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Microsoft Advises to Type in URLs Rather than Click

spacehug writes "In a recent Microsoft Knowledge Base article, they provide 'Steps that you can take to help identify and to help protect yourself from deceptive (spoofed) Web sites and malicious hyperlinks.' These steps include always using SSL/TLS, typing 'JScript commands' in the address bar, and typing in URLs instead of clicking links! I have a suggestion that's not in the Knowledge Base: don't use IE!"

74 of 984 comments (clear)

  1. i knew it by jester42 · · Score: 5, Funny

    i always knew that those hyperlinks were a bad security problem. Web designer should really avoid those propietary 'href'-tags for security reasons.

    1. Re:i knew it by beda · · Score: 5, Funny

      You are right, gurus use 'a'-tag instead, with 'href' as an attribute.

    2. Re:i knew it by sepluv · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Not in XHTML 2.0 -- it looks like the anchor (a) element is probably going to be deprecated now one can use href on any element (as I have said it should be for a while, because there is nothing semantically special about link text in comparison to other text).

      IMO, as XHTML 2.0 is meant to be non-backwards-compatible, they should use the a element for the functionality of the acronym and abbr elements.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
  2. Hah! by DarkHelmet · · Score: 5, Funny

    I have a suggestion that's not in the Knowledge Base: don't use IE!

    Yeah, and I have a solution to prevent malicious programs like IE from running that's not in the Knowledge Base...

    Install Linux.

    I hear you can buy a copy of it for around $600 somewhere.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    1. Re:Hah! by Bish.dk · · Score: 4, Informative

      What is the best browser for MS platform?? Mozilla, Opera,?? Let a brother know.

      Mozilla Firebird is a lean, mean browsing machine. Highly recommended. Remember not to click the link if you're in IE!

    2. Re:Hah! by byolinux · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Firebird will be, but until then, vanilla Mozilla I'd say.

      Firebird seems lacking in a few things for now.

    3. Re:Hah! by linuxci · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Personally I'd say Mozilla Firebird but it's a matter of preference. The Mozilla's are free and Opera is free if you don't mind a banner ad (or pay them for the ad free version), so just download them all and give them a go, they all have their good points. But one thing, if you do use Opera, please go into preferences and stop it 'Identifying as IE' that doesn't help people with flawed stats programs realise people are using alternative browsers.


      Also if you can also educate others into non-IE browsers that will help marketshare and make more sites develop to the standards and not to MS only HTML/JS. Although to be honest I know of very few IE only sites, and I never need to use them anyway, YMMV.

    4. Re:Hah! by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 4, Informative

      I see others have recommended Mozilla Firebird. It's a great browser indeed, and open source.

      However, I recommend Opera. It's small, fast, very standards-compliant, and has lots of nice features that make browsing the web just a little more comfortable. Examples:

      Don't want to wait for those graphics to load? Press G to stop loading them. You can selectively view some images if you need to.

      Can't read the fonts? Color scheme ticking you off? Press Ctl+G to use the default stylesheet. Black text on white background, couldn't be more legible. Don't like the default stylesheet? Don't worry, you can change it.

      Type g litigious bastards in the address bar to search for litigious bastards on Google.

      Bookmark pages and assign aliases to them to surf there quickly. For example, I used sd for Slashdot and osn for OSNews.

      I don't like mouse gestures, but some people love them. Opera does, too.

      Etc, etc.

      It's a pity Opera on Linux keeps crashing. On Windows, it's great, though.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    5. Re:Hah! by The+Fink · · Score: 5, Funny
      Oooh! I get it now!

      This is all a big ploy, by Microsoft, to prevent "their" customers clicking on links which might take them to competitors' products. Sneaky! It might even be patentable!

      What'll they think of next?

    6. Re:Hah! by Megaslow · · Score: 5, Informative
      While I am also a happy Firebird user, it is lacking a few key things, e.g. mailto URLs are not handled properly. Also, there are still significant bugs, such as pages which cause the browser to completely croak, and bugs with the password manager.

      I'm sure the majority of the glaring errors or lacking features will be addressed before it becomes an official product.

    7. Re:Hah! by NoMercy · · Score: 5, Funny

      And by the sounds of it, a week later buy a new keyboard because youve worn-out your [g] key.

    8. Re:Hah! by real_smiff · · Score: 4, Informative
      Opera was my browser of choice for over a year, but recently i moved to Firebird.. why? I got fed up with Opera being so slow. It seems to have problems with certain sites (many that i come across), relating apparently to its javascript engine (a suggestion on their forum to turn off js is too inconvenient for me). If this affects you (I was finding Opera regularly using >50% CPU and >100MB RAM on my AMD 1.2Ghz, 512MB system), you may want to consider Firebird instead (with all the necessary extensions to give a similar experience). I have found no such resource usage in Firebird yet.

      This is in no way bashing Opera, which has a lot of great innovations and I hope to return to when this problem is fixed. Just a warning that Opera may not be as fast as everyone thinks!

