Google Blocks co.cc From Search Results 127
tekgoblin writes "Google has taken the attack on malware into its own hands today as it blocks the entire co.cc subdomain. The block removed about 11 million results from the Google search index which should dramatically clean up much malware in search results."
First post! (Score:2)
Re:First post! (Score:5, Funny)
Nope. I'm pretty sure you just posted it. Maybe you posted a dupe comment, but it's not the same exact one, just identical.
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You're doing it wrong, Russell...
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Nope. I'm pretty sure you just posted it. Maybe you posted a dupe comment, but it's not the same exact one, just identical.
Actually, a few days ago there was another comment that said" First post!". Maybe just naming yours "First response" or "First comment" would help you not to confuse yourself with other people.
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I just hope they don't block co.ck (Score:5, Funny)
That wouldn't be cool.
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Total violation of the Code of Conduct for Bros...
Re:I just hope they don't block co.ck (Score:5, Funny)
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Proper granite slabs are really the prefered long-term storage facility for such codes.
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Check out these cool pens:
Pen Island [penisland.net]
"Your pen is our business"
Re:I just hope they don't block co.ck (Score:5, Funny)
The rest, from http://www.dba-oracle.com/oracle_news/news_fun_urls.htm [dba-oracle.com]:
http://www.kidsexchange.com/ [kidsexchange.com] - Kids clothing
http://www.whorepresents.com/ [whorepresents.com] - Celebrity agents
http://www.therapistfinder.com/ [therapistfinder.com] - Site to find therapists
http://www.powergenitalia.com/ [powergenitalia.com] - Italian power generator supplier
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Well (Score:1)
Thats a bit harsh isn't it. I'm sure there is at least one legitimate .co.cc domain
They'll migrate elsewhere (Score:1)
When it comes to the justice system, some people say that it's better to allow a hundred guilty people go free than imprison one innocent person. I'm not sure if I agree with that but it's a valid point of view. However, there is no reason to apply similar principle for search engines. When the primary function is to serve the googlers and the quality of results go significantly up when blocking that domain, that's what should be done. I don't even think that there are that big ethical concerns about the si
Re:They'll migrate elsewhere (Score:5, Insightful)
> some people say that it's better to allow a hundred guilty people go free than imprison one innocent person. I'm not sure if I agree with that
If one day you are the one innocent stuck with 100 guilty people maybe you will change your mind. If you want a second opinion on this, ask the mother of Freddy Krueger.
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You're not keeping up. In today's society, it's "fuck them, as long as it isn't fuck me."
As Pastor Martin Niemöller rightly pointed out (here [wikipedia.org]), eventually it will become "fuck me", but that requires looking ahead further than tomorrow, and again, today's society doesn't encourage that kind of thinking.
This is a nice, safe way for the authorities (in this case, Google... a self-created and -appointed vector for network search) to do the work and cast a safety net over the incompetent; they are absolutel
Re:In Today's Society (Score:3)
Better to accuse 100 innocent people than let one guilty one go free!
Re:Quote from the Manual (Score:2)
"And in the end, the MAFIAA acted more like the Government, and the DHS acted more like a greedy coproration, until it was no longer possible to tell them apart."
With a nod to George Orwell - Animal Farm.
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Re:They'll migrate elsewhere (Score:4, Insightful)
If it is infinitely worse to punish one innocent, we should just close down the police and courts, as we can never be 100%, totally, without doubt certain of anybodies guilt.
If it is zero, we should start putting everybody in prison, to make sure we get everybody who is guilty.
I think we can agree that none of these scenarios are good societies, so we need to aim for something in between. But what level of doubt should be enough for not punishing a person? Until that question is answered, the phrase about a hundred guilty going free is just words that sounds nice.
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Well yes, that phrase is just words that sounds nice. You could pick the numbers 10, 1000, or any other and it would work the same. The reason is because the number isn't important. It's just an illustration of the legal doctrine of presumed innocence. The doctrine itself doesn't aim for any particular ratio of imprisoned innocent to free guilty but the level of doubt required to punish someone has been clearly established as "beyond a reasonable doubt".
Re:They'll migrate elsewhere (Score:4, Insightful)
[...] the number isn't important. It's just an illustration of the legal doctrine of presumed innocence.
But the number IS important, it defines what level of presumption of innocence our judicial system has. This is a fundamental question, and yet is isn't defined anywhere. I would assume that different people found different levels of doubt reasonable, so not defining it just leads to arbitrary justice, depending on what the particular jury or judge finds reasonable.
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Figure out a way to quantify doubt. After that, we can talk about adjusting our legal system.
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If you are executed wrongfully, your final statement will be "at least I die so that we make sure that someone is punished for every crime". ?
Your wife, your children - it's all good, so that someone is punished?
