Comments on: Firefox flaw raises phishing fears
Malicious hackers could exploit the bug to spoof a legitimate URL, security experts warn.
Firefox: When is a flaw not a flaw?
Malicious hackers could exploit the bug to spoof a legitimate URL, security experts warn.
Firefox: When is a flaw not a flaw?
December 4, 2009 6:13 PM PST
December 4, 2009 4:56 PM PST
December 4, 2009 4:25 PM PST
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I can't believe CNET actually ran this story.
Firefox is MORE secure then IE, not perfectly secure. How hard is that to grasp? The fact that a flaw showed up in FF is news. When IE flaws show up, that just signifies that it is a different day but same crap as yesterday.
~Firefox takes almost double the time IE takes to open
~Firefox doesn't load pages as fast as IE as well as slower picture loading.
~Firefox has a tendency to replace the current page your using with a different page when you click on a link outside of the browser instead of just opening up a new window.
So I left Firefox. I had two choices:
The cheese with the holes that tasted really good
VS
The cheese that was whole but didn't taste good.
And personally, I prefer Swiss.
JC
The argument seems to imply that Microsoft has created a web browser analogous to a piece of swiss cheese that any competent programmer would never create and Firefox has been designed by sensible programmers who actually know how to do their job. Why would Bill Gates not take whatever share of his wealth he needed to and hire these wonder persons away to work for him to secure the cash flow of browsing the internet that is the very life blood of Microsoft? I struggle to find a solution to that question each time I see someone claiming that Firefox is a better/more secure web browser then IE. Why Bill!? Why do you not hire geniuses such as these to design IE!?
The answer is not all that difficult to find. First off, the programmers who developed Firefox are not better in general, and likely not as good in general. The question then becomes if this is the case, why does Firefox currently seem to be a more secure web browser? The answer to this is also relatively simple. Getting past any competent web browsers security is not a task that is easily done by anyone without an expertise in such things and takes a great deal of time and effort to accomplish. The fact is that for a very very long time, in terms of the life of the internet and web browsers, the only significant or worthwhile target has been IE, and as such has faced virtually the full brunt of interested hackers who are looking to leave a mark.
As Firefox, or any other browser for that matter, gains popularity the hackers will take an interest, and you can rest assured that their attention will reveal flaws as significant or even more so in these new entries to the browser market. Will they have the team/time/money/drive as significant that Microsoft currently has to plug these holes that will inevitably show up? Will these flaws yet to be revealed get attention as quickly or slower then IE security flaws have had, or will weeks, or months go by before they are updated and cured? Will the cures actually work? Will there come a day when hackers who have not been able to ?KILL? IE, decide to turn their full attention to a lesser browser that hasn?t had ten years of security development to keep it up and running, to try for a virtual death blow to one of the under developed newcomers? Do you want to be using that browser on that day?
Firefox has just started down a very long road. Lets wait and see if it can stay on the road at the first corner before we declare it has won the race.
- User Failure
- by January 24, 2005 11:54 AM PST
- The only security flaw involved in Phishing is with users themselves...anyone stupid enough to fall for these e-mail shouldn't be worried about their browser security...they probably leave the car running and unlocked with the diamond ring sitting on the dash
- Like this Reply to this comment
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