In article <50f2da80$0$33828$c3e8da3$
a909...@news.astraweb.com>,
Warren Oates <
warren...@gmail.com> wrote:
[very amusing description of a phone conversation]
>Me: Messages? I didn't get any messages. What email address did you send
>them to?
>
>Him: No, sir, not email. The light yellow box at the bottom right of the
>computer screen.
Do Windows systems have some sort of messaging system that Microsoft
can use to put messages right on your screen? Sort of like how Comcast
sends messages to your cable TV receiver? (Although those just trigger
a light on the box; they don't show up on your screen.)
>I've read about this stuff. It seems that the unwary _will_ sit down
>right now at the computer and type in whatever the bozo tells them to
>type in. Leads to identity theft and all sorts of stuff.
I was chagrined a few months ago to see a neighbor who should know much
better (she used to work for one of the biggest antivirus companies)
click on a Google search result and then click on the resulting website
to download some software to view the schedules of a local transportation
agency. That sure didn't seem right to me; the schedule should have been
readily viewable on the website itself. It was only after I moved closer
to her desk that I realized she had mistyped the name of the agency and
was on a fake website. I sure hope she was running software to protect
her from malware. (She has a Windows system.) I'm still amazed at how
she wasn't paying a bit of attention to whether she was on the right
website or not before she clicked to download the software.
Patty