      --

      This is my Sig, this is my Gun. One is for Slashdot and one is for Fun.

    9. Re:Hah! by byolinux · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I have Moz 1.6 and Firebird 0.71 on OS X, and I find Firebird to be lacking some little bits that prevent it from being anywhere near as good.

      Examples would be things like plugins and things from mozdev.org that don't work, preferences that are not present in Firebird, etc.

      Firebird is going to be a wonderful browser, it's already a very good browser, I just don't feel it's ready for (my) usage yet.

    10. Re:Hah! by Pxtl · · Score: 4, Funny

      No - the best browser for the MS platform is Arachne... oh, you meant Windows.

    11. Re:Hah! by xlyz · · Score: 4, Informative


      to add mailto: support to Firebird just install mozex extension

    12. Re:Hah! by Walterk · · Score: 5, Informative
      However, I recommend Opera. [..] lots of nice features that make browsing the web just a little more comfortable. Examples:

      Don't want to wait for those graphics to load? Press G to stop loading them.

      Firebird: Press ESC

      You can selectively view some images if you need to.

      Firebird: has image blocking: right click -> block images from <server name>

      Can't read the fonts?

      Firebird: Ctrl++, or Ctrl+- for smaller fonts

      Color scheme ticking you off? Press Ctl+G to use the default stylesheet. Black text on white background, couldn't be more legible.

      Firebird: No shortcut for default colours yet.

      Don't like the default stylesheet? Don't worry, you can change it.

      Firebird: Preferences->General->Fonts&Colors

      Type g litigious bastards in the address bar to search for litigious bastards on Google.


      Firebird: By default has `google' as alias for google, but you can do this with anything by assigning alias to sites with %s for the search term, eg:
      • Google: http://www.google.com/search?q=%s&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF- 8&hl=xx-bork&btnG=Google-a+Seerch
      • IMDB: http://us.imdb.com/Find?select=All&for=%s


      Bookmark pages and assign aliases to them to surf there quickly. For example, I used sd for Slashdot and osn for OSNews.

      See above.

      Firebird also has type ahead searching. A feature which one can't live without.
  3. Why go half way? by Snosty · · Score: 5, Funny

    I say go one step further for ultimate security and telnet to port 80.

  4. Better solution by CaptainAlbert · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why risk using the Web at all? Just e-mail the webmaster and ask him to fax the webpages to you!

    --
    These sigs are more interesting tha
    1. Re:Better solution by Mork29 · · Score: 4, Funny

      E-mail? You must be crazy... Just stick to messaging the fokes on your local BBS. I just got done downloading this kicking game called Lemonade Stand!

    2. Re:Better solution by Mr_Silver · · Score: 5, Funny
      Why risk using the Web at all? Just e-mail the webmaster and ask him to fax the webpages to you!

      I followed Microsoft's advice and typed in your address but all I got was the MSN search engine telling me that the domain "fax the webpages" doesn't exist.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
  5. Re:fpfpfp by radicalskeptic · · Score: 4, Funny

    Damn, if only you could have clicked the "reply" link instead of having to type the URL in in manually for security reasons, you could have gotten first post. Curse you, IE!

    --
    WARNING: If accidentally read, induce vomiting.
  6. How About.. by thesupraman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They turn off all the 'automate EVERYTHING' approaches microsoft seem to think are a good idea, then it will become safe again to actually click on the links?

    Really. perhaps a few more people should install pegasus email under windows, and download mozilla firebird - the world would really be a slightly better place!

    Or is that just too obvious?

    PS: What on EARTH is up with IE's css support? is it intentionally designed to be completely broken?

    Sigh.

    1. Re:How About.. by golgotha007 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What on EARTH is up with IE's css support? is it intentionally designed to be completely broken?

      damn, no kidding.

      i design web sites for a living. there's nothing worse than getting a web site looking just the way you want, then running a W3C CSS and HTML validator and having everything check out 100 percent. ...then to check the site with IE. holy crap, my PNG files aren't transparent anymore? what are all these extra spaces all over the place? why does the site now look so shitty?

  7. In other news: secure banking by VEGx · · Score: 5, Funny

    In other news M$ advices all online banking users to walk in to their nearest bank office to secure their online banking...

  8. uhh? by aarku · · Score: 4, Funny
    Is it just me or does the title of the article read:

    Eight-hundred-thirty-three-thousand-seven-hundred- eighty-six Steps that you can take to help identify and to help protect yourself from deceptive (spoofed) Web sites and malicious hyperlinks

  9. Re:Turn off Javascript, turn on the status bar by linuxci · · Score: 5, Informative

    The point is there's a bug in IE that even with JavaScript turned off people can give the impression that you're going to a different URL than you really are, the worst thing is it also affects the address bar. Be safe, don't use IE

  10. CLIE? by mattjb0010 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Microsoft Advises to Type in URLs Rather than Click

    So now MS is promoting a return to command line interfaces?

  11. Homograph attacks might bite us all by ControlFreal · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Although this article on the insecurities of IE (or in a more general sense, Windows' URL handling) is fitting for ./, the advice to type URL into the address bar may be one that we should all take to heart in the future.

