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Bug Internet Explorer Security The Internet IT

Finland Issues IE 6 Warning 22

loconet writes "ZDNet UK reports that The Finnish Communications Regulatory Authority have warned computer users against using Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6 web browser as it has a serious security flaw that compromises computer systems. Microsoft has yet to announce when it will release a patch for the vulnerability, which does not affect XP SP2 users but does affect Windows 2000 users and XP SP1 users. The vulnerability was published at the beginning of November."
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Finland Issues IE 6 Warning

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  • on aftonbladet.se (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fredrikj ( 629833 ) * on Saturday November 27, 2004 @09:53PM (#10934500) Homepage
    For the record: for several hours this was top news on the front page of aftonbladet.se, the most visited Swedish news site [alexa.com], with the headline "Don't use Internet Explorer" [aftonbladet.se]. Hopefully at least a few people followed their link to mozilla.org...
  • Who'd use IE? (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Refrozen ( 833543 )
    Again.

    That's what? The 1000000th time a 'big' institiution has said to use something other then shiternet exploder?
    • by SgtChaireBourne ( 457691 ) on Sunday November 28, 2004 @06:41AM (#10936350) Homepage
      Who'd use IE?
      Believe it or not, there are unfortunatley many people that do not hear about secure or functional programs. MS has not only a lock on the desktop market (for the time being [zdnet.com.au]), but also the advertising market.

      The demand is out there. Whenever I show or tell about the options avaiable, the non-tech people ask afterwards why haven't they received this information earlier.

      Perhaps one reason for the decision by the Finnish agencies to advise against MSIE and for Firefox, Mozilla, Opera, etc. is to compensate for harm done from the computer "security" campaign [tietoturvaopas.fi] earlier this year, which amounted to nothing more than a state funded 8-page, 4-color MS ad delivered to every home, apartment or dorm in the country. Telling die hard Chairman Bill fans to update and patch is one thing, but neglecting to even name other options appears to fall somewhere between irresponsible/incompetent and graft.

      Maybe this will lead to discussion of other useful tools and operating systems. Obviously, Mozilla, Firefox and Opera are drop in replacements. Likewise, MS-Outlook has a worse track record than MSIE and should be shunned in favor of Eudora, Mozilla, Thunderbird, etc. Home users that just want a computers that works should look at OS X, though I bet there would be a good cottage industry in upgrading old x86 machines to a Linux or BSD distro.

      There are also issues like file incompatibility, technological obsolesence, and platform lock-in that those and options like OOo [openoffice.org] avoid.

  • by aitio ( 794921 ) on Saturday November 27, 2004 @11:10PM (#10934890) Homepage
    Changing your browser was FICORA's last option [tietoturvaopas.fi] when dealing with BOFRA. Before were upgrading to SP2, updateing virus scanning and so on.

    "#5 Erityisesti jos käytössäsi ei ole Windows XP -käyttöjärjestelmää tai XP:n Service Pack 2 -päivityksen asentaminen ei ole mahdollista, yhtenä tietoturvahaavoittuvuuden rajoitusmahdollisuutena on vaihtoehtoisen selainohjelman käyttäminen, kunnes haavoittuvuuteen on olemassa korjaava ohjelmistopäivitys."

    Loosely translated: "If you are not using Windows XP, or installing SP2 is not possible, you can also use a different Internet-browser, until the vulnerability is patched."

    This is still far from saying "DON'T USE IE, YOU MORONS!"

    My own family was an example of how these suddle ways of trying to make people to care about computer security don't work.

    Dad in the morning while reading the paper: "
    'FICORA issues statement...' Why don't they stop rambling about the Internet and those viruses!"
    Dad in the evening: "What the fu*k is wrong with the computer?"
  • Harsher words (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Gary Destruction ( 683101 ) * on Sunday November 28, 2004 @02:02AM (#10935600) Journal
    It will only be a matter of time before we start seeing harsher words about Internet Explorer's security problems. "Don't use Internet Explorer" is more of a catch phrase than a warning.
    Imagine seeing harsher words from security firms like,"Internet Explorer is a virus vector" or "Internet Explorer makes Windows an unsafe OS."
    Harsher words may prompt harsher actions. The realization of IE's entanglement with Windows may finally be officially recognized as a problem and not an enhancement or innovation.
    • Internet Explorer makes Windows an unsafe OS

      Like it needs any help with that (or isn't already).

      Oh wait, is this, by any chance, the same Internet Explorer that Microsoft (and its key executives) claimed under sworn testimony in US v. MS was a fundamental part of their OS that could not be removed due to it been responsible for much of the basic OS functionality? Hmmm...I wonder?

      (Not that this is really a problem for Microsoft as they regularly directly contradict themselves in quick succession--even

  • Read this [webpronews.com]
    Looks like Microsoft PR department has also heeded to the warning :-)
  • The US always seems to be way behind on anything involving intelligent decisions. Why don't we get warnings about MS crap stinking?
  • This just in..... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fozzmeister ( 160968 ) on Sunday November 28, 2004 @06:44AM (#10936356) Homepage
    .... Unpatched versions of Solaris, Linux, *BSD and PalmOS also have security problems
  • I can well believe Finland did this as the even the US government (CERT) [us-cert.gov] has made a number of [google.com] similar warnings (including their most recent suggestion to ditch the browser [cert.org], but is this story true?

    I cannot find anything on The Finnish Communications Regulatory Authority's WWW site about it, and (thanks to timothy not even looking articles he posts links to) the text in the story, "warned computer users against using Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6" links to an article which doesn't even *mention* the warni

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