Followers
Monday, 24 September 2012
Don't Be A Victim of Scam!
Credit to : http://www.maybank2u.com.my/mbb_info/m2u/public/personalDetail04.do?channelId=Personal&cntTypeId=0&cntKey=OB04.01&programId=OB-OnlineBanking&chCatId=%2Fmbb%2FPersonal
Maybank will NEVER send out emails with attachments or links leading to Maybank2u.com. DO NOT click on unknown email links from any “Maybank emails”.
Even the most alert of us can get scammed. Never assume you won’t be hit.
Scam Alert!
Never assume you won't fall victim to phishing scams. Be alert towards any emails requesting your particulars or to apply for a TAC number. DO NOT log in to Maybank2u.com via any email links.
Phone Scam
If you receive calls regarding credit cards or loans claiming to be from any financial institutions, please DO NOT share your username, password and TAC number. DO NOT respond to requests to update 3rd party TAC mobile number.
Nevertheless, we encourage you to take precaution when giving out any confidential information (including your credit card number) over the Internet/phone or any other channel.
How to prevent yourself from being victims of phishing scams!
Here are some easy steps to help you identify a phishing scam:
1. Email Phishing Scams
Sample phishing scam email #1
Sample phishing scam email #2
2. Manually Key in URL
Always manually type our URL address www.maybank2u.com.my into your browser to ensure that you are in the authentic Maybank2u.com website
3. Site Authentication
Before entering your username and password, observe the lock icon located next to the browser's address bar. The certificate should only be for www.maybank2u.com.my and no other. DO NOT click on any lock icons on the webpage itself. If you do not see any lock icon as shown in the images below, DO NOT PROCEED.
Internet Explorer
Firefox
Google Chrome
Safari
4. Image Verification
ONLY log in if you see your chosen image and phrase.
If you see any other Image, Phrase, or any of the samples shown below, DO NOT PROCEED.
Sample
• ENSURE the image and phrase shown is the one you personally chose.
• DO NOT key in your password if the image is not available.
• DO NOT key in your password if the image is "Loading".
Maybank will NEVER request for your personal banking ID, PIN number, TAC number and credit card information. Protect yourself. Don't fall into the phishing trap.
5. Update Your Browser
The latest version of several browsers can detect and warn you of many phishing sites. If you see a phishing warning message on your browser, DO NOT PROCEED.
For a safer internet banking experience, always download the latest version of your internet browser.
The bare minimum for better browser security is:
Internet Explorer 8/9
Mozilla Firefox 5.0.1
Google Chrome 13
Apple Safari 5.1
iPhone Jailbreaking and the DMCA
Credit to : http://internetjustice.blogspot.com/2010/12/iphone-jailbreaking-and-dmca.html
By Sinny T.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) was originally enacted to prohibit “circumvention” of digital rights management and “other technical protection measures” used to protect and control access to copyrighted works. The DMCA has since cast a wide net to protect copyrighted material even when the use of the copyright materials arguably may be permissible under fair use guidelines.
In order to curtail DMCA’s overly restrictive implications, the DMCA provides that the Library of Congress possesses the power to define exceptions under the DMCA for legitimate, non-infringing uses of copyrighted material. Pursuant to this power the Librarian of Congress has recently issued a public statement declaring that it was legal to bypass a cell phone’s operating system (particularly iPhone) on the particular software it will run to get “lawfully obtained” programs to operate.
Apple, Inc. has maintained tight control over the types of programs allowed to run on the iPhone, namely, applications (a.k.a. Apps) pre-approved by Apple and which only could be purchased through the App Store. But, with the Library of Congress’ new ruling, Apple’s ability to police and prohibit jailbroken iPhones has vanished. A jailbroken iphone allows the user to bypass the restriction Apple places on iPhones to only allow the installation of applications from the App Store.
Here’s how the argument had developed over this issue between Apple and “jailbreakers”:
Apple argues that it has the right to control the software on its devices and jailbroken, altered phones infringes upon Apple’s copyright for Apple’s operating system. Apple further argues that altering the phone encourages pirated applications, exposes iPhones to security risks, and hampers the user’s overall iPhone experience.
Jailbreaking proponents, however, argue that users should be allowed to customize their phones as they see fit and to have freedom to use features or programs that fall outside of the App Store. Furthermore, allowing this ability to customize phones will in fact bolster iPhone sales and appeal when Apple would not have such a restrictive grip over its products and application store.