    As pointed out here, the advent of multilingual (Unicode) domain names gives rise to a new possibility for attacks: the Homograph attack.

    Example: one could replace the o's in http://www.microsoft.com with Greek omicrons, Cyrillic o's or characters from other charsets, as long as they are rendered by our browser as something resembling an "o". The users won't notice the difference, but they might be redirected to another site, even though they visually inspected the URL.

    A more serious example: my bank, the Dutch Rabobank, features internet banking. It specifically displays a warning before logging in: Make sure that the address in the address bar starts with https://www.rabobank.nl/, then you are sure you're communicating with us. Now, with a homograph attack, even that might not be certain again: it looks the same, and users are reassured even though reassurance is not due! And it's not limited to using IE or Windows either.

    A comment is in order here: we're not that far yet, as most clients require special (non-default) DNS clients to access Unicode domain names. But it might become a big problem in the future.

    Are there any people from countries using non-latin domain names that might want to comment on this?

    --
    Support a Europe-related section on Slashdot!
    1. Re:Homograph attacks might bite us all by linuxci · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There's no excuse to have to go to reduiculous means to prevent spoofing, and manually typing in URL's is excessive, in fact I'd say the vast majority of people in here that use IE at home out of choice are doing it because they're too lazy to try alternatives (I can't think of any other reason why they'd prefer IE) so they're not gonna type URL's manually either - and the non tech literate public won't even know to do this.


      So it's upto the browser makers to take action if this is really a security risk.


      The simplest solution to me would be to not allow multiple charsets to be displayed in the URL bar making this not possible.

    2. Re:Homograph attacks might bite us all by MonTemplar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You don't even need to go digging for Unicode characters to pull off tricks like that. As demonstrated on Slashdot itself! Some examples: Anonvmous Coward (y replaced by v), MonTemp1ar (l replaced by 1 (one)). At least with /. usernames you have the UID that can be checked against to confirm the person's identity. No such luck if you apply the same trick to URLs - how many people are going to spot the difference?

      -MT.

      --
      -MT.
    3. Re:Homograph attacks might bite us all by ControlFreal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I fully agree with you that it should not be necessary. However, I assume that you are from a country using a latin charset (being Dutch, I am). However, even though we as "westerners" might still be in the majority (are we still?), this might not always be like this.

      For example: the number of Chinese internet users went from roughly 600 thousand to 80 million in the timespan 1997-2003. So there will be lots more. And that's only China. I can only imagine that these people want domains in their own charset (at least we have lots of domain names in Dutch here in Holland, but of course we have the advantage of using a Latin charset).

      In that case, a general "block" on multilingual domains in the address bar won't work.

      --
      Support a Europe-related section on Slashdot!
    4. Re:Homograph attacks might bite us all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A simple solution is to render characters from a different code page than the default in a different color in urls.

  12. What about .... by sdukaric · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's say M$ user types in URL but on that URL is redirection to faulty URL? The thing is, they can do nothing about it. And nowadays some regular URL has like 30+ characters with all those PHP-Nuke/Puke portal engines and horror CMS engines. SO, M$ crew, create a real browser and stop dragging us/them to a stone age...

    --
    Sinisa
  13. Ahh sweet sweet irony by quantaman · · Score: 4, Funny

    http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb; %5Bln%5D;833786

    Need I say more?

    --
    I stole this Sig
  14. Don't use IE by 91degrees · · Score: 4, Informative

    I try to convince other people of this. Firebird conatains a popup blocker, supports tabbed browsing, is more secure, and has a gestures plugin.

    The other people just don't. It's not like they don't know how. These are proper techies. they just make up daft excuses like not trustin free software.

    Maybe trust is importatn. You can trust IE after all. You can trust it to be insecure.

  15. Re:Easier way... by BenjyD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Then you have to fight the bizarre built-in pro-Microsoft stance of pretty much any non-techy computer user. I swear MS are putting something in the water.
    You could install computers with IE and Mozilla, with a large message that popped up *every time* you ran IE saying "This browser is insecure and will allow criminals to steal your money. There is a far more powerful and secure browser on this computer - it's the red icon on the desktop".
    And people would still use IE "'cos it's Microsoft".

  16. Re:Turn off Javascript, turn on the status bar by teledyne · · Score: 5, Informative

    But it still doesn't make sense. Some secure sites have a feature that requires a referrer link when you access different pages. If you type in a URL, there is no referrer link, and so in that case, you might not be able to access that site.

    On the other hand, I use Opera, and I love it. While it has a little banner that display ads depending on what you're currently surfing (unless you pay 30 bucks for it), I find it in no way to be intrusive. Go try it out.

  17. Microsoft to remove the @ symbol from URLs by krappie · · Score: 5, Informative

    It hasnt made it on slashdot yet, but netcraft is reporting that future versions of IE will no longer be supporting user information in HTTP or HTTPS URLs.

