washingtonpost.com — Many people are switching from Internet Explorer to alternative browsers such as Firefox and Safari. Though that might make them feel more secure, the shift has also opened new doors for bad guys.Case in point: We have no IE bugs to report this month, but both Firefox and Safari have been hit hard.
Apr 26, 2008 View in Crawl 4
zekardApr 27, 2008
Well one thing is for sure, Mozilla patches their stuff more frequently.Check out the 08 stats for Firefox and IE7.<a class="user" href="http://secunia.com/product/12434/?task=statistics_2008">http://secunia.com/product/12434/?task=statistics_ ...</a><a class="user" href="http://secunia.com/product/12366/?task=statistics_2008">http://secunia.com/product/12366/?task=statistics_ ...</a>
karmavsApr 28, 2008
as are Safaristand, GreaseKit, Safari Adblock, safarisource, and many others. (those + inquisitor are just the ones I use)
antemonApr 28, 2008
the problem isn't with firefox itself, it seems the windows registry has been compromised so no matter how many times you unisntall/install it, if something is to run on startup or something, it'll get infected again and again.
paynexApr 28, 2008
I know this is quite lame but, i know i'm not the only one who would've got a kick out of this...<a class="user" href="http://img110.imageshack.us/img110/2210/83919158kt6.jpg">http://img110.imageshack.us/img110/2210/83919158kt ...</a>
huangismMay 2, 2008
well it's about f**king time
zounasMay 4, 2008
Some may think to have a better protection in an old shed with steel doors than in a fortress, I presume.
zounasMay 4, 2008
I have MAC address in my PC, now we can all declare peace.
containimatedMay 5, 2008
@twigboyI guess if you squint while looking at the graph...
Closed AccountJul 24, 2008
You know that's not why I switched..d**kh**d