And that is the problem with the idea that it is morally acceptable to punish an innocent person for a crime they did not commit. To hold such
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That explains so much about our legal system, if basic principles are based on a complete lack of logic and/or understanding.
We don't know how large the populations of Sodom was at the time, so we have no way to evaluate the ratio of population/x, where x represents the various numbers that Abraham ask for.
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one Nigerian prince who really does want to give someone money
Who is this Nigerian prince of which you speak? I wish to make his acquaintance.
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Just shows what a bunch of crazy fuckwits hang around the Linux "community".!
Just so you know, not ALL of us are nuts...but I have to agree, that "Everything Micro$haft is t3h evil!" BS really gets on my nerves, as does this seemingly willful ignorance of the issues Linux has.
Wait...I thought we were talking about search results? How did we get to an OS flamewar from that faster than a car analogy?
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I pointed out (and I'll be happy to give you the links as well if you wish) that major retailers have joined small shops like mine in refusing to sell Linux because LINUX BREAKS DRIVERS. I then gave him a link from Linus himself laughing on that THERE ARE NO PLANS when it comes to the kernel, it is just him and his buds scratching itches, like it is 1993 and they are just doing it for shits and giggles. Again I'll be happy to provide links and it is Linus in his own words, no bullshit.
First, I'd love to see the links to that...not that I doubt it, mind you...
Linux is my favorite OS in many ways, but I still can't use it as my day to day workhorse OS; and, since Windows 7, I've no longer had the burning desire to, as MS finally got (in my opinion) many of the major issues that I've complained about with Windows fixed in 7.
My biggest problems with Linux mostly come back to attitudes...ones like Richard Stallman are, in my opinion, pure poison to the free/open source movement, which s
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We may be at 101:1 or higher (Score:1)
People argue over the "acceptable ratio" of "number of guilty people who should be allowed to go free in exchange for not imprisoning one innocent person" but whatever Google's thoughts on what the ratio should be in searches, .co.cc is at least at "N+1:1" and over the limit.
I for one would be willing to be the one innocent person who went to prison for up to life in exchange for 100,000 actual criminals guilty of a charge similar in severity to the one I'm innocent of NOT going free because the standard of
Re:Well (Score:5, Informative)
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Trying to decide if you're for real or not. Every time I see one of your posts, I have the same mental discussion with myself.
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Thats a bit harsh isn't it. I'm sure there is at least one legitimate .co.cc domain
I think this domain was supposed to be for some small island but a Korean company owns it. And no, I don't think any of the 11 million subdomains of garbage spewed out by this Korean spammer is legitimate.
If there really is someone that ended up doing business with this company putting up a website with this domain they need to find a real ISP.
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.cc is the Cocos (Keeling) Islands. .co.cc is just a single, corporately owned, address within .cc. Any legitimate Cocos Islands company can get a .cc address for themselves; the islands are small enough that it would appear that they have quite reasonably decided they don't need a .co.cc subdomain. Google's action appears to me a reasonable reaction to a significant ill.
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I agree. Thanks for the info.
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Thats a bit harsh isn't it. I'm sure there is at least one legitimate .co.cc domain
If it bothers them being excluded from Google, they can move to another free domain in 10 minutes. If you use a free domain you ave no security anyway. I've used one for several years for a single-issue website at cjb.net. But now they keep hassling me to reconfirm it every month. If I miss one of those, it's gone.
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Yes, and irrespective of how questionable you think it is for a business to use a free domain, it might take a bit more than 10 minutes to let everyone you advertised to know what your new website address is.
Some kind of forewarning would have been nice for those legitimate folks using .co.cc. For example, in South Africa there's what's known as a Closed Corporation which is a juristic entity like a pty (ltd), Inc, LLC, LTD, etc. Some of these businesses are using theirname.co.cc since it's common to use
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Yes, and irrespective of how questionable you think it is for a business to use a free domain, it might take a bit more than 10 minutes to let everyone you advertised to know what your new website address is.
The .co.cc website will still work, any customers who have bookmarked it will still be able to use it. Anyone who sees your ad and types in the address will still get there. The only difference is that it won't appear on Google searches. So you can open a new site and put a notice and redirect at the old one and lose nothing.
did anyone else read that phonetically ? (Score:1)
Google blocks cock from search results.
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did anyone else read that phonetically ?
No, we were all taught to read properly.
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Because we all know that co.cc is a word that has a "proper" meaning.
So you admit, then, that 'cock' was a misreading of it.
Stop being an ass.
Take your own advice.
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Continue, please! (Score:1)
Now, please do the same for anything on that ripoffreport extortion site. Ooh, and anything ending in ehow.com or answers.yahoo.com or chacha.com or the other endless streams of bullshit content farm crapfests. Those we actually run into all the time, via google. I don't know when the fuck the last time was I ran into a co.cc link of any kind, via google. Probably never.