    For more information, please see microsoft's advisory. Thats right, type in the URL yourself, it really is at microsoft.com. From now on, any HTTP or HTTPS URL that has an @ sign in it will report "Invalid syntax error".

    After months and still no patch for this bug.. they just now announced THIS as their fix, but still no patches. You'd think they'd just prevent parts of their URL bar from disappearing instead of removing features..

    Workarounds for this new behavior are listed as:
    * Do not include user information in HTTP or HTTPS URLs.
    * Instruct users not to include their user information when they type HTTP or HTTPS URLs.

    How ingenious. I also find it interesting that they link to the standards they are now breaking under "references".

    1. Re:Microsoft to remove the @ symbol from URLs by Jugalator · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes. Unfortunately they never seem to have realized they could avoid the problem by doing like Opera for example... Dialog:

      -----
      You are entering www.thewebsite.com while using this login information:

      User name: blah
      Password: foo

      Proceed?

      [ Yes ] [ No ]
      -----

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    2. Re:Microsoft to remove the @ symbol from URLs by g3rr!t · · Score: 5, Informative

      Which would be correct, except that RFC1738 is obsoleted by RFC2396, which does allow for user names.

      (There's an interesting "discussion" over on Mozilla's bug id 122445 - regarding this, too)

  18. Internet Explorer should offer... by 2bot_or_not_2bot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    (1) Checkbox to disable "kiosk mode" from EVER happening! (2) Checkbox to disable pop-up windows (or prompt user per pop-up) as opposed to disabling Javascript altogether. (3) Outlook-specific settings for HTML preview so that most features can be turned off for e-mail preview; stop spam from essentially calling home via preview, or playing virus MP3, etc. For example, by default forbid all HTML-formatted e-mail from accessing the Internet and running scripts -- just totally passive HTML. The user, at his or her discretion, can right-click on the body of an e-mail to select further previewing rights for trusted mail. (4) Checkbox to reject URLs that use unicode characters -- just an option; (5) Checkbox to forbid wacky URLs with "obvious" redirection tricks; (6) Option to set the "maximum number of browser windows to open per second". One can set this to a rate slower than one's ALT-F4 pressing rate, to win the battle against run-away pop-ups.

    1. Re:Internet Explorer should offer... by dohcan · · Score: 5, Funny

      Is that the long way of saying "just use Mozilla" ?

  19. Alas, some of us have little choice. by The+Fink · · Score: 5, Interesting
    It's part of our IT department's standard operating environment to have MSIE as the only browser on Windows platforms. It's also part of their policy to prevent additional programs -- specifically including web browsers of any kind -- from being installed, and the penalty for doing so is not something I really feel like finding out. People have been fired for repeat violations.

    Their reasoning? Security. Judging by the number of times in the past two months they've had overtime to do, and the amount of times they have to send out emails-which-get-deleted-without-further-reading on what not to do with a web browser, I suspect it's the security of their jobs they're trying to protect, but anyway...

    So, instead, I sit and shake my head with wonder at all the people, particularly from the Management stream -- although I've seen for myself that engineers aren't immune -- who blindly click links without checking their content, who don't check for SSL, and so on and so forth. And, in two cases, get swindled out of cash because they believed an email supposedly from their bank...

    ObRant: Why conceal this kind of knowledgebase article? Microsoft should have it in forty-foot-high letters of fire on their front page. No, more than that; it should be in every freaking news syndication everywhere for every single windows user to see and read, repeatedly, until they get the hint.

    Then, and only then, can we honestly say that those who still don't do the "right" thing deserve it.

  20. What's next? by This+is+outrageous! · · Score: 5, Funny
    "Protect yourself from clicking links by disconnecting the mouse!"

    "Protect yourself from email worms by walking to the post office!"

    "Protect yourself from p2p worms by buying your music on 8-track tape!"

    "Protect yourself from joe-jobs by not using your hotmail address!"

    "Protect yourself from internet credit card theft by using dollar bills exclusively!"

    "Protect yourself from e-banking snoopers by keeping your savings under the mattress!"

    "Protect yourself from spam by disconnecting the internet!"

    "For Christ's sake, protect yourself from illegal operations by turning off your computer NOW!

    (Oops, this one's not new.)

    --
    This is...

    O
    U
    T
    R
    A
    G
    E
    O
    U
    S

    !

  21. They can't be serious... by zoney_ie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How on EARTH did someone write this KB article without cracking up. Are they for real or what?

    I mean, either you continue as usual and get screwed should you hit a malicious link, or use a different browser. Who in their right minds would ACTUALLY follow the steps here. "Hmmm, this link looks suspicious... I'd better manually enter the address". Or copy a piece of JScript code for a more verbose description of the link...

    Yeah, right. I can't get over this article - it's nearly like a spoof or something.

    I've never had problems with Mozilla Firebird - ever. And it's not even v1.0 yet! I've been using it since November last, every day nearly, at work and home.

