Re: Microsoft Browser Under Scrutiny

From: Gene K (genekRE_at_MOVEolivianc.net)
Date: 07/04/04


Date: Sat, 3 Jul 2004 21:32:29 -0400

Of course you hate anything to do with Windows, that is why you are
participating in a Microsoft Windows Newsgroup.

-- 
Gene K
"Tom" <no-way@not-here.com> wrote in message
news:%23JHJenTYEHA.384@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/07/03/tech/main627407.shtml
NEW YORK, July 2, 2004
(AP) It's been a bad week for many users of Microsoft Corp.'s nearly
ubiquitous Internet Explorer browser.
A pair of virus attacks exploiting its vulnerabilities had led security
experts to recommend that Web surfers consider such alternatives as Mozilla
and Opera.
Until Microsoft made a software update available Friday, continuing to use
Internet Explorer was "like playing the lottery," said Johannes B. Ullrich,
chief technology officer of the nonprofit SANS Internet Security Center.
The respected research center was among security groups recommending other
browsers as long as a key vulnerability in IE remained unfixed, leaving it
capable of running malicious code that's been hidden at a number of popular
Web sites.
It took a week for Microsoft to issue the update, which does not fix the
flaw entirely but disables a hacker's ability to deliver malicious code with
it. Ullrich said the update appeared to eliminate any immediate need to
switch browsers, which can cause problems of its own.
The flaw had allowed a computer virus to spread through a new technique that
converted popular Web sites into virus transmitters. That infection was
designed to steal valuable information as Web users typed it into their
computers ? passwords and the like.
And this week, researchers discovered another password-stealing program
hidden behind pop-up ads. A repair for the flaw enabling that Trojan
infection was issued in April, many users had yet to patch their systems.
IE is a frequent target for hacking because of its popularity; WebSideStory
Inc. says 95 percent of surfers use it globally. The browser is closely
integrated with Microsoft's Windows operating system and Outlook e-mail
program, creating more room for programming error and making solutions more
difficult.
Though many of IE's functions are not unique, IE tends to be more permissive
in running code ? flexibility that helps Web developers create fancy
features but allows hackers to more easily find weaknesses.
A major Windows XP upgrade, known as a service pack, is due out this summer
and would plugs some holes in IE. Last week's outbreak would not have
occurred had those software plugs been installed, said Gary Schare, a
Microsoft security director.
Microsoft also is developing a specific fix for the new vulnerability, but
Schare said testing takes time. He called it premature for independent
security experts to recommend that people explore alternatives.
Even if those recommendations were heeded, it's highly unlikely Microsoft
could be unseated as top dog in the browser business. After all, IE comes
with Windows computers. The Justice Department, after initially suing to
force Microsoft to uncouple the browser from its operating systems, later
backed down.
Many users don't care enough or know how to find other browsers, most of
which are free or ad-supported. Opera Software ASA, which offers the No. 3
browser for Windows, saw no significant change in downloads this week.
Downloads of Mozilla doubled, but the increase is not nearly enough to
significantly change its market share.
"It's not that consumers are so loyal to Microsoft, but more they are
apathetic," said Geoff Johnston, an analyst with WebSideStory, which tracks
browser usage. "With it, there really is a cost to switching."
Users who install alternatives will find that some Web sites simply won't
work. Movielink LLC says its online movies need technology specific to IE,
and America Online Inc. shuns its own Mozilla-based Netscape browsers for
new conferencing tools.
Browser-integrated toolbars from search leader Google Inc. and others are
only available for Internet Explorer.
Many sites work on alternatives but display items incorrectly, often because
developers fail to test on them.
"All they know is it looks good to them ... on their own browser, and their
own browser is most probably Internet Explorer," said Jakob Nielsen, a Web
design expert with Nielsen Norman Group.
Ken Godskind, vice president of marketing at the Internet monitoring firm
AlertSite, uses the Mozilla browser partly because of security concerns, but
he accepts having to run IE now and then.
"Rarely are you going to go someplace where you're going to avoid Microsoft
technology," he said.
But sites have gotten better about designing for other browsers, said Porter
Glendinning, an Internet consultant who promotes adherence to Web standards.
Until recently, he said, banking applications rarely worked on anything
else.
And leading Web application developers, including Opera, Apple Computer Inc.
and Macromedia Inc., are collaborating on better plug-in technology to rival
Microsoft's.
Opera's Christen Krogh said users would get the same functionality no matter
their browser.
Mark Rasch, chief security counsel for Solutionary Inc., favors alternatives
"if for no reason other than to create heterogeneity," which dulls the
impact of any single virus attack.
But alternatives can become targets, too, as more people use them, said
Chris Kraft, senior security analyst at Sophos Inc.
A better solution is to reconsider whether browsers ought to have evolved
into Swiss Army knives of the Internet ? a development that can, and has,
backfired on users.
These Web browsers have advanced over time to be extremely rich in terms of
content, how they deliver content," Kraft said. "What's the compromise
between a rich experience and creating a toolbox for the general malicious
community?"


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