The current Library of Congress ruling allows jailbreaking iPhone users a big sigh of relief as to fear of prosecution. The ruling also alleviates any concerns about bringing a jailbroken iPhone into the Apple Store for repair or analysis.
Although negative publicity over the leak of a secret phone prototype and iPhone 4 antenna problems have chipped away Apple’s iron control over its products, sales figures have not been impacted. Consumers continue to purchase Apple products regardless of any government ruling or unsavory publicity.
The Library of Congress exception has also allowed artists to remix copyright-protected video content for noncommercial work, and renewed its approval for cellphone owners to “unlock” their devices in order to allow its operation under other wireless carriers.
By Sinny T.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) was originally enacted to prohibit “circumvention” of digital rights management and “other technical protection measures” used to protect and control access to copyrighted works. The DMCA has since cast a wide net to protect copyrighted material even when the use of the copyright materials arguably may be permissible under fair use guidelines.
In order to curtail DMCA’s overly restrictive implications, the DMCA provides that the Library of Congress possesses the power to define exceptions under the DMCA for legitimate, non-infringing uses of copyrighted material. Pursuant to this power the Librarian of Congress has recently issued a public statement declaring that it was legal to bypass a cell phone’s operating system (particularly iPhone) on the particular software it will run to get “lawfully obtained” programs to operate.
Apple, Inc. has maintained tight control over the types of programs allowed to run on the iPhone, namely, applications (a.k.a. Apps) pre-approved by Apple and which only could be purchased through the App Store. But, with the Library of Congress’ new ruling, Apple’s ability to police and prohibit jailbroken iPhones has vanished. A jailbroken iphone allows the user to bypass the restriction Apple places on iPhones to only allow the installation of applications from the App Store.
Here’s how the argument had developed over this issue between Apple and “jailbreakers”:
Apple argues that it has the right to control the software on its devices and jailbroken, altered phones infringes upon Apple’s copyright for Apple’s operating system. Apple further argues that altering the phone encourages pirated applications, exposes iPhones to security risks, and hampers the user’s overall iPhone experience.
Jailbreaking proponents, however, argue that users should be allowed to customize their phones as they see fit and to have freedom to use features or programs that fall outside of the App Store. Furthermore, allowing this ability to customize phones will in fact bolster iPhone sales and appeal when Apple would not have such a restrictive grip over its products and application store.
The current Library of Congress ruling allows jailbreaking iPhone users a big sigh of relief as to fear of prosecution. The ruling also alleviates any concerns about bringing a jailbroken iPhone into the Apple Store for repair or analysis.
Although negative publicity over the leak of a secret phone prototype and iPhone 4 antenna problems have chipped away Apple’s iron control over its products, sales figures have not been impacted. Consumers continue to purchase Apple products regardless of any government ruling or unsavory publicity.
The Library of Congress exception has also allowed artists to remix copyright-protected video content for noncommercial work, and renewed its approval for cellphone owners to “unlock” their devices in order to allow its operation under other wireless carriers.
Dodgy sex tape the least of M'sia's many problems
Credit to : http://www.malaysiakini.com/letters/160118
Rajiv Nambiar
5:44PM Mar 30, 2011
As I write this, our nation has been recently rocked by yet another scandal.
This time around it alleges a well known politician was involved in an ‘immoral' act recorded in a room in Kuala Lumpur.
I wonder what our nation has come to, as we always seem to make world headlines for all the wrong reasons.
The world mourns the loss of lives in Japan, Libya is under attack, Yemen is on the verge of collapse and a potentially calamitous climate change is set to take place.
Yet all the attention in Malaysia is on an ‘illegally' filmed sex act which may or may not involve the said politician at all.
In the eyes of the average Malaysian, this issue has been blown out of proportion. I was on Twitter a week ago when the news of this video first came out and my immediate reaction was that ‘This is definitely going to make front page news tomorrow!'
But what's saddening is that nobody seems to look beyond a politician being involved in a sex act.
Firstly, the point that comes into mind is that the people who have exposed the video should have been arrested for possession of pornographic material under Section 292 of the Penal code.
Moreover, now that a police report has been lodged by the said politician and many have followed suit, it's important that the police carry out their duties efficiently and transparently.
To leave all this aside and to look at this whole fiasco from the average Malaysian's standpoint of view is a whole different matter.
That's where I'm coming from.
I am the average Malaysian and it bothers me to think that all the government and the media could think of since the 2008 elections only concerns the ruling coalition and the opposition.
