The Mobius web-site was
spoofed recently. Someone - presumably looking to pass themselves off as a
legitimate venture capitalist and needing a web-site to do so - copied our site and
changed the name of the firm as well as some of the biographical information
(contacts, team, etc). They even went so
far as to pull live feeds from our site that updated our portfolio ticker.
We looked up information on
the domain on whois and on some of the registry sites, but the most interesting
data came from one of our portfolio companies – Quova. Quova has mapped the IP space of the internet
for physical location. If you give them
an IP address, they can tell you where it is located (the data are extremely
accurate to the country level; very accurate to the city level and
beyond). They can also tell you some
useful things about the address (connection type; carrier; proxy info; device;
etc). We’ve been investors in Quova for
several years and I’ve worked with the company pretty closely since I joined Mobius. In this time I’ve had the chance
to talk with some of the company’s customers (who use the data for things like
fraud detection and localized marketing), sat through demos of the
company’s service, talked with their technical team, etc. I’ve never really had the chance to use the
service . . . until now. I was amazed
with the data they were able to come up with and it was very helpful to our IT
group who was trying to gather more information about the site in
question.
The Internet is often
described as a place without borders. In reality that’s not correct. Technology exists that gives us the ability to define these
borders. Technology also gives us the
opportunity to take some of the anonymity away from the Internet and to create boundaries
around our on-line lives. There is such a thing as ‘there’ on the internet
(as opposed to ‘anywhere’) and I think we’ll see an increasing use of this
technology to make each of our experiences on the Internet both safer and more
relevant (just the past year has seen the ability to localize searches; more geographically
targeted banner adds; etc. – often powered by Quova’s technology) and more
profitable (routing traffic that was previously unserviceable, for instance, to
a partner site who can service the traffic, etc.). Think of the Internet as comprising both a
virtual ‘there’ and a physical ‘there’ that combine to create our experience
(and may separately be relevant to enhancing that experience). It’s not hard to come up with the ways that
the combination of these data will quickly change our on-line experiences.
Some sites to look at:
Schneier on Security
http://www.schneier.com/blog
The Identity Corner
http://www.idcorner.org
Identity Woman
http://www.identitywoman.net
Kim Cameron's Identity Weblog
http://www.identityblog.com
Posted by: Dimitar Vesselinov | February 14, 2005 at 03:23 PM
Presentations & Audio :: Digital ID World 2004 Conference
http://conference.digitalidworld.com/2004/attendees/downloads.php
Posted by: Dimitar Vesselinov | February 14, 2005 at 07:07 PM