Jump to content

Fusker: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Change in Image Surfer Pro reference site
Line 41: Line 41:


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://vusker.com/ vusker.com] (JQuery based Fusker)
*[http://fusk.us/ Fusker Outstanding Image Visualiser]
*[http://fusk.us/ Fusker Outstanding Image Visualiser]
*[http://navnetapp.com/ Net.Nav Fusker Engine]
*[http://navnetapp.com/ Net.Nav Fusker Engine]

Revision as of 21:12, 13 October 2010

Fusker is a type of website or utility that extracts images from a web page, typically from free hosted galleries. Fusker software allows users to identify a sequence of images with a single pattern, for example:

http://www.example.com/images/pic[1-16].jpg

This would identify images pic1.jpg, pic2.jpg, through pic16.jpg.

When this pattern is given to a fusker website, the website would produce a page that displays all sixteen images in that range. Patterns can also contain lists of words, such as http://www.example.com/images/{small,medium,big}.jpg, which will produce three urls, each with one word from the bracketed list. The web page is then presented to the person who entered the fusker, and can also be saved on the fusker web server so that other people may view it.

Fusker implementations

Server-side fusker software extracts content (e.g. image or video) from its original location and displays it in a new page on the client-side (user's web browser). Content is separated from the surrounding information that the content host may have intended (e.g. links to affiliates or pay-per-click ads). However, the content is not downloaded locally to the client by the fusker server; the new page that the fusker server produces instructs the client web browser to retrieve each piece of content from the content host web server and display it in the new page. This can lead to excessive internet bandwidth usage and waste. Many server-side implementations of the Fusker technology are available on the web.

In addition, a fusker can also be implemented as client software that completely bypasses the need for a third-party fusker web site. By eliminating the need to fusker via a web site, the need to use a web browser is also eliminated. Due to not using a web browser, fusker client software will often store downloaded content locally on the client machine. This reduces Internet bandwidth usage since fusker client software, unlike a web browser, only retrieves content once. Fusker client software is able to do this because it can effectively emulate a web browser; referrer headers are rewritten to an acceptable value, and more complex implementations can also emulate a web browser to the point of being able to click links and login to accounts. However, just like server-based fuskers, client software fuskers also separate content from its original surroundings, which may have included advertisements on the content host's web site. Examples of a client software fusker implementation using these principles are PhotoFucket by phatWares.[1][2] or FuskerClient[3]

As web browser technology evolves a new generation of image fusking software is also evolving. Integrated toolbar extensions to some of today's most popular web browsers is emerging. This technology effectively augments the native browser's book mark capabilities to add fusking references to multiple images. This allows the user to surf any place on the web they would normally be able to reach and store references to sets of images from different servers to be viewed together on a single web page. The first to offer this type of image fusking tool bar is Image Surfer Pro.[4] Image Surfer Pro boasts patent pending technology which allows users to store references to multiple servers in the same collection and save that collection to a file which may be shared with other users of the software. This file sharing capability looks likely to spawn a host of Internet sites dedicated to creating and sharing the image collection files. Surfing After Dark may be the first of these sites with direct ties to Image Surfer Pro.[5]

Criticism

Visitors to a fusker website frequently see copyrighted pornographic images that have been separated from their intended context, known as hot-linking. Companies that provide free hosted galleries strongly dislike fuskers because they have the potential to cost them a lot of money in bandwidth bills, and because the only reason the free galleries are provided is to entice the user into clicking on a more profitable link, and those links are no longer displayed from fusker sites.

In response, most web site administrators check the referrer field to prevent their images from being "fuskered", or require users to log in.[6] However, some fusker software has the ability to emulate a legitimate web browser. Referrer headers are rewritten to an acceptable value, and more complex implementations can also emulate a web browser to the point of being able to click links and log in to accounts.

Fusker websites usually include a mechanism for reporting fuskers that contain illegal content such as child pornography.

Etymology

"Fusker" is a Danish term which originally meant a person covertly doing work outside the official guilds. It came into Danish around 1700 from German pfuscher, meaning a dabbler, botcher, or charlatan. Later it came to mean someone cheating (for example using company resources for personal benefit) or alternately doing shoddy work.[7]

In English it nearly exclusively refers to the meaning described in this article.

History

The original fusker technology was created by Carthag Tuek, who made the Perl CGI script as a work-alike of the UNIX/Linux cURL tool, specifically its URL-globbing functionality.

The idea has been continued by others and ported to other scripting languages.

References

  1. ^ "PhotoFucket Home". phatWares.
  2. ^ "PhotoFucket About". phatWares.
  3. ^ "FuskerClient Home".
  4. ^ "Image Surfer Pro Home Page".
  5. ^ "Image Surfer Pro owned by Surfing After Dark".
  6. ^ "How to block Fusker". 2005-03-13.
  7. ^ "Fusker". Ordbog over det Danske Sprog.