    --
    -- *~()____) This message will self-destruct in 5 seconds...
    1. Re:They can't be serious... by danamania · · Score: 5, Funny

      To go back to an often used analogy, if Microsoft were a car company and their vehicles happened to exhibit a problem with the engines catching on fire (as happens, sometimes, with real car manufacturers) other makers would recall and fix the problem.

      Not microsoft!

      They're innovative. They'd send a helpful sheet out to owners:

      -----------------
      Things you can do to protect yourself from an engine fire:

      The most effective step you can take to protect yourself from an engine fire caused by the known defect, is pushing your car manually. By pushing your car manually, you can avoid creating the temperatures required to initiate combustion. This will keep your car safe. Also, you can save fuel and contribute to a cleaner environment.
      ----------------- :P

    2. Re:They can't be serious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The URL spoofing exploit also exists in Mozilla. Only Opera is sort-of immune by popping up a warning message about potentially dodgy sites.

      Considering IE is here to stay (as you could never hope convert the masses out there who think Opera is just the thing with fat ladies singing and that Mozilla is some stupid Japanese monster) I think people's time would be better spent raising awareness of IE's flaws and encouraging Microsoft to fix them rather than encouraging people to change browser.

      Plus on /. you're preaching to the converted when talking about different browsers.

    3. Re:They can't be serious... by LittleGuy · · Score: 4, Funny

      How on EARTH did someone write this KB article without cracking up. Are they for real or what?

      We'll find out next fall on an all-new FOX Reality Miniseries: "The Simple Life: Redmond".

      (What? Didn't you notice that the KB is suppose to Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 SP1, when used with Anal Wiener Buggers?)

      --
      Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
    4. Re:They can't be serious... by m4rcL · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It shows beyond a shadow of a doubt how stumped Microsoft are. They must've sat for hours thinking of how to solve their problem and simply could not come up with an answer. Their software model cannot cope with this sort of thing so their only advice is to avoid using the internet properly. It's something we've all known all along. Open source works better.

    5. Re:They can't be serious... by kryliss · · Score: 4, Funny

      And don't forget pushing the car will also give you some well needed exercise..

      --
      --- If the bible proves the existence of God, then Superman comics prove the existence of Superman.
    6. Re:They can't be serious... by justforaday · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Who in their right minds would ACTUALLY follow the steps here?

      i totally agree with you about the absurdity of the whole situation. however, i will admit that i know someone who will follow these instructions to a tee. my roommate refuses to listen to anyone when they recommend using an alternate browser [firebird, mozilla, and opera have all been suggested numerous times by numerous people]. instead i get to sit there and laugh at him while he bitches about popups, security holes, and having to copy/paste links into notepad to make sure they really go somewhere he wants to go. i truly get the feel that some people purposefully put themselves through pain to try to make a point. what that point is, however, is totally lost on me...

      --
      I'll turn into a supernova and burn up everything. Well I'll turn into a black little hole and you'll turn into string.
    7. Re:They can't be serious... by ozbird · · Score: 4, Funny

      Also, you can save fuel and contribute to a cleaner environment.

      Pushing your car can also cause unburnt fuel to poison the catalytic converter, and pollute the atmosphere with hydrocarbons. In certain situations, the unburnt fuel in the exhaust pipe may explode, possibly taking out the muffler, catalytic converter etc. with it. If this occurs, you should report the problem to your fuel supplier and/or exhaust manufacturer.

    8. Re:They can't be serious... by Christopher+Whitt · · Score: 5, Informative

      The URL spoofing exploit also exists in Mozilla

      bzzt - wrong. It existed only partially. The status bar would display the URL incorrectly, however the address bar always correctly displayed the full URL. There was a patch for this the same day that it was discovered Mozilla was partially affected, and an improved fix has since been checked in to all major Mozilla variants. Mozilla 1.6 is fixed, as will be Firebird 0.8 (due any day now).

      Check to see if your browser is vulnerable at the Secunia Adddress Bar Spoofing test page.

    9. Re:They can't be serious... by blinkylights · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Considering IE is here to stay (as you could never hope convert the masses out there who think Opera is just the thing with fat ladies singing and that Mozilla is some stupid Japanese monster) I think people's time would be better spent raising awareness of IE's flaws and encouraging Microsoft to fix them rather than encouraging people to change browser.

      "People" do weird things sometimes - a large number of people went to the theater and paid perfectly good money to see 'Gigli' for example. I think it's incredibly weird that people still use IE even without the security problems, given that there are a number of faster, better-featured browsers available free for downloading. But "people" tend to move in flocks. All it would take would be a large enough catalyst, and I think there would be a mass migration.

      Is this it? No. People are stupid - they won't switch because they should switch. People won't switch until they come to a roadblock: they want to do something and they find they can't. Even if every IE user were to see this KB entry, 99.9% would ignore it, and they'd blame "hackers" if they got hit by the vulnerability, not MS or IE.

      If people get exposed to and get used to better browsers, though (corporate IT gets tired of trying to teach users not to click on things, for example), they'll get used to tabbed browsing, native popup-blocking, their BenJen browser theme, etc., then find they can't do the same at home with IE... they'll switch.

      If IE were almost as good as Opera or Firebird, you'd be right about it being nigh invulnerable. It just isn't, though.

    10. Re:They can't be serious... by berzerke · · Score: 4, Informative

      ...If Google were to support the Toolbar in Moz and I'd probably switch...

      Ah! But there is a google toolbar for Moz. Happy switching.

    11. Re:They can't be serious... by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 5, Informative

      How can you Linux guys live without the Toolbar ? I *need* to know. Are you actually going to google.com every time you want to find a pic?

      When I was using Galeon, I would just put a "Search Google" box in my toolbar. (Here's a screenshot with three Google search boxes. Two of them are folded closed to save space). Firebird has similar functionality.

      For a variety of reasons I switched back to plain old Mozilla, and certainly don't visit Google.com directly. Personally I use a bookmark keywords . I've got "g" mapped to Google, so I just type something like "g galeon screenshots" in my address bar and I get a search for "galeon screenshots" from Google. It's such a handy feature that I've got similar keywords for Wikipedia, Everything2, dictionary.com, FreshMeat, and a few others.

      However, if I was only using one search engine, I might use the default behavior build into the address bar. When you type an address in a drop list of suggests appears below. The bottom one is always, "Search ENGINE for 'YOUR KEYWORDS'", where ENGINE is one of the many options you can configure (including Google), and YOUR KEYWORDS are whatever you typed. You just select it and off you go.

      If you're really keen on having a search box dedicated to Google, well, besides trying something like Galeon or Firebird, you can install the Googlebar (screenshots). Personally I'm no longer keen on adding search boxes to toolbars, I want less user interface on screen, not more. Less interface means more space for actual web page.

      How are you checking PageRankings?

      As a general rule I try to not obsess about what piece of software thinks about my web site or the web sites of others. Knowing PageRanking is certainly amusing, and it may be marginally useful if you're doing professional web work, but is it really that critical?

      I'll admit, it's a shame Mozilla doesn't provide it, but it's not really that big of a deal.

      As a bonus, it's the best popup blocker ever. I haven't seen one in a year and a half.

      Neither have I. It seems a bit odd to co-mingle popup-blocking and searching into a single component, but I guess if it works for you. Mozilla's popup blocking support works great and comes built in to the browser. As a bonus I can also stop sites from doing other irritating things. For example, I've forbidden sites from resizing or moving existing windows or moving windows up and down in the screen ordering. If you're sick of sites doing stupid crawls in your status bar or hiding the real destination for links you can just click "Allow scripts to...Change status bar text."

      I do like the tabbed browsing but it's like I have tabbed browsing now; I just have a dozen browsers open. I switch between them along the taskbar. RAM is cheap today gentleman. I don't really care how many of my machine's resources it takes.

      Tabbed browsing has never been about resources; that you think it does shows a serious lack of understanding about modern web browsers. Every major browser (including IE and Mozilla) will only run one copy of the program, regardless of how many windows you have open. Tabs are not significantly more efficient than windows.

      Tabbed browsing is about organization. The task bar works fine, but it doesn't scale. If you've got 20 windows open you've just got twenty little teeny icons with almost no text. XP's grouping helps, but all of the web browser windows get lumped together. A typical use case would be to have a window open to a web email site, another window reading a list of bugs assigned to me and a bunch of tabs for individual bugs I'm loo

  22. Use mozilla by mobby_6kl · · Score: 5, Funny

    Can I have my karma now?

  23. Absolutely hysterical by BigRedFish · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm laughing so hard I can't type. Hang on... OK. This MS article is so wrong I don't even know where to begin... How about here:

    The most effective step that you can take to help protect yourself from malicious hyperlinks is not to click them. Rather, type the URL of your intended destination in the address bar yourself.

    Is MS going to issue a patch to disable hyperlinks then? If you can't click hyperlinks, doesn't IE cease to meet the definition of a browser? Look at the bright side, finally Netscape has closure.

    Now, from the "but it's so easy to use" department:

    Make sure that the Web site uses Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS) and check the name of the server before you type any sensitive information. [....] By checking the name on the digital certificate user for SSL/TLS, you can verify the name of the server that provides the page that you are viewing. [...] double-click the lock icon, and then check the name that appears next to Issued to. If the Web site does not use SSL/TLS, do not send any personal or sensitive information to the site. If the name that appears next to Issued to is different from the name of the site that you thought provides the page that you are viewing, close the browser to leave the site.

    Huh? Does anyone expect Joe Luser to understand that? Checking the certificate against the stated URL and the IP address supplied by a DNS lookup of that URL seems rather straightforward. Someday, someone ought to invent a machine to do things like that. We could call it a computer. A computer might also be able to display the actual site name an nothing else, rather than allowing it to be spoofed in any way, eliminating the need for such manual babysitting.

