'Spamalot' Subscribers to Get Spam ... a Lot 123
CrazyWingman writes "It looks like the list of e-mail addresses subscribed to the lists for the Broadway show 'Spamalot' has been nabbed by spammers. The New York Times is reporting that the list was posted on a page that could be found by looking at the source of other Spamalot webpages. All I have to say is that I hope the creators of the Spamalot website have been sacked."
Re:Anyone got the copy of the article? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Anyone got the copy of the article? (Score:2)
Re:Anyone got the copy of the article? (Score:2)
Boy... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Boy... (Score:2, Funny)
- "Who expected that ?"
- "NOBODY expects the Spanish Inquisition !"
Re:Boy... (Score:3, Funny)
- "NOBODY expects the Spammish Inquisition !"
Re:Boy... (Score:2, Informative)
The bug I saw in action is fixed now, but if you select the whole contents of the page, there is still some strange if innocuous text showing there.
Since I used a unique email address for this site, I have been checking to see if I got any spa
That does it. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That does it. (Score:2)
Nope, it works like www.freesmallfurryanimals.com, and they'll free your money from your wallet...
Re:That does it. (Score:2)
FreeSmallFurryAnimals [freesmallf...nimals.com] doesn't resolve, but for those that don't care for 'em, try using an M-1 Carbine to hunt rats. [komar.org]
Camelot! (Score:4, Funny)
Ahhhh.... irony (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:1)
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:4, Interesting)
And, John Lithgow was sitting five rows in front of me. He has a bald spot on the back of his head.
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:2)
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:2)
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:2)
Finns. In an Alpine village? Shouldn't that be an Arctic village? Finland is nowhere near the Alps!
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:2)
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:2)
I thought about it, but I'm describing the first three minutes of the show, and the Playbill describes it even before the show starts. It's not as if I gave away anything more than one joke, and I promise you the show is worth seeing for the hundreds of other jokes it contains.
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:2)
It is possible to get tickets if you keep trying. Telecharge's pages are pretty nice, you can try to get tickets for a range of dates and if you leave the window open you only have to enter the captcha once. I left it up on the dates I wanted and tried it periodically and managed to get two tickets on the 5th or 6th try.
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:1)
Great show! (Score:2)
I also recommend, if you like Indian food, to go to Utsav in the theater district. It was friggin awesome. Get the Murg Vindaloo and order the Sterling Cabernet with it. It's a great combo, if you don't mind your food making you sweat
Anyway, great show for Holy Grail fans
T
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:2)
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:1)
Re:Ahhhh.... irony (Score:1)
Its late, Im tired, and I had a joke that sounded a lot better in my head. Good night slashdot.
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http://www.freeminimacs.com/?r=15622556 [freeminimacs.com]
http://www.surfjunky.com/?r=Silentnite/ [surfjunky.com]
Reg-free link (Score:5, Informative)
Generated using the New York Times Link Generator [blogspace.com].
Re:Reg-free link (Score:2)
And yes, I know that you can lie on the forms, but my attitude is, why encourage sites to use registration by lying?
Re:Reg-free link (Score:2)
That, from wowbagger (69688).
I agree that you should be careful where you register. The NYTimes has never abused my information, just as /. has never abused my information. Those of you that hate the NYTimes because they require a free registration look a little odd to me when you post under an account registe
Re:Reg-free link (Score:2)
The only data Slashdot has on me is my preferred nickname, my Slashdot password, and an email.
The worst that could happen were Slashdot's database comprimised is the revelation of my Slashdot password and my email - so I would have to change one password and I might see a margi
Ripped! (Score:5, Informative)
Up until Thursday evening, when a reporter from The New York Times pointed out the problem to the Web sites' developer, visiting a specific address on the shows' sites produced a long page with mailing-list data. The security hole was not obvious to casual Web surfers because the address was buried in the site's code. But it could have been discovered by someone deliberately seeking the list data, or by a kind of program used by spammers to scour the Web for new e-mail addresses to bombard.
Both montypythonsspamalot.com, where 19,000 people had signed up for a newsletter, and movinoutonbroadway.com, where 14,000 had, were built by Mark Stevenson, a designer in Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y.
Mr. Stevenson said he had hired a programmer, whom he would not identify, to add the list sign-up function to the sites. He said that the amount of resources put into security on the sites had seemed adequate, but "in retrospect, this was not enough, and we need to do more." He said that a message would be sent to the list with a warning about fraudulent e-mail messages.
Mark Wilkie, a software engineer who maintains Web sites for Gawker Media, said the ability to view the data must have been built into the sign-up software, but it was not clear why someone would do this. "Security-wise, it's a horrible thing to do," he said.
Aaron Meier, a spokesman for Monty Python's "Spamalot," said yesterday that the show would have no comment.
When told by e-mail message about the breach, several people who had signed up for the "Spamalot" list said they were unsurprised, given the state of Internet security and the aggressiveness of spammers. Several noted that there was something appropriately Pythonesque about the incident. After all, Internet historians say that the use of the word spam to refer to junk e-mail messages has its roots in a 1970 Monty Python sketch, in which all conversation in a cafe is drowned out by a group of Vikings chanting the word over and over. The sketch and its song about Spam, the meat product, were adapted for the new musical.
"Are you sure they didn't do it on purpose?" joked one list subscriber, Matthew J. H. Baya of Ellsworth, Me. "Talk about guerrilla marketing."
sacked (Score:5, Funny)
The cREators would like to announce that the previous creato
NO CARRIER
The c re a tors of
NO CARRIER
Re:sacked (Score:2, Funny)
That programmer... (Score:5, Funny)
But why? It's not like we'd want to bludgeon, or bitchslap, or ambush, or lynch the programmer.
