FAS Talk

"When you go looking for anything at all, your chances of finding it are very good." -- Darryl Zero

October 30, 2008

How to hide the Internet Explorer 7 search box

A little registry magic does the trick.

I use the Google toolbar in both IE and Firefox, primarily because I love the ability to share bookmarks across browsers and across machines.  But I've always been bugged by the waste of toolbar space of having two Google search boxes--one supplied by IE and one supplied by the Google toolbar.

So, I went looking for the option to turn off the search box.  This was pretty obvious in FF but not so in IE.  (Did I miss it?)  Here's a bit of registry magic that did the trick.

To hide the IE 7 search box:

  1. Close all instances of IE 7.
  2. Open a command prompt window (i.e., a DOS box).
  3. Type the following command (all on one line) and press ENTER:

    REG ADD "HKCU\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\InfoDelivery\Restrictions" /V NoSearchBox /T REG_DWORD /F /D 1


October 11, 2008

Video Technology: Seeing is not always believing

It used to be you needed the likes of George Lucas to make believable fake videos; not any more.
What types of fake-video-based scams are coming down the pike?

There's a great spoof video going around the Internet--or more accurately, a class of spoof videos--posing as a news story about an unknown presidential candidate taking the election by storm.  For example, I'm taking the election by storm.

Okay, obviously I'm not running for office.

Now, I'm guessing that you understood the previous sentence to be true without flinching.  You did so based on a principle that I like to call the "Henry Kissinger's Wife Rule".  The idea goes like this:

I know that Henry Kissinger's wife is not three feet tall.  Why?  Because if she were three feet tall, I would have known that fact by now.  But I don't know that fact.  Therefore, she is not three feet tall.

So, if I were a serious candidate for president, you would have known it.  But you don't know it.  So, I'm not.

But you did not know I was not running because of the quality of the spoof video.  In other words, the quality of the video would not cause most viewers to reject it has a fake.

But what about this Fox News video?

That's a little tougher call, eh?  The quality makes it believable and the Henry Kissinger's Wife rule is no help here.  (That is, Fox News might or might not do something like this.  And if they did, you would not necessarily know about it.)

Now, here's the interesting ponderable...

Stop and think about the first video suggesting that I was running for president.  That video was programmatically generated based on some very simple input (i.e., my name) that was entered into a web form by my not-quite-six-year-old daughter.  She's an very bright kid, but when it comes to technical knowledge about making believable fake videos, she falls considerably short of George Lucas.

So, given the the rapidly advancing video technologies (that will soon make it possible to generate billions of mass customized fake videos for next to nothing), and given the undeniable willingness of certain classes of people to exploit technology for every imaginable purpose (e.g., selling pills, selling sex, stealing money, etc.), what types of fake-video-based scams are coming down the pike?

Brace yourself.


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