Myspace XSS code revealed

By iamned - Last updated: Saturday, January 12, 2008

I have decided to share the myspace XSS code

Instering this code into a myspace profile create a huge invisible link upon clicked runs a javascipt file

You can verify it yourself by pasting the code into a myspace profile and then clicking it. Your coookie will be logged and then you will be redirected to google.com However, it only logs complete cookies for Safari users for some reason. INternet explorer and firefox only log the IP address.

You can also paste the code into a myspace bulletin and it will still work.

Since worldpress is retarded and modifies textarea html when it shouldn’t you’ll have to copy it form this textfile:

myspace hacks 

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Ignore the boo hoo hoo media - Part 3

By iamned - Last updated: Saturday, January 12, 2008

In the first two sections of this three part series I gave a brief overview of the smartist movement and its political and social ramifications, and then listed the sectors that stand to benefit from the smartist revolution; energy, internet technology, and commodities.

The third and final section will cover the various stocks and funds you should invest in to profit off the smartist web 2.0 movement.

Interestingly, Hillary Clinton John McCain won the New Hampshire primary, which came as a major blow to the ‘anti-smarty’, ‘anti-growth’ candidates Edwards, Obama and Huckabee. Although Clinton and McCain are on different aisles neither have elaborated any plans to pull out of Iraq or have insisted on some short of a timetable or exit plan. Should either Romney, McCain, or Clinton will the election (I predict Romney will win, BTW) the war will continue and energy and the stock prices of energy and commodity companies will continue to rise as they have since the war in Iraq began in 2003. In addition, these candidates enact pro-business incentives which will further globalization and entrepreneurship thus benefiting web 2.0 and other ’smarty’ companies.

The stock market took another blog this week with the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average falling roughly 1.3%. Negative headlines still dominate the headlines regarding recession, slowdown in consumer spending, bad holiday sales numbers. And Obama and Hucklebee are for some godforsaken front runners?

Here are a list of some smarty web 2.0 new world order stocks and ETFs (Exchange traded funds) that are immune to bad news

1. Google Ticker: goog

Google is the quintessential internet company; the posterchild of the second dotcom boom which we are currently in. Its marketcap of $200 BILLION exceeds that of Yahoo, Ebay, and Amazon combined. Meanwhile its revenue and profits are surging from the boom in online advertising.

However, Google needs to make more aggressive efforts to dominate the web 2.0 marketplace such making an attempt to buyout facebook for over $30 billion dollars. Google’s social networking efforts such as Orkurt have largely been failures and buying out Facebook in the same manner that Google aquired Youtube in 2006 would make Google the leader in web 2.0.

Although Google trades at $630 a share I predict by the end of 2008 it will trade at over $800.

2. Apple Computers (ticker: AAPL)

Although Apple doesn’t have any web 2.0 properties is is still a major player in the second technology/internet boom. Its sales of Ipods and Computers continue to grow as PC users switch over and I don’t see this trend changing anytime soon. meanwhile, Dell, Microsoft, and Sony’s efforts to develop a so called ‘Ipod Killer’ have been unsuccessful.

3. Energy Select SPDR (ticker: XLE)

Since Summer of 2004 energy prices have been surging and show no sign of slowing. One way of profiting off this trend is by buying the Energy Select SPDR (XLE). This exchange-traded fund holds big-name companies like ExxonMobil, Chevron, and Valero. Regardless who wins the presidency the war in Iraq will continue, and there is the possibility of an invasion of Iran. This will only drive up energy prices further. In addition, the global economy is booming resulting in rising food an energy prices. Middle East, Asian, and South American economies are growing at a much faster rate than United States and European economies and growing such as oil to run their infrastructures.

4. iShares MSCI Brazil (ticker: EWZ)
iShares China 25 Index (ticker: FXI)
Claymore BRIC (ticker: EEB)

EWZ, FXI, and EEB are ETFs (exchange traded funds) that track foreign stocks.  EWZ consists of Brazilian stocks, FXI consists of Chinese stocks, and EEB is a combination of China, Brazil, and other so called ‘emerging markets’. All of these ETFs are up over sixty percent in the past year while the S&P 500 gained only four percent in 2007. The reason why these ETFs are outperforming US indexes is because the foreign economies are experiencing much more rapid growth than the United States economy. Investing in Brazil or China now is analogous to investing in the US in the early 90’s as there is still a lot of growth and upside potential left.

Like it or not, we’re in a globalist smartist economy and in spite of the constant complaining of Ron Paul supporters this trend isn’t going to reverse anytime soon, and emerging markets (ie. Brazil, India, China) as well as large cap multinationals (ie. Wallmart, HP, McDonalds, Cisco) are the main beneficiaries of this globalist revolution.

5. Mastercard (Ticker: MA)

Mastercard is arguably one of the best stocks to invest in because they are at the forefront of paymentism and spendism.  paymentism is the means that the smarties use to extract payments from people, such as creditcards and phone billing. Spendism is the growing trend of global consumerism. with the boom in emerging markets mastercard stands to benefit directly from increased consumer and business spending, and hence more creditcard transactions.

Mastercard stock is up over eighty percent this year and will only go higher in the years to come.

