PandaLabs has detected a spam message that uses subliminal advertising techniques. At first glance, it is an advertisement that gives the user the opportunity to buy certain stocks online. However, the user not only sees a static image, but also a sequence of images that are displayed extremely rapidly. To be more specific, there are four images, three of which show the word Buy in different positions. Subliminal advertising techniques have been used for a long time and are based on composing images that users perceive, even though they are not aware of it. In the case of this email message, the word Buy appears on screen for a maximum of 40 milliseconds, and in some cases, for only 10 milliseconds. . By doing this, although the recipient is not consciously aware of the Buy message, the subconscious levels of perception receive it and store it, influencing the recipient. According to Luis Corrons, director of PandaLabs, The link for this article located at Help Net Security is no longer available. . Innovative phishing method utilizes subconscious cues to shape user opinions and impact investment choices.. Subliminal Advertising, Email Manipulation, Security Threats. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Bashing Microsoft Corp. may be popular sport on some issues, but the internal security breach that the company disclosed late last month has some corporate information technology users waxing sympathetic. Several users last week said the incident -- in which a . . . . Bashing Microsoft Corp. may be popular sport on some issues, but the internal security breach that the company disclosed late last month has some corporate information technology users waxing sympathetic. Several users last week said the incident -- in which a malicious attacker gained access to certain parts of Microsoft's corporate network and was able to view the source code for an unspecified future product (see "Microsoft stung by hack attack," link below) -- did nothing to change their perceptions or opinions of the software maker or its products. They also said it won't affect their purchasing decisions. "I don't think any less of them," said Jeffrey Ratner, director of IT engineering at Phoenix Home Life Mutual Insurance Co. in Hartford, Conn. "I know how things go. I feel bad for them." The link for this article located at CNN is no longer available. . Enterprise tech professionals express understanding for Microsoft amidst a recent internal data compromise, highlighting the intricacies of security challenges.. Microsoft Security Breach, Corporate IT Users, Internal Breach Incident. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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