    From the "but it's so easy to use" department, take two:

    In the Address bar, type the following command, and then press ENTER:
    javascript:alert("Actual URL address: " + location.protocol + "//" + location.hostname + "/");

    I see. We just proved this week that a huge segment of the Windows user base still hasn't learned about attachments. But grandma, who wants to look at the pictures of her grandchildren, is expected to be a Java programmer. There must be some incredible acid floating around Redmond. A complete break from reality, this is.

  24. ... and SSL will still work by Craig+Ringer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just imagine going to:

    https://&#1010;&#1086;mm&#1086;nwealthbank.com.a u/

    (may not display properly - whatever, you get the picture)

    and getting a perfectly valid ssl session. With entirely the wrong people - but the user would only notice if they looked at the cert.

    Of course, you'd have to find a cert registrar dumb or unethical enough to give you a cert for the domain, but with people like Verisign around that can't be hard.

  25. Security: Text-only email? by deadmonk · · Score: 4, Informative

    The same MS advisory page recommends (way down at the bottom for those that don't bother to RTFA):
    Read E-mail Messages in Plain Text.
    ...
    By reading e-mail in plain text, you can see the full URL of any hyperlink and examine the address that Internet Explorer will use. The following are some of the characters that may appear in a URL that could lead to a spoofed Web site:

    * %00
    * %01
    * @

    Gee, ya think that HTML email is a bad idea..? I wonder how many people even realize that this "IE advisory" applies to Outlook and their email as well?

    Nice way to bury that one, guys..

  26. One leap for man (in reverse)! by CubicZirconia · · Score: 5, Funny

    So what's next then? ....Write your emails in outlook, then print them and mail them in an envelope, all the benefits of outlook with the added security of Physical Delivery (tm)*(new improved feature, Microsoft patent pending).

  27. Re:You can't just use another browser. by binford2k · · Score: 5, Informative

    You missed the point.

    http://www.amazon.com%01@malicious-site.com

    will show as http://www.amazon.com%01@malicious-site.com in Mozilla, Firebird, Opera, etc.

    In IE, it will show as http://www.amazon.com

    That is the flaw. It has everything to do with IE.

  28. I haven't clicked links for YEARS! by TrollBridge · · Score: 5, Funny

    Goatse trolls on Slashdot taught me not to click hyperlinks LONG before they became a security issue!

    --
    There's a Mercedes gap too. I want one and can't afford one, but it's not government's job to do anything about it.
  29. This just in... by CFBMoo1 · · Score: 4, Funny
    and typing in URLs instead of clicking links!

    Microsoft Coperation today advised users to upgrade their current Internet Explorer web browsers to Carrier Pigeon 1.0. This newly released software package transferes HTML documents safely and securly over the friendly skies.

    NOTE: Microsoft is not responsible for packet loss during hunting season, unless it's wabbit season but definatly not duck season!

    I know I should probebly read the advisory, but I use mozilla. So how would it help?

    --
    ~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
  30. normal people by real_smiff · · Score: 4, Funny
    yep. i think it's because MS stuff is the most basic and hasn't changed for about 5 years (since they started using the internet). Like I tried to get people to use Opera.. and that thing pops up at the start (asking whether you want to start with your last session, home page, blank window etc.) and they don't even read it, they just think it's some sort of error.

    Where we go "cool, nice features" they... don't.

    The other thing is, they always, with unwavering precision and frightening speed, manage to find the pages that it doesn't render properly.

    gah, normal people.

    the other thing is, that MS have succeeding frighteningly well in making their applications and icons synonymous with the tasks they perform in the minds of so many people. it's been said before, but that blue 'e' sort of IS the internet to so many people, like that 'w' IS the word processor. gah again. sorry for the lack of capital letters in this post.

    This browser is insecure and will allow criminals to steal your money.
    lol
    --

    This is my Sig, this is my Gun. One is for Slashdot and one is for Fun.

  31. In an ideal standard world... by trezor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In an ideal, standardized world where W3C-specs were followed, and no-one sought to conquer the entire web trough non-standard HTML-extensions and market-dominance...

    In such a pretty and ideal place, you wouldn't have to develop different sites for different browsers. You are making yourself the extra work, by supporting none-standards. No sympathy for you, my friend. No sympathy for the devil, indeed.

    As a slashdotter I thought you knew that IE is more or less a Win32-only product. And there's a hell lot more to the internet than Win32.

    Anyone excusing their IE-support with sheer marketdominance has obviously ridden themselves of all the principles the net was founded on. But I guess that is ok, since most IE-users wouldn't know.

    --
    Not Buzzword 2.0 compliant. Please speak english.
  32. Almost by trezor · · Score: 4, Insightful
    • PS: What on EARTH is up with IE's css support? is it intentionally designed to be completely broken?

    I know this is offtopic flamebait, but hell it's so likely to be true...

    I believe Microsoft intentionally has a slightly broken CSS, so that everything that looks good in IE will look crappy in any standard-compliant browser.

    C'mon, it's not that crazy! We all know which mother has the marketshare's here.

    It's not like most people even know there are standard's anyway. "People" use FrontPage, or even worse, Word to make webpages these days, remember?

