Hmm - same problem... It's google chrome which makes trouble - sorry
for the false alert..

Regards måns Mårtensson

On 10 Nov., 18:51, Måns <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Simon
>
> Thanks for making it clear.
> Btw. your permalink (http://faq.tiddlyspot.com/#[[Is%20Tiddlyspot
> %20secure%3F]]) from your blog is pointing to an empty tiddler titled:
> Is Tiddlyspot secure%3F
> A better permalink might 
> be:http://faq.tiddlyspot.com/#%5B%5BIs%20Tiddlyspot%20secure%3F%5D%5D
>
> Regards Måns Mårtensson
>
> On 10 Nov., 13:45, Simon Baird <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Apologies for the lack of response. I don't know why you're seeing what
> > you're seeing in Analytics.
>
> > However your concern has caused me realise we don't really warn people about
> > Tiddlyspot's lack of security.
>
> > In short, because tiddlyspot doesn't use SSL it's not a good idea to a).
> > consider your data secure and b). use a password that you don't want people
> > to discover.
>
> > I've posted about this here and updated the FAQ and will shortly place an
> > extra warning on the signup 
> > page.http://tiddlyspot.blogspot.com/2009/11/warning-about-security.html
>
> > Regards,
> > Simon.
>
> > On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 10:58 PM, M) <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > So I can think of a few explanations:
> > > > * someone in Brazil has guessed your password
>
> > > If the person guessed the password, I would have seen the different
> > > pages visited by this person.  What it looks like to me is that the
> > > person attempted to guess the password 12 times.  Possibly, at the
> > > 12th, they guessed it though I consider that unlikely because I'm not
> > > using an easy password like "qwerty".  I'm less concerned about the
> > > Brazil visit because it is a one time visit and since I use an easy
> > > domain name like "the", maybe the person mistyped something like
> > > "thy".  The Japan one is a recurring visit and this is the one I'm
> > > more concerned about.  If I were the evil doer, I'd visit a
> > > tiddlyspot, download it and try it from my own computer.  Okay, now
> > > that I said that, for this to be true, the evil doer would have to
> > > open the tiddlywiki with notepad to strip the GA code and prevent
> > > pings from occurring (or unplugging from the web).
>
> > > > * your own visits are mistakenly being registered as coming from Brazil
>
> > > Unlikely.  I would have seen it happen more than just for one day and
> > > it wouldn't have been more than the number of times I visited.  I do
> > > notice that my work has provided two different city names
>
> > > > * Google Analytics is misconfigured somehow, counting requests from
> > > >    other locations
>
> > > I notice that "/[object object]" is in the 'pages visited' list.  I
> > > don't know what that is.
>
> > > I doubt anyone is seeing my content and now that I've moved it to
> > > another location and have yet to see odd results in GA, I'm not so
> > > worried.  I imagine my old domain name is just an easy one.  What
> > > remains to be answered is why GA registers a hit.  Maybe it is just as
> > > Jeremy says, they are just false positives.
>
> > > I'm keeping the GA code active for this domain to see if anything
> > > happens.
>
> > --
> > [email protected]
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