Unfortunately there are no actual publicly traded web 2.0 companies, nor are there any web 2.0 IPOs in the pipeline. The closest web 2.0 investment which I would recommend is Google and Baidu (ticker: BIDU), but they aren’t actual web 2.0 companies.

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Ignore the boo hoo hoo media -Part 2

By iamned - Last updated: Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Part two of this three part article will elaborate on the ’smartism’ revolution, as well as investment ideas.

The current 2008 election front runners; mainly Hillary and Edwards try to appeal to the middle class’s sense of entitlement. They are misleading voters into believing the falsehood that they are entitled to:

1. Job security
2. Universal healthcare and inexpensive drugs
3. Retirement
4. An affordable college education
5. A livable wage

Contrary to the mantra of the candidates no one is entitled to any of the above, at least not in the smartist web 2.0 era which we are currently living in. All the problems that the middle class is facing as reported in the media; rising food prices, pain at the pump, outsourcing, increased college tuition, surging credit card debt, etc is a byproduct of the smartist era, and is the inevitable byproduct and consequence of irreversible, unstoppable technological and capitalistic progress. It is out of the power of any politician to reverse these processes. Since it is futile to try to resist this transition, you can try to profit off it instead.

What is the smartist era and who are the smarties?

The smartist era began in late 2004 and coincides with the boom in web 2.0/social networking as globalization and free markets superseding sovereignty. The affects of the smartist era the second dot com boom, hyper-capitalism, the growth of ‘information’ jobs, and the outsourcing of industrial jobs overseas. Other affects include increased immigration both illegal and legal, marginalization of the middle class, surging commodity prices, growing wealth gap, reduced job security, and rising food prices. Most of all the economic and social ills that politicians address can be attributed to the smartist revolution.

Since August of 2004, when Google went public gold has surged from $400 an ounce to over $890 as of January 8th, 2008. Gas prices have risen over 50 percent and oil has more than doubled.

The graph below illustrates this rise:

If you look more closely at the graph you can see that the slope began to increase markedly in the forth quarter of 2004, which coincides with the Google public offering and the beginning of the web 2.0 boom.

The ’smarties’ of the smartist movement include the entrepreneurs and knowledge workers who are the architects of the web 2.0/social networking revolution. Some examples are Steve Jobs, the Google founders, and Jimmy Whales of Wikipedia. A smartie can be more broadly defined as any person whose actions contributes to the smartist movement, regardless of their profession.

While negative headlines of recessions, rising gas and oil prices, rising unemployment, a housing slump, and a credit crunch cast abundant pessimism on investor sentiment, there is a silver lining, which is to invest in ’smarty’ companies and funds that are capitalizing on this new social and economic revolution. The three sectors I recommend investing in are internet technology, energy, and commodities.

Stay tuned for part three where I will list which stocks and funds to put your money in to capitalize on this revolution.

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Ignore the boo hoo hoo media -we’re still living in the smartist web 2.0 era

By iamned - Last updated: Monday, January 7, 2008

(I am aware that this article has little to do with SEO and internet marketing but if you read it you will make money because I am disclosing information and ideas that are widely ignored. This article is written by someone who derives Riemann Zeta function integrals in his spare time and can cut through fog and BS like a hot knife through butter. I am capable of ’seeing’ things that others miss or overlook because I know how things work.)

Last Friday the stock market tanked over two percent on poor economic data. Unemployment rose to five percent in December, a three-tenth percent increase in November and job payrolls in December increased by 18,000, which was far below estimates. The Dow Jones fell almost two percent and the tech heavy nasdaq lost nearly four percent.

Meanwhile, Obama and Huckabee won the Iowa primary-a great upset to the political establishment. Judging by the results of Iowa it is apparent that voters want change and reform, which is why the heavily funded and experienced Clinton and Romney who embody the so called ‘political establishment’ failed to win.

The headlines are continuously filled with negativity-poor job growth, pain at the pump, unemployment, layoffs in the financial sectors, subprimes, housing problems, ongoing tensions in the middle east, mortgage defaults, and so on. Millions of middle class Americans are desperately seeking answers and resolve to the uncertainly that looms overhead. They fear losing their jobs to outsourcing and being unable to pay for health care, prescriptions drugs and their children’s education.

According to a recent CNN poll half of Americans believe we’re in a recession in spite of the fact that economic data indicates otherwise. In September 2007, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said 110,000 new jobs were created. For each of the last three months, our economy has created an average of 97,000 new jobs. Since August 2003, the economy has created more than 8.1 million new jobs in 49 consecutive months of job growth.

Meanwhile the price of commodities continues to surge with no end in sight. This week oil recently passed $100 dollars a barrel and gold traded over $850 dollars an once. Gas prices continue to rise as well a food prices. However, the American consumer is extremely resilient and unaffected by these rising costs. And the overseas economies of India, China, and Hong Kong show no sign of slowing in spite of signs of economic weakness in the US.

A lot of idiot ‘bears’ attribute rising oil, wheat, and gold to inflation but this is simply not true. The reason why these commodities keep rising is due to HUUUUGE demand overseas. China, brazil, Mexico, India are consuming natural resources at a feverish pace to keep up with DEMAND because their economies are growing so fast. Demand is the key word. This is a demand problem; not a supply problem as was the case in the 80’s when oil peaked. The demand is so huge that prices are rising, which is fundamental economics at work and isn’t indicative of inflation.

To be continued….

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