In a monthly survey of more than 38 million Internet-connected computers conducted by Netcraft, Microsoft market share rose nearly 2 million to 12.9 million computers. Microsoft racked up a market share of 34.02, a rise of 4.89 per cent. Apache servers running on Linux dropped a similar amount, to 53.76 percent. IPlanet software from Netscape and Sun Microsystems dropped by about 200,000 to 2.33 per cent.
Netcraft said the change was mainly due to the shift of the domain name parking services of Register.com and Network Solutions from Linux and iPlanet to Microsoft software. Domain names are often "parked" on the servers of a registrar while they are under development.
Network Solutions shifted several hundred thousand sites from an iPlanet system at Web hosting firm Digex to Microsoft-based systems at Interland during March. Thousands of the Network Solutions sites at Interland were defaced shortly afterwards.
Netcraft also found that many sites using SSL encryption--a common form of security used on e-commerce sites--use cryptographic keys that are short enough to be vulnerable to hackers.
This is a lingering effect of tight U.S. restrictions on the export of cryptographic tools, according to Netcraft. Experts recommend a key length of 1,024 bits, but software using such lengthy keys was not originally available for export outside the U.S.
In most European countries, 25 per cent of SSL servers use vulnerable keys, Netcraft said. Within the U.S., by contrast, only 15.1 per cent of SSL sites used short keys.
U.S. export restrictions have been relaxed in recent years but the effect lingers, the firm said. "U.S. export regulations have had a discernable impact in slowing use of strong cryptography outside of the States," the survey found.



