_Aerospace_Eng_
03-18-2009, 09:42 AM
I was reading some feeds from Lifehacker and saw this one
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/16/passwords-of-8000-comcast-customers-exposed/
While comcast claims its only 700 usernames its still alot. This isn't good publicity for seeing as how they already limit bandwidth and they are trying to work with Sony to make some kind of store. The site mentioned in the story was http://www.pipl.com which looks through many search engines for whatever you give it, name, email, username, phone. Luckily my personal email address isn't found but my secondary one was. That would explain why I got so much spam. I thought I was careful with it but guess not. It even found a "Wish List" for amazon.com which I found strange. Why was it still there even though it was old? I'm going to search for my telephone number next.
So what did pipl find out about you? :eek:
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/16/passwords-of-8000-comcast-customers-exposed/
While comcast claims its only 700 usernames its still alot. This isn't good publicity for seeing as how they already limit bandwidth and they are trying to work with Sony to make some kind of store. The site mentioned in the story was http://www.pipl.com which looks through many search engines for whatever you give it, name, email, username, phone. Luckily my personal email address isn't found but my secondary one was. That would explain why I got so much spam. I thought I was careful with it but guess not. It even found a "Wish List" for amazon.com which I found strange. Why was it still there even though it was old? I'm going to search for my telephone number next.
So what did pipl find out about you? :eek: