Alareth
Philosopher
Apparently, yfrog is really easy to hack
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...ans-twitter-account-might-be-yfrogs-fault.ars
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...ans-twitter-account-might-be-yfrogs-fault.ars
Two things: first, starting a message with @____ is different than having a @____ within the message. The second, and perhaps more relevant to your observation, is addressed below:
http://blog.twitter.com/2008/05/how-replies-work-on-twitter-and-how.html
That hilighted bit seems to be what you're observing. I don't use twitter, so that page is where I'm getting my information from. So I guess there's a third way that people could have found the message, but I don't know how often people actually go to his profile page rather than just follow his feed. Possibly not very often.
I don't get this point. If this guy was willing to be dishonest toward his wife (of 11 months) then why would anyone expect him to be honest toward his constituents ?
It's bloody obvious that he was. He knew some compost was about to hit the fan. The only way he could have known that would be if he were about to throw it.I do not know, and do not claim to know, whether that guy was following both parties or whether he had changed his settings.
There are actually perfectly legitimate reasons for a married man to have a suggestive picture of himself that he could tweet to somebody. So it doesn't matter whether it is Weiner's stuff.The issue is his suspicious handling of the matter. The picture itself is just a brief bit of congress critter humor. Weiner has unnecessarily brought the focus to this by his apparent attempts to hide the truth.
http://www.justice.gov/criminal/cybercrime/reporting.htm
In case knowing how to find this information is too much to ask of a federal lawmaker with 10+ years experience and his legal advisors, I'm sure the local police department has a copy of this information.
My email account was hacked last month. Did I call the police? The FBI? No. What do you think they would've done had I reported it? Nothing.
I'm guessing Rep W. realizes the authorities have more pressing issues than hacked Twitter/Facebook accounts.
The issue is his suspicious handling of the matter. The picture itself is just a brief bit of congress critter humor. Weiner has unnecessarily brought the focus to this by his apparent attempts to hide the truth.
So his attempts to keep his private life private is in itself bringing trouble onto himself?
So, as I said earlier, it's in the realm of federal law enforcement who were all aware of the allegations as soon as this hit the national press.
For a Congressman to start crying for an investigation might be seen as petty whining.
Aware of =/= Investigating. It normally takes a complaint to start an investigation.So, as I said earlier, it's in the realm of federal law enforcement who were all aware of the allegations as soon as this hit the national press.
I don't disagree with this, but you made it sound as if it is difficult to know who to call - which is complete rubbish.Also, viewing it as a prank sounds more and more plausible.
And, as I mentioned, Wiener might have something (non-criminal) he wants to hide even if he were the victim of a prank (and didn't send the photo himself).
I think people are reading far too much into his not contacting the police.
My email account was hacked last month. Did I call the police? The FBI? No. What do you think they would've done had I reported it? Nothing.
I'm guessing Rep W. realizes the authorities have more pressing issues than hacked Twitter/Facebook accounts.
Which has nothing to do with my quote. This event has persisted simply due to the way he has handled it and his evasive answers.There are actually perfectly legitimate reasons for a married man to have a suggestive picture of himself that he could tweet to somebody. So it doesn't matter whether it is Weiner's stuff.
This is far from proof that he sent it to anyone to whom he had no business sending it.
No, his private life became public when the photo was posted. If he would have come clean and said it's a private matter between the woman, me and my wife, that would have been the end of it. Instead we have a claim of hacking with no contacting the police, hiring lawyers, and evasive answers which all leads to suspicion of lying and coverups.So his attempts to keep his private life private is in itself bringing trouble onto himself?
Apparently your partisan bias is showing or you haven't been following the facts.Apparently, all one has to do is make an accusation, and then gauge the response of the person being accused in order to determine guilt.
I've told you this before: it doesn't matter if they're aware of the story, they won't start an investigation unless there's a criminal complaint.
Aware of =/= Investigating. It normally takes a complaint to start an investigation.
Did the hackers actions cause you public embarrasment, strain your marriage, cost you legal/PR fees, and potentially harm your career?
I don't disagree with this, but you made it sound as if it is difficult to know who to call - which is complete rubbish.
Apparently your partisan bias is showing or you haven't been following the facts.
CNN:
The website biggovernment.com, run by conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart, first reported the photo of a man's lower body in underwear being posted on Weiner's Twitter account in connection with a tweet to a Seattle woman. The woman, identified as a 21-year-old college student, subsequently issued a statement to the New York Daily News in which she said she never had met Weiner though she followed him on Twitter and had once jokingly referred to him as her "boyfriend" in a tweet. She indicated that the post had come from someone other than Weiner, and added that "this person had harassed me many times."
"I am not sure whether or not this letter will alleviate any future harassment," said the statement by Gennette Nicole Cordova, published Sunday by the Daily News. "I also do not have a clear understanding as to how or why exactly I am involved in this fiasco. I do know that my life has been seriously impacted by speculation and faulty allegations. My reputation has been called into question by those who lack the character to report the facts."
<snip>
The photo and others posted on Weiner's account have been taken down, and Cordova also has removed her Facebook and Twitter accounts. In her letter to the Daily News, she said she recognized the Twitter account of the tweet that sent her the photo.
"Friday evening I logged onto Twitter to find that I had about a dozen new mentions in less than an hour, which is a rare occurrence," Cordova's letter said. "When I checked one of the posts that I had been tagged in, I saw that it was a picture that had supposedly been tweeted to me by Congressman Anthony Weiner. The account that these tweets were sent from was familiar to me; this person had harassed me many times after the congressman followed me on Twitter a month or so ago. Since I had dealt with this person and his cohorts before I assumed that the tweet and the picture were their latest attempts at defaming the congressman and harassing his supporters."