Re: gibberish defacement?

From: John Sage (jsage@finchhaven.com)
Date: 02/04/02


Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2002 12:42:17 -0800
From: John Sage <jsage@finchhaven.com>
To: Oliver Petruzel <oliverpetruzel@email.com>

umm..

So google returns web pages given any fragment from the text you posted.

Did you actually *go* to any of the pages google returns?

Here's *more* of the text from one such page:

See: http://www.weddinglinks.ca/samplesite/mainframe.htm

"...This is just an example

you can customize this page to suite your needs.

Do not read this it is just Mumbo Jumbo..."

It looks like boilerplate text filled into a table by a web publishing program; kinda like that old "lorem dipsit blah blah blah..." that PageMaker used to have (maybe still does...)

- John

-- 
Most people don't type their own logfiles;  but, what do I care?

On Mon, Feb 04, 2002 at 10:29:44PM +0800, Oliver Petruzel wrote: > Does anyone have any history with the following gibberish? : > > ------------ begin snippet > > "through a top-down, proactive approach we can remain customer focused and goal-directed, innovate and be an inside-out organization which facilitates sticky web-readiness transforming turnkey eyeballs to brand 24/365 paradigms with benchmark turnkey channels implementing viral e-services and dot-com action-items while we take that action item off-line and raise a red flag and remember touch base as you think about the red tape outside of the box and seize > > B2B e-tailers and re-envisioneer innovative partnerships that evolve dot-com initiatives delivering synergistic earballs to incentivize B2B2C deliverables that leverage magnetic solutions to synergize clicks-and-mortar earballs while facilitating one-to-one action-items with revolutionary relationships that deliver viral markets and grow e-business supply-chains that expedite seamless relationships and transform back-end relationships withthrough a top-down, proactive approach we can remain customer focused and goal-directed, innovate and be an inside-out organization which facilitates sticky web-readiness transforming turnkey eyeballs to brand 24/365 paradigms > > with benchmark turnkey channels implementing viral e-services and dot-com action-items while we take that action item off-line and raise a red flag and remember touch base as you think about the red tape outside of the box and seize B2B e-tailers and re-envisioneer innovative partnerships that evolve dot-com initiatives delivering synergistic earballs to incentivize" > > ---------- end snippet > > Searching for lines of the above gibberish on Google, you will see numerous websites that appear to have been defaced or...something...?? > > I've encountered both Nix and IIS sites with this issue today... > > Any ideas? > ./op

---------------------------------------------------------------------------- This list is provided by the SecurityFocus ARIS analyzer service. For more information on this free incident handling, management and tracking system please see: http://aris.securityfocus.com



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Google Groups now has a verification requirement to post!
    ... interpret the gibberish they put on the screen. ... It does seem to be helping. ... I can't believe it's taken Google THIS LONG to fix this problem. ...
    (rec.games.pinball)
  • Re: Google Groups Beta Terms of Use
    ... tony made up the following gibberish: ... > It is google who runs the newsgroups and as for your childish remark, ...
    (uk.rec.motorcycles)
  • Re: Google Groups now has a verification requirement to post!
    ... I posted this with no verifications. ... interpret the gibberish they put on the screen. ... I can't believe it's taken Google THIS LONG to fix this problem. ...
    (rec.games.pinball)
  • Re: Hipcrime
    ... Google 'Hipcrime' - he was the name of a Usenet spammer who sent lots of ... articles containing gibberish to drown out the actual traffic. ... I did Google before posting my original query, ...
    (uk.railway)
  • Re: new yahoo 80s group to join!
    ... umm, i've been using google for years now! ... If you knew full-well how to use it, you'd follow their recommendations ...
    (uk.culture.nostalgia.1980s)