Mon 21 Jul 2008

RSS Feed

Edited by Paul Hales

Published by Incisive Media Investments Ltd.

Terms and Conditions of use.

To advertise in Europe e-mail here

To advertise in Asia email here.

To advertise in North America email here.

Join the INQbot Mail List for a weekly guide to our news stories:

Subscribe

Youtube ban a mistake

Claims Microsoft

ALL THOSE NASTY PEOPLE who thought that Microsoft was trying to shut down Youtube by banning its links on the Messenger service were wrong, claims Vole.

Users started to mutter the words ‘anti-trust’ when Messenger started refusing to allow Youtube links to be posted on Messenger. Every link came up with the words, 'this message could not be posted.'

However a SpokesVole said that it was not part of a devilish plot to overthrow the world order, kill off Youtube and replace it with its own video. Nope, it was simply a cock-up.

Apparently, the third party which handles blocking of potentially unsafe content for MSN Messenger and Windows Live Messenger listed Youtube as a bad site, as opposed to a bad sight.

The third party blocked a couple of other legitimate sites too, but the problem has since been fixed... in the library with a lead pipe.

The block was only up for a few hours. µ

L'Inq
Cnet

Comments

ok but...

ok... but why are they scanning, filtering and blocking content at all in one to one instant messaging in the first place?
posted by : Ivor, 13 May 2008

@Ivor

To protect people from clicking on dodgy links maybe?

People have been infected by viruses in the past which caused their messenger to spam everyone on their contact list with a link, which leads to them acquiring a virus if they click on it.
posted by : BD, 13 May 2008

@BD

They are scanning for known dodgy links and it takes a criminal a minute amount of time to set up a new unknown link. so that scanning wont do any good. Am I paranoid or is the scanning a pretext for indexing what links are sent? Since the real world use of scanning will cost more then it delivers profit.
posted by : Anne Bokma, 13 May 2008

not a bad idea

Although I don't like my software telling me what I can or can't download/click, I have to admit I can see why these things exist. A lot of viruses are spread through chat programs by sending links or files to people on the infected person's contact list. It's a one-to-one instant messenger as the first commenter said, which is why the receiver believes he can trust anything that comes from his "mate".

Some people just aren't suspicious enough of these things.
posted by : Ach, 13 May 2008

Censorship planet

Meanwhile mininova IS banning mention of youtube (WTF!) by replacing it with ******.
As if their version of youtube will ever be able to compete, even with heavy-handedness
posted by : W.-, 13 May 2008

I used to love this site

µ is turning into a copy/paste rag. I expected a bit more from the first article, like, for instance, pointing out that an intentional block by microsoft is too idiotic to even consider. (who would want that kind of publicity ?)

Instead all we got was a rephrasing of whatever page you linked at the bottom. I'm not suggesting you do our thinking for us, but rehashing stupid, unfounded rumors without pointing out their flaws is not the way to go either.

oh and great follow-up article too.
posted by : dude, 13 May 2008

I'm not the biggest NF fan, but...

..."The third party blocked a couple of other legitimate sites too, but the problem has since been fixed... in the library with a lead pipe" gets my vote.

Personally, I'd have fixed it in the dining room with a candlestick, but I guess that's just style.

posted by : perisoft, 13 May 2008

darn

i guess i shouldn't give my friends links to torrents with windows live messenger anymore
posted by : tarave, 14 May 2008
IThound
Search for solutions, reports & analysis

Newsletter signup