On TV.com: BATTLESTAR Galactica Maxim Photoshoot
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Robert Lemos
Posted on ZDNet News: Sep 15, 2004 10:23:00 PM

The latest releases of the Mozilla and Firefox browsers, along with the Thunderbird e-mail software, fix 10 security issues, including three critical vulnerabilities, according to the Mozilla Foundation, which develops the software.

The three critical flaws could let an attacker run code on the victim's computer, according to information published by the Mozilla Foundation on Tuesday. The vulnerabilities are caused by the improper handling of electronic business cards, known as vCards; overly large images in the bit map (BMP) format; and links that have host names using nonprintable characters.

The issues are fixed in the latest versions of the Mozilla Foundation's open-source software products: Mozilla 1.7.3, Firefox release candidate 1.0 and Thunderbird 0.8.

Security information provider Secunia gave the set of 10 holes a "highly critical" rating, its second-highest grade for Internet threats.

The plethora of new security issues comes a month after the Mozilla Foundation started offering money to researchers who found verifiable security problems in the browser. On Tuesday, the open-source group released its latest version of its software packages.

The Firefox browser in particular has benefited from the perception that its rival, Microsoft's Internet Explorer, suffers from security problems. A flaw revealed yesterday by Microsoft could put users of Internet Explorer at risk of having their PCs compromised by malicious Web sites.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 32 Talkback(s)
YOU ARE KIDDING
I can't live without tabbed browsing. (Read the rest)
Posted by: hipparchus2000 Posted on: 09/16/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Please  Jeff Spicoli | 09/15/04
so who's clean?  ryanmikhael | 09/15/04
no such thing as an absolute in terms of security...  ryusen | 09/15/04
Not quite...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/15/04
that's always a possiblity, but...  ryusen | 09/15/04
But...  tic swayback | 09/15/04
It's a simple account of probability  Jeff Spicoli | 09/15/04
no time  hipparchus2000 | 09/16/04
A patch a day keeps the virus away.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/15/04
There shouldn't be a patch a day..  Jeff Spicoli | 09/15/04
Tell it to the open source folks.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/15/04
well,  ryusen | 09/15/04
Matters not, a box is a box.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/15/04
but what do you need to fix?  ryusen | 09/15/04
Intel's Fault for your problems?  nucrash | 09/15/04
That doesn't make any sense  voska | 09/16/04
Say what..that they're doing a great job fighting against criminals?  Jeff Spicoli | 09/15/04
Get your facts straight..  d_jedi | 09/15/04
Crazy stuff  Jaschink | 09/15/04
Don't know where you're coming from  Jeff Spicoli | 09/16/04
bitching from other article...  ryusen | 09/15/04
Between a rock and a hard place..  d_jedi | 09/15/04
Forgot something  Jeff Spicoli | 09/16/04
how about tabbed browsing?  SC-man | 09/16/04
That would be useful.. IF  d_jedi | 09/16/04
RE: That would be useful.. IF  SC-man | 09/16/04
Not really..  d_jedi | 09/16/04
YOU ARE KIDDING  hipparchus2000 | 09/16/04
About security  CobraA1 | 09/15/04
Patching, shouldn't it be perfect  FilledOut | 09/16/04
On perception and voluntary ignorance  michael-t | 09/16/04
IE should roll new executables each day like others  FilledOut | 09/16/04

What do you think?

advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here