    So yes, I believe IEs CSS-support (or the CSS-support in any Microsoft product) to be intentionally broken. To gain marketshare. And that's paranoid me.

    Btw, my W3C-validated, visually confirmed (opera, mozilla) good webpages look like shit in IE. And, no I don't bother to make IE-CSS.

    --
    Not Buzzword 2.0 compliant. Please speak english.
  33. ulitmate defeat by init-five · · Score: 5, Interesting

    To ask the user not to click on bad URL's is to admit:

    1) we (Microsoft) know what a bad url is
    2) we (Microsoft) assume that you may know what a bad url is
    3) but for the life of us, we (Microsoft) just can't tell IE what a bad URL is
    4) we (Microsoft) give up trying to teach IE what a bad URL is
    5) hence we (Microsoft) ask you to please take care and avoid bad URL links

    --
    Hallowed are the Ori
  34. People, you misunderstand the problem! by SharpFang · · Score: 5, Informative


    The bug is not allowing URLs style:
    http://fake.host.as.username@the.real.evil .host/
    This is perfectly legal and most people will spot it! (well, at least I do.)
    The bug is:
    http://fake.host.as.username[somespecialchar] @the. real.evil.host/
    where the special character prevents IE from displaying anything after it.
    This is NOT the case in other browsers, this is a serious vulnerablity (because no matter how hard you look at the URL bar in IE, you won't see the URL is fake) and this is THE way crackers and spammers exploit the bug!

    --
    45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  35. Windows can be secure by trezor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know this really isn't a popular opinion around here, but still, it needs to be said.

    While it's true Windows isn't really the state of the art platform when it comes to security, it beat's Linux when it comes to a few key issues. Like hardware support.

    Yes. I know. Hardware support in Linux isn't that bad, but still you encounter hardware you simply cannot get working under Linux. This isn't exactly a flaw in Linux, but for all hardware that is developed, you can swear the vendor will release Windows-drivers that makes hardware support a non-issue.

    And as far as voting with your wallet goes, you really never can tell it's an issue before you try it. This goes for my MP3-player (Creative). I couldn't get it working under any Linux or *BSD platform.

    Back to the issue. Running Windows securely really only requires you to configure the system properly. Like disabling all unnecassery services (Universal PnP, Remote assistance, remote registry and so on...), and using none-Microsoft products. Like Mozilla or Opera for web-browsing.

    As much as we all love to hate Windows, it can be configured to operate decently. But in the name of "user-friendlyness" it configured to be insecure by default.

    And there goes my karma.

    --
    Not Buzzword 2.0 compliant. Please speak english.
    1. Re:Windows can be secure by bilbobuggins · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Back to the issue. Running Windows securely really only requires you to configure the system properly. Like disabling all unnecassery services (Universal PnP, Remote assistance, remote registry and so on...), and using none-Microsoft products. Like Mozilla or Opera for web-browsing.

      why don't people see that this is a MAJOR FLAW with the OS?
      the majority of home PC users are not slashdot geeks and simply don't have the time, and shouldn't have to worry about this sort of stuff.
      the whole founding principle of a home PC is that joe somebody is empowered to pursue his lifelong dream of starting a small business and can focus on producing/selling/etc. without having to be a mainframe technician on top of it. at what point does the amount of required fixes/patches/workarounds make a device cease being a tool and become a liability instead?

      sally middle-school teacher should be able to check her email without 5 service packs.
      bill janitor should be able to boot up a computer and check a sports score without being decieved by a major browser flaw into installing 16 trojans and zombie-fying his machine.

      the folks at redmond have forgotten so utterly and completely that the original idea of a computer was to help people that it's mind boggling.

      one of the most satisfying things in software dev can be watching someones day become markedly easier b/c of something you worked on.
      microsoft has become the antithesis of that.

  36. Upgrade Path by Duckman5 · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you're roommate is that unwilling to change browsers when other people suggest, perhaps he's be willing to upgrade when "Microsoft" tells him to.
    I've sent that page to a few people now, and the responses are pretty amusing. It redirects IE users to a spoofed MS Update page for Internet Explorer that offers Mozilla for download as the "update" for IE.

  37. Sorry it took me so long to reply to this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    My hands cramped up about halfway through typing http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb; %5Bln%5D;833786 . :)

  38. XHTML = DOA by mccrew · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Now I'll be the first to say that XHTML is a good thing and all that HTML should have been, but unfortunately the horse has already left the barn, and so designing a more secure barn door lock is mostly an academic exercise. Clients are written to deliberately be tolerant of HTML, and to degrade gracefully in the face of malformed, broken, or just-plain-wrong HTML elements. There is just too much valuable information in HTML 3.2 out there that nobody will accept a client that is hard-core XHTML only, and so if XHTML clients have to be backwards compabible to be used, what's the motivation to go to the pains of converting to XHTML? I don't see it.

    Any solution that relies upon millions of people changing their behavior is dead on arrival.

    --
    Hey, Windows users, there is no such thing as "forward" slash, there is only slash and backslash.