Skip navigation.

A Blog From Behind the Trenches

Attack of the Bugs

Posts tagged with "msie"

Cenzic says Firefox and Safari are the least secure browsers? Really?

, , , ...

According to Computerworld, security firm Cenzic has released a report showing that Firefox and Safari were the least secure browsers in the first half of 2009. That's the impression you get by simply skimming the article anyway. The actual report from Cenzic only counts the number of security flaws, and concludes that Firefox had 44% of all vulnerabilities, Safari had 35%, IE had 15%, and Opera a mere 6%.

Does that really mean that IE is more secure than Firefox and Safari?

I'm not sure a conclusion like that can be drawn at all. There are other aspects to security vulnerabilities that were not covered, such as the severity, and how long the vendor takes to fix them. Furthermore, security reports sometimes elevate standard crash bugs into security bugs, for example referring to them as "Denial of Service Vulnerabilities".

It's great to see that Opera has a low number of vulnerabilities, and I am confident that we would look good if severity and "time to fix" were taken into account as well. But until the report actually includes those relevant details, it isn't really that useful.

Statistics are great, though. You can make them show just about anything.

What is a browser? Russian edition

, , , ...

You may have seen the video where Google asks more than 50 people in Times Square, New York, what a browser is. Most of them basically think a browser is a search engine!

It looks like the various browser vendors have a lot of work to do in order to create awareness around browsers!

Now someone has tried a similar poll in Russia.

Read more...

Microsoft's new mobile browser is... IE6

, ,

Microsoft is finally going to get their mobile browser offering up to speed... by porting the old Internet Explorer 6 (released in 2001, a few months after Opera 5) to Windows Mobile.

In a world where everyone, including the rest of Microsoft, is busy moving away from IE6 and all of its problems, Microsoft's Windows Mobile unit thought it was a good idea to wipe the dust off IE6 and give it new life.

At least it supposedly supports Flash.