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March 3, 2005 9:43 AM PST

Netscape launches browser beta

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Netscape has released a public test version of a Web browser that includes antifraud technology, with hopes of challenging Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser dominance.

The company, a division of media giant Time Warner's America Online subsidiary, said Thursday that the browser, dubbed Netscape 8, will better protect people from growing online fraud threats such as phishing.

Over the last several months, the browser has been available only to a small number of individuals involved in a limited beta test. Now anyone can download the software via the company's Web site.

The beta was expected to arrive in mid-February, but the release date slipped so that the company could fix some bugs in the software, according to Netscape. The product will remain in test mode for at least several more weeks. No date has been set for the browser's official launch, a company representative said.

Netscape once controlled approximately 80 percent of the Web browser market. But Microsoft's Internet Explorer wrested the market away and currently owns nearly 90 percent of the sector, according to most surveys.

However, IE's growing specter of security vulnerabilities has encouraged Netscape and other companies, most notably Netscape's open-source spinoff Mozilla, to make security their main selling point.

Online fraud, in particular phishing, has been growing rapidly over the last several years. Phishing attacks typically consist of e-mail that appears to come from trusted companies, such as banks or e-commerce vendors, which attempt to lure people to bogus Web sites where they're asked to divulge sensitive personal information. Most often this information is used by criminals to commit identity fraud.

Among the weapons the browser features in its effort to guard against online criminals are frequently updated blacklists of Web sites that are suspected of distributing spyware or hosting phishing schemes. Those lists are provided to Netscape by outside security researchers.

The browser promises to redirect customers to a warning page when they access a banned site, and also disables various technologies with questionable security implications, including ActiveX, scripting and cookies, if a user chooses to continue on to a blacklisted Web address. The lists had not been offered in earlier test versions of the browser.

Another feature of the browser, unrelated to security concerns, allows individuals to add RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, feeds to Netscape 8 with a single mouse click, and simplifies the process of designating a set of tabs as their home page.

The browser was built through a partnership with Canadian development company Mercurial Communications, as Netscape has cut its own programming staff considerably.

CNET News.com's Paul Festa contributed to this report.

See more CNET content tagged:
Netscape Communications Corp., phishing, Time Warner Inc., Web browser, RSS

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Buggiest browser ever
by yfan March 3, 2005 10:43 AM PST
I am wondering how they took such a great browsing engine - Firefox - and managed to screw it all up. It crashed three times in my first 5 minutes of use... twice while trying to switch between browsing engines. The Gecko implimentation is so bad Yahoo Mail keeps logging me out. The default engine is IE and I hate it that there is no way to change the default.

I am uninstalling it right now. I'll see if they've matured in their non-beta release.
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Mozilla FF Vs NS 8.0b
by Willy Wonker March 3, 2005 10:51 AM PST
NS8 crashes every single time I open it. Firefox only did it once this year. I found tons of adwares flowing into NS8 on this article itself. Dont download this beta it suck.
I have the beta...
by System Tyrant March 3, 2005 11:50 AM PST
and so far so good. I am really liking it too. I haven't had a crash yet. I have been switching back and forth between render engines and trying out all the different features.

Depends on how things go, but at first glance I think I will really like this version of netscape. Of course it's still in beta and I haven't been using it long, but if they make it solid it will become my browser of choice, I think.

I will still keep Firefox handy though.
Buggiest browser ever
by BrianM March 3, 2005 7:06 PM PST
It seems every time AOL or Time Warner get involved with Netscape they screw things up. This thing isn't even ready to be a beta with Windows 98, it opens and just sits there trying to open a Netscape paage but a blank page and this is after importing my start page. I'll stick with Mozilla.
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I suppose
by System Tyrant March 4, 2005 7:01 AM PST
I should feel lucky then. I have a Windows XP Pro with SP2 and it has worked fine for me. The only problem I have had with it is when you tell it to open a new tab it opens it in the tab you have open.

I figure Win 98 support isn't high on their priority list. Just for the record though I like the new Netscape browser. In the end it may fall flat on it's face, but they have some very interesting concepts.
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