For someone who isn't 17, I have to admit that I spend a fair amount of time digging around in MySpace and trying to understand how all the pieces fit together. Indeed, MySpace help is an an important element of my tech Q&A blog too (where I offer
One possibility would be to fax in credentials, but that's just as open to spoofing. It's a very tricky problem, actually, and one that I imagine will be exploited with all sorts of social engineering hacks and related.
Y'know, more than just about any other site I visit, MySpace still feels like the lawless Wild West of the earlier Internet days. In addition to these inane and empty promises to make a better, safer MySpace, I'd like to see MySpace Chief Security Officer Hemanshu Nigam explain how the company is going to tighten up the overall environment so that there are less spam profiles, less spam comments and less spam email sent to legitimate MySpace users. Without these filters, I believe it's only a matter of time before people migrate to cleaner, less noisy and chaotic environments.
Meanwhile, my reportcard for today's announcement: A good effort, but the proof is in the implementation, and without addressing other fundamental problems within the MySpace world, the company will not being able to retain its "busiest site on the Web" distinction for long.
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