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If you make an account and login to google it gives you the option of hiding domains but you have to visit them first for the hide option to show up. Someone also made a handy greasemonkey script if you want to go that route.
Re:Continue, please! (Score:4, Interesting)
Problem is, it only allows you to blacklist 50 domains (or did, last time I used the feature).
I suppose suggesting google should block them is a bit harsh, but it'd be nice if they had a way to more appropriately rank them. The quality and accuracy and meaningfulness of the content deserves placement a few pages down; the only reason they have the top three or five results most of the time, is due to a more broad manipulation unrelated to the actual individual content. If the content was valuable (like wikipedia results), I'd have no problem with it rising to the top - even with a nudge by google as a judgement call.
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You can always edit your dns settings and direct those domains to, say, lolcats or whatever.
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Yeah, but isn't the point to improve the google customer/browsing/searching experience? Otherwise it'd be a wild west of search engines with the caveat that you should manipulate the results however you want on your end, for a better result set. Things like the ability to block domains per-user are nice for one-off circumstances, but things like ehow/yahoo.answers/chacha and similar are of no use to anyone and certainly don't belong in the top results anymore than a malware site does.
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Actually, it looks like they've raised the limit to 500 domains. That's a lot more reasonable. There's more than 50 that I need to block for a better experience, but I probably couldn't come up with near 500 regular offenders.
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By what criteria are you saying that Stack Overflow is the same tier as Yahoo answers, but eHow and ExpertSexchange are content farms?
Yahoo answers is borderline retarded. I've seen better quality questions and answers on 4chan.
Re:Continue, please! (Score:5, Insightful)
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All computer-related technical searches on Google need to be accompanied by -site:www.experts-exchange.com
All GNU/Linux related searches need to be accompanied by -Ubuntu
Too bad the definition of legitimacy apparently doesn't cover the absence of laming and/or ignorance...
Re:Continue, please! (Score:4, Funny)
> Yahoo Answers isn't a content farm. It's a legit place where users post general questions and other users answer
I love Yahoo Answer, especially when people take the time to reply "I don't know".
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...and that gets selected as the best answer. Although, my personal favorite are the compulsive internet nannys that post woo and appeals to authority for responses in loo of an actual answer.
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Thank you. I was looking for that.
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Yahoo answers isn't a complete waste. But because you are defending them publicly.. i post this: http://www.somethingawful.com/flash/shmorky/babby.swf [somethingawful.com]
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http://www.google.com/reviews/t [google.com]
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actually y answers is mostly useful.
Next to go: (Score:2)
The di.cc sub-domain, as well as the Icelandic pen.is sub-domain.
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But where shall I hosht my forum about the merits of shwords vershus writing implements Alex?
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Please phrase your question in the form of an answer.
Well then.. (Score:3)
Link to the original article from google (Score:5, Informative)
oh no (Score:1)
co.cc blocked!
Safe search (Score:3)
Heck setup the safe search options so I can pick which TLDs are in/out of my search results. I'm pretty sure it would be fine to eliminate some TLDs completely and not miss much.
"Today" or last week? (Score:2)
Google dumps all 11+ million
Another parasitic linkspamming blogger (Score:4, Insightful)
The ORIGINAL FUCKING STORY IS ON THE REGISTER [theregister.co.uk]
For fuck's sake, stop this linking to every scumbag linkspamming plaigiarising blogger who submits his crappy blog to scam some ad hits.
Re:Another parasitic linkspamming blogger (Score:4, Informative)
nope the original story is on google's blog: http://googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.com/2011/06/protecting-users-from-malware-hosted-on.html [blogspot.com]
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So writing is only allowed on one site on the Internet, even if it's just some small time blog? The article also clearly cites where it came from.
Of course he's allowed to write whatever he likes. I'm talking about using Slashdot to present his copy of a copy of an original news story here, with the obvious motive of scoring some advertising hits. He added nothing, left out quite a lot, and thus "parasitic linkspamming blogger" he is.
It's Slashdot's shame that it allows this to happen when a minute checking the story would have given them the actual source(s).
What took them so long? (Score:2)
Blocking sites from Google search results is about the same thing as shutting them down completely.
Judging by how well they block spam in GMail, Google should be able to do a pretty good job of blocking bad Web sites.
I wish they had started blocking malware sites long ago!
co.cc (Score:4, Interesting)
co.ck would be The Cook Islands, which is a semi-autonomous part of New Zealand.
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Hunh hunh hunh, you said "semi".
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I guess said Korean company have registered .co.cc with eNIC (a subsidiary of Verisign, afaik) and is then reselling sub-domains of that to anyone interested, without bothering to check who places the order or what it is used for as long as the payments show up on time.
Next step... (Score:1)
Balls (Score:1)
This is BS. g00gle engineers are being lazy. clowns
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Not large portions of the internet. Just a single spam domain name.
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You can still go there
You'll still find out about them in your email