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Last edited by Etymon on 16 December 2008, 04:30
Posted
Basically, don't visit sites you don't trust.<
Posted
Or just do a search :)
http://blogs.technet.com/swi/archive/2008/12/12/Clarification-on-the-various-workarounds-from-the-recent-IE-advisory.aspx
Or simply upgrade to IE8 effective immidiately...
<
http://blogs.technet.com/swi/archive/2008/12/12/Clarification-on-the-various-workarounds-from-the-recent-IE-advisory.aspx
Or simply upgrade to IE8 effective immidiately...
<
Last edited by SiSL on 16 December 2008, 10:19
Posted
IE8 is still far from ready for general release, it still has some serious issues which have not been resolved.<
Posted
Or you can just use Vista UAC with IE7 in protected mode. In other words default setup of Vista.
Anyway, I've never seen so much detailed information on Microsoft site about a security that big before. May be it may help people get rid of IE6 soon enough.<
Anyway, I've never seen so much detailed information on Microsoft site about a security that big before. May be it may help people get rid of IE6 soon enough.<
Last edited by SiSL on 16 December 2008, 10:57
Posted
Originally posted by RichardKinserWell, there's a problem even with sites you may trust : they may be subject to infection as well. A while ago we had a similar 'outbreak', where people where infected through the official Asus website. (link)
Basically, don't visit sites you don't trust.
My own sites running on Apache hosting were infected a while ago, through a root-access hack at my provider. I was not alarmed until a friend of mine tipped me to check for additional FTP accounts. They left the entire site intact, but injected hidden iframes and javascript stuff in tons of pages. So, even sites you trust may be hazardous to visit using an insecure browser.
I currently refuse to use IE, and use Firefox 3 instead. Too bad I cannot use that approach here at work, as they've implemented several IE only webapplications....
portfolio - linkshrinker - oxle - twitter
Posted
Originally posted by MarcelG
I currently refuse to use IE, and use Firefox 3 instead. Too bad I cannot use that approach here at work, as they've implemented several IE only webapplications....![]()
Just opposite here, Malwares are not "browser" specific. What happened at you is Malware which is used to create Botnets. Beside I refuse to use a browser claiming most secure while having found triple critical security flaws than it's IE equivalent in just a year with 14 "new versions" to fix it. <
Last edited by SiSL on 16 December 2008, 11:26
Posted
Just opposite here, Malwares are not "browser" specific. What happened at you is Malware which is used to create Botnets. Beside I refuse to use a browser claiming most secure while having found triple critical security flaws than it's IE equivalent in just a year with 14 "new versions" to fix it.Then try opera, or safari or even google chrome. At least until ms finds a fix or fixes it.<
Posted
time to boot up the mac?<
© 1999-2010 MaD2ko0l
Posted
Originally posted by MaD2ko0lOr use SandboxIE, or surf via a VM you can toss out if it gets hosed, or do any of a number of things.
time to boot up the mac?
The long and the short is that all OSs and all browsers have security holes. Period.
And the biggest one is sometimes PEBKAC.<
Posted
I currently refuse to use IE, and use Firefox 3 instead. Too bad I cannot use that approach here at work, as they've implemented several IE only webapplications....why not? use FF to surf the web and IE to access your work sites<
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