The ‘people' has been neglected in my opinion. Let's look at the said sex clip scandal first.
The facts as we know them today are that the video was filmed in a hotel room in KL involving ‘someone' performing sex acts with a prostitute.
Now as a Malaysian, I am not concerned about the ‘someone' who was filmed in the video. I am more concerned over which hotel is it in KL that provides prostitutes to customers? Why hasn't the authorities spoken anything about this?
Prostitution is rife in KL and one only needs to go to Bukit Bintang and other places like it to assert the truth about these claims.
There are massage parlours that promotes vice in every nook and corner in KL and also everywhere around the country. Why has nothing been done to stop the spread of this? Shouldn't there be some kind of enforcement?
On a different note, my city is tainted with irresponsible and ill mannered cabbies, dirty toilets and endless amounts of potholes in and around every major road, yet all we could think of discussing about right now is about a dubious porn clip?
I am bewildered whenever I drive around KL because I get the impression that authorities are not concerned about their people at all. The Federal Highway is badly jammed all the time.
Whenever it rains, roads around KL are packed to the brim and traffic policemen are nowhere to be seen.
Public transportation is atrocious. We speak about controlling the rate of climate change, but take a drive around KL and you will know why this is unachievable if not a distant dream.
Public buses are not well maintained and we could see that every other day at least one bus breaks down in the middle of the road and thus causes traffic congestion which often stretches for hours.
So much black smoke is emitted from these buses that at times it is almost impossible to see the road while driving behind it.
What are the authorities doing?
If buses aren't bad enough, let's look at another mode of public transport - KTM Komuter. Every day during peak hours these trains are packed like sardine cans and it amazes me to think that there are people traveling on it every day!
I took a train recently after a hiatus of almost two years and I must say that nothing has changed ever since! The trains almost always arrive late and it's hot and humid inside. Illegal immigrants travel on the train like its Genting Theme Park.
Why wouldn't there be cases of pickpocketing and sexual harassment if the distance between me and the next person inside a Komuter is no further that a strand of hair?
Leaving public transportation aside, let's talk about roads. Every major road in the city is either badly laid or ridden with potholes.
It is extremely distressing to be driving under these circumstances and if potholes and bad roads aren't bad enough, these roads are also not resurfaced properly after repair work is done.
KL is filled with such roads and every day the number of such roads increases. Where is enforcement? Why has nothing been done?
What I have stated here doesn't even cover 10 percent of the actual problems that plague our country, its only an insight from a concerned Malaysian.
I am sad that all this is taking place with no action being taken about it, but whenever there is a scandal involving the ruling coalition or the opposition, it makes front page news almost immediately.
Twitter and Facebook looks like a war zone where politicians trade barbs against each other. Why can't there be a common ground when it comes to protecting the interests of the people they serve?
I love my country and I feel blessed to be a citizen of this wonderful nation. I hope politicians set their differences aside and first try to sort the problems that plague the nation rather than wasting taxpayers' money to launch a Royal Commission of Inquiry to probe a despicable porn clip.
What happens in a person's private life should remain private and shouldn't be used against him/her. It's like saying I won't listen to Ricky Martin's songs because he is gay or Bob Marley's music is bad because he is a drug addict.
If you wish to gauge a person's capability, take him on in an even battlefield where in this case it happens to be ‘politics' and ‘how to help the people'.
This way, millions need not be spent on campaigning before the General Elections because ‘we' the people already know who to vote for in the ballot box.
I urge the authorities to take into consideration the points I have raised in this letter before launching into a debate on whether there should be a Royal Commission of Inquiry to probe the authenticity of a porn clip.
There are much more pressing issues to be addressed and we are running out of time and me being the average Malaysian - is running out of patience.
Rajiv Nambiar
5:44PM Mar 30, 2011
As I write this, our nation has been recently rocked by yet another scandal.
This time around it alleges a well known politician was involved in an ‘immoral' act recorded in a room in Kuala Lumpur.
I wonder what our nation has come to, as we always seem to make world headlines for all the wrong reasons.
The world mourns the loss of lives in Japan, Libya is under attack, Yemen is on the verge of collapse and a potentially calamitous climate change is set to take place.
Yet all the attention in Malaysia is on an ‘illegally' filmed sex act which may or may not involve the said politician at all.
