV scanner.

The above are just some of the handy tools I’ve kept booked marked for emergencies or use on a daily basis. I have others I could probably mention, but for Windows sys.admin. and field support the above is a good place to start and should keep you calm enough to get the job done. You’ll still curse Windows as rubbish, but at least it you might be able to fix it enough to tolerate it longer.

Update 2009-10-07:

  • Avira AntiVir Personal – free for personal use. I’ve been using this for the past 10 months as I’ve found it to be less resource intensive (aka faster) than Avast! and just as good. It lacks many of the extra features of Avast!, such as SMTP, POP, IMAP, P2P, IM, and web scanning, but then for power users who are aware of the pitfalls, use secure channels, and use tools already adapted to their situation, like Firefox web browser, then Avira’s light weight nature compared to Avast! will be better. Still for the average joe unfamiliar with internet security, Avast! Home Edition will probably be a more comprehensive solution.

BarricadeMX 2.2

Today my partners, FSL, and I announced the release of BarricadeMX 2.2, the latest version of my comprehensive anti-spam software for POSIX mail servers, in particular Linux, OpenBSD, and FreeBSD. In addition versions for Windows and Mac OS X have been ported and are currently being tested.

Along with the usual plethora of speed, accuracy, and bug fixes that are part of any major release, are several new features and enhancements:

Enhanced Message-ID for Email Watermark (EMEW) Version 2
Improved outbound message “water-marking” reduces the threat of Denial of Service due to “bounce message” floods. With EMEW it is now possible to selectively apply different secrets by individual sender, sender domain, or sender account for outbound tagging and validation of of inbound non-delivery reports or content white listing of replies. This allows an ISP to apply EMEW only for those domains known to use the ISP outbound mail servers exclusively and exclude those domains that might use a mixed mail server model.
Attachment Reject Policies
Using simple file name patterns, deny attachments based on attachment
name, content-type, and/or file names found in .zip and .rar compressed
archives.
Time limited recipient addresses
Easily generate safe and disposable time limited email addresses as part of user’s regular mail address. Intended for use by users who want to supply short lived addresses to questionable web sites registration forms or mailing lists.
Digest DNS Blacklist Support
Originally intended for use with the Malware Hash Registry, it can be used with other similar blacklists. Support for other distributed hashes, such as Vipul’s Razor, Pyzor, and DCC is being considered.
Sophos AV Support
Sophos AV has been added to the already supported AV engines: Avast, ClamAV, F-Prot.
More RFC Supprot
RFC 1652 8BITMIME simple pass-through support now advertised with EHLO capabilities list.

RFC 1870 SMTP SIZE parameter extension supported and can be used in conjunction with the existing access-map size limitation tags length-connect:, length-from:, and length-to: for rejections based on SIZE at RCPT TO: command instead of end of message.

DNS, URI, and NS BL Additions
Now possible to check IP addresses and URI found within selected headers against blacklists. Also experimental options to check URI name servers against specialised NS blacklists now available.

Technical questions concerning the software or documentation, please contact me via SnertSoft directly. Otherwise to arrange for demos, discuss pricing, speciality needs, or other POSIX based platforms please contact my partners FSL.

Upgrade to WP 2.7

Have finally updated the blog software to WordPress 2.7. Not as painful as I was anticipating.

I have a theory if you anticipate the worst, things typically work first go, but you waste lots of time and energy being paranoid; of course that one time you’re not paranoid or too complacent about installing an upgrade happens to be that one time when the shit hits the fan. The same is true with computer hardware; when you install a new interface card or memory and carefully close up the box, before testing the new hardware, you always end up having to reopen the box because: the card / memory wasn’t seated properly; you unseated a cable by accident that just happened to get caught on your sleeve cuff button; forget to reconnect a cable you disconnected so you get your hands inside, etc. Sometimes I think Murphy was the court jester to God.