1996-08-05 - gathering bandwidth through spam

Header Data

From: Mike McNally <m5@vail.tivoli.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 89fdeb4fbfc1a316a7490422cec242b0474ee4eb75fd72afcb6d2d48f134e620
Message ID: <320629E6.247A@vail.tivoli.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-08-05 20:24:01 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 6 Aug 1996 04:24:01 +0800

Raw message

From: Mike McNally <m5@vail.tivoli.com>
Date: Tue, 6 Aug 1996 04:24:01 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: gathering bandwidth through spam
Message-ID: <320629E6.247A@vail.tivoli.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Maybe I'm dense, but it didn't really "click" until the other day that
the Netscape mail reader, which renders html pages mailed as attachments
right there in the mail reader window, would also run any Java applets
(and, I guess, Javascript code) referenced by the page.

If you're using Netscape as a mail reader, and this isn't old news to
you, you can try it: point the browser at a page with an applet, and
then use the "File->Mail Document" menu command to mail it to yourself.

Thus:  if you want to gather some free compute cycles, just spam a
document out to a few thousand hapless victims.  Those using Netscape
for mail (and you can find them pretty easily by looking at the
"X-Mailer" field when creating your mailing list) will click on your
message, pull your applet, and give you some cycles without realizing
it.  Of course, your applet will be free to connect back to home base
and relay any results it gets.

Cool, huh?

______c_____________________________________________________________________
Mike M Nally * Tiv^H^H^H IBM * Austin TX    * For the time being,
       m5@tivoli.com * m101@io.com          *    
      <URL:http://www.io.com/~m101>         *    three heads and eight
arms.





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