Re:That programmer... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That programmer... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:That programmer... (Score:2)
Cheers
Stor
Re:That programmer... (Score:1)
A moose once bit my sister. (Score:5, Funny)
She was Karving her initials on the moose with the sharpened end of an interspace toothbrush given to her by Svenge- her brother-in-law- an Oslo dentist and star of many Norwegian movies: "The Hot Hands of and Oslo Dentist," "Fillings of Passion," and "The Huge Molars of Horst Nordfink"...
Re:A møøse once bit my sister. (Score:2)
Large møøse on the left
half side of the screen
in the third scene from
the end, given a thorough
grounding in Latin,
French and "O" Level
Geography by BO BENN
Suggestives poses for the
møøse suggested by VIC ROTTER
Antler-care by LIV THATCHER
"To be spammed..." (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"To be spammed..." (Score:5, Funny)
Re:"To be spammed..." (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:"To be spammed..." (Score:1)
It would be obvious to anyone like me who uses a unique e-mail address for each purpose. Since I didn't sign up for Spamalot, I don't know if it was harvested or now.
Re:"To be spammed..." (Score:4, Interesting)
If it was harvested though, it opens up an interesting issue since the exposed data included names and physical addresses to go with the email addresses.
Re:"To be spammed..." (Score:1)
Re:"To be spammed..." (Score:1)
Ironic (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ironic (Score:2)
Not a professional job... (Score:5, Insightful)
Both montypythonsspamalot.com, where 19,000 people had signed up for a newsletter, and movinoutonbroadway.com, where 14,000 had, were built by Mark Stevenson, a designer in Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y.
Mr. Stevenson said he had hired a programmer, whom he would not identify, to add the list sign-up function to the sites. He said that the amount of resources put into security on the sites had seemed adequate, but "in retrospect, this was not enough, and we need to do more."
Why would they use some obviously "home grown" half assed mailing list code when there are perfictly good and fairly sold apps out there like Mailman or EZmlm? Sounds like the "designer" hired some friend, prob. som kid who just learned about web scripting...
Web designer's resume... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Web designer's resume... (Score:3, Funny)
Probably you are right. Perhaps we could send the Washington state sculptor to New York to arrange an "unfortunate smelting accident" [imdb.com] for the web designer. I certainly would if he tarnished my name.
Re:integration most likely (Score:2)
Re:Not a professional job... (Score:3, Insightful)
Calling him a web designer is a stretch. From looking through the other sites he did, they're all filled with shitty Dreamweaver and ImageReady code.
What do you expect... (Score:4, Funny)
Well, DUH!!!! (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Well, DUH!!!! (Score:2)
Zoiks Shaggy what are you doing out of the Mystery Machine?
We dine well.. (Score:1)
I predict that in the future, Shakespeare and Monty Python will be mentioned together a lot.
The creators (Score:5, Funny)
SPAM SPAM
SPAM SPAM
SPAM SPAM
SPAM SPAM
We aplogize for the spam, the creators of this website have been sacked
SPAM SPAM
SPAM SPAM
SPAM SPAM
SPAM SPAM
SPAM SPAM
We aplogize for the continued spam, the persons responsible for the sacking of the persons just sacked would like to announce that they have been sacked.
Mail lists... (Score:2, Interesting)
Every employee.
It actually was a three column table, on the left side it had the employee's name, next column was for e-mail, and the last for their phone number.
I was sitting with the Administrator that handles the email servers, when I heard recently there has been an ever more increasing spam flow to all the college email addresses.
The new age in spamming ? (Score:2)
<programmer> ok, I am going to create the website for Acme Inc. For 3 grand, I can leave a backdoor for you to get all the email addresses
<spammer> make it 2 grand and 3% cut of all referral fees
<programmer> deal
<spammer> deal
This would get pretty interesting pretty fast
Re:The new age in spamming ? (Score:4, Funny)
I would sleep in bed with spammers! They're all hot nubile chicks with pills to make me skinny and my penis huuuuuge!
Developers to be blamed? (Score:4, Insightful)
"How would anyone find that page?"
"Maybe we'll get to that once we add the international shipping feature."
etc. It gets tiring. After a while, you feel unappreciated. I'm not saying that something like this happened here, but at this point, I don't know that it DIDN'T happen...
My 2 cent American.
Re:[examples] to be blamed? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Developers to be blamed? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Developers to be blamed? (Score:3, Insightful)
Titles (Score:1, Redundant)
And to clarify.... (Score:1, Redundant)
Arghhh (Score:4, Funny)
I'm Brian! (Score:1, Funny)
glitch? (Score:1)
I think I found the page that caused the issues (Score:2, Insightful)
http://www.montypythonsspamalot.com/cgi-bin/spamal ot.cgi?email=
This html is full of artifacts. I would be surprised if they actually hired a web developer and didn't just screw up and use some free script they didn't fully understand.
Anonymous Programmer Is the Cause! (Score:1)
Mr. Stevenson said he had hired a programmer, whom he would not identify, to add the list sign-up function to the sites. He said that the amount of resources put into security on the sites had seemed adequate, but "in retrospect, this was not enough, and we need to do more."
He had hired a programmer.... *nod*
And my mother's still a virgin....
After birthing me yesterday.
They should have hired the Whizzo Web Company... (Score:1)
Spammers die! (Score:1)
Why is I that we always hear about attacks on 'this server', 'that server', yet nobody's ever thought of planning a DDoS (Distributed Denial Of Service, read here [grc.com] for more info) Attack on Spammers? Why not? We could potentially get rid of them, make their machines crash... I just don't get why we have to wait for the law to take matters into their incapable hands.
Not that I'm trying to incite you or anything.