In the eyes of the average Malaysian, this issue has been blown out of proportion. I was on Twitter a week ago when the news of this video first came out and my immediate reaction was that ‘This is definitely going to make front page news tomorrow!'
But what's saddening is that nobody seems to look beyond a politician being involved in a sex act.
Firstly, the point that comes into mind is that the people who have exposed the video should have been arrested for possession of pornographic material under Section 292 of the Penal code.
Moreover, now that a police report has been lodged by the said politician and many have followed suit, it's important that the police carry out their duties efficiently and transparently.
To leave all this aside and to look at this whole fiasco from the average Malaysian's standpoint of view is a whole different matter.
That's where I'm coming from.
I am the average Malaysian and it bothers me to think that all the government and the media could think of since the 2008 elections only concerns the ruling coalition and the opposition.
The ‘people' has been neglected in my opinion. Let's look at the said sex clip scandal first.
The facts as we know them today are that the video was filmed in a hotel room in KL involving ‘someone' performing sex acts with a prostitute.
Now as a Malaysian, I am not concerned about the ‘someone' who was filmed in the video. I am more concerned over which hotel is it in KL that provides prostitutes to customers? Why hasn't the authorities spoken anything about this?
Prostitution is rife in KL and one only needs to go to Bukit Bintang and other places like it to assert the truth about these claims.
There are massage parlours that promotes vice in every nook and corner in KL and also everywhere around the country. Why has nothing been done to stop the spread of this? Shouldn't there be some kind of enforcement?
On a different note, my city is tainted with irresponsible and ill mannered cabbies, dirty toilets and endless amounts of potholes in and around every major road, yet all we could think of discussing about right now is about a dubious porn clip?
I am bewildered whenever I drive around KL because I get the impression that authorities are not concerned about their people at all. The Federal Highway is badly jammed all the time.
Whenever it rains, roads around KL are packed to the brim and traffic policemen are nowhere to be seen.
Public transportation is atrocious. We speak about controlling the rate of climate change, but take a drive around KL and you will know why this is unachievable if not a distant dream.
Public buses are not well maintained and we could see that every other day at least one bus breaks down in the middle of the road and thus causes traffic congestion which often stretches for hours.
So much black smoke is emitted from these buses that at times it is almost impossible to see the road while driving behind it.
What are the authorities doing?
If buses aren't bad enough, let's look at another mode of public transport - KTM Komuter. Every day during peak hours these trains are packed like sardine cans and it amazes me to think that there are people traveling on it every day!
I took a train recently after a hiatus of almost two years and I must say that nothing has changed ever since! The trains almost always arrive late and it's hot and humid inside. Illegal immigrants travel on the train like its Genting Theme Park.
Why wouldn't there be cases of pickpocketing and sexual harassment if the distance between me and the next person inside a Komuter is no further that a strand of hair?
Leaving public transportation aside, let's talk about roads. Every major road in the city is either badly laid or ridden with potholes.
It is extremely distressing to be driving under these circumstances and if potholes and bad roads aren't bad enough, these roads are also not resurfaced properly after repair work is done.
KL is filled with such roads and every day the number of such roads increases. Where is enforcement? Why has nothing been done?
What I have stated here doesn't even cover 10 percent of the actual problems that plague our country, its only an insight from a concerned Malaysian.
I am sad that all this is taking place with no action being taken about it, but whenever there is a scandal involving the ruling coalition or the opposition, it makes front page news almost immediately.
Twitter and Facebook looks like a war zone where politicians trade barbs against each other. Why can't there be a common ground when it comes to protecting the interests of the people they serve?
I love my country and I feel blessed to be a citizen of this wonderful nation. I hope politicians set their differences aside and first try to sort the problems that plague the nation rather than wasting taxpayers' money to launch a Royal Commission of Inquiry to probe a despicable porn clip.
What happens in a person's private life should remain private and shouldn't be used against him/her. It's like saying I won't listen to Ricky Martin's songs because he is gay or Bob Marley's music is bad because he is a drug addict.
If you wish to gauge a person's capability, take him on in an even battlefield where in this case it happens to be ‘politics' and ‘how to help the people'.
This way, millions need not be spent on campaigning before the General Elections because ‘we' the people already know who to vote for in the ballot box.
I urge the authorities to take into consideration the points I have raised in this letter before launching into a debate on whether there should be a Royal Commission of Inquiry to probe the authenticity of a porn clip.
There are much more pressing issues to be addressed and we are running out of time and me being the average Malaysian - is running out of patience.
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