Zone-Spoofing Fixed for IE 7 Home Users
BeanBunny writes "The IE 7 dev team has essentially removed the intranet zone for Home users, resulting in a Web browser that is effectively invulnerable to a zone-spoofing attack. This security feature does not exist, however, on any installation that is part of a managed network. It also does not exist if you manually change the permissions on your Internet zone. However, in Windows Vista, both zones will be run in a 'protected mode,' something that allegedly prevents the invisible installation of code."
The OP doesn't seem too sure of this new security ploy - I don't know how they plan to implement this, but I think claiming to have a completely secure way of doing things doesn't help your security in the long run. Immune to today's typical attack, maybe, but if/when vista takes over as the OS of choice for most computers, its vulnerablilities will be found and exploited. I remember how SP2 was supposed to be some sort of security godsend, and when I first tried to install it it BSOD'd my computer every startup until I reformatted & reinstalled windows. That's slightly off topic, but it's an example of how good-intentioned 'security' fixes can do little more than break something that's been manually secured in the first place.
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Sounds like a good start for IE7. If vista comes around, I still won't use IE7 anyway. It's reputation is tarnished and no matter what Microsoft does, it won't bring back us Firefox, Opera, Safari and etc users.
If I was Microsoft, I'd implent IE competely away from shell and work with it individualy. I think it'll solve the majority of the problems.
I still fail to understand why IE needs zones at all. If the security settings were less complicated and more reasonable, this wouldn't be a problem. Instead of trusted/intranet/internet, etc... why not a 'whitelist' and 'blacklist.' Simple and easy. Zones are complicated and confusing for most users, and many people end up setting the internet zone to low security so they can access their favorite Java/Flash/JS/ActiveX-addled whiz-bang website anyway.
Everyone should know that checkbox well -- and leave it alone and unchecked.
But where is the Never trust content from this provider ever again checkbox? The one I want to check every time I go to a site (all seemingly signed by the same certificate provider) that tries to install the 24-hour Time Manager, or You Must Click Yes to View This Site's Content when all trying to do is get out of a site I hadn't wanted in the first place.
That's what I want my browser to offer me -- along with an inability for any web-site to affect my browser's basic functioning, like disabling the right mouse key. When is that patch coming?
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
Actually, in Vista, the default user account is non-admin, and IE7 runs in a mode even more limited than that.
Slowly but surely MS is learning a few good tricks from the Linux crowd.
Please get over yourself. The "Linux crowd" didn't invent the security system that's in Linux. If MS is learning from anyone, it's from the Unix crowd, which Microsoft itself is a part of, having created Xenix in the late 80's. But essentially, MS is learning from its own problems, which were created by migrating its userbase from a single-user no-security system (DOS, Win3.x, Win 9x) to a multi-user system with security (NT and its decendents). During this migration, the default accounts have been admin because that's what they were (essentially) in Win9x. In order to keep Win9x programs working, the default accounts in NT have been admin. This is changing with Vista, and has nothing to do with "learning" from Linux.
-- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000