IE7 Toolbar Mayhem
nikostheater writes "A user called anyweb tried to infect IE7 with as many toolbars as possible and it's interesting to see what happens and how secure IE7 is.." This is funny if only for the screenshot of a browser window with like 80% of the screen covered with toolbars.
You go to the website, and click multiple times to install something on purpose? Sometimes even downloading and running something? I'm not an IE apologist, or even an IE users, but it seems like infection is a bit strong.
I think the better point is that at the end, even after screwing up IE 7 so badly, the author was able to remove all the toolbars with relative ease (save the Yahoo toolbar). The better question is why was the Yahoo toolbar allowed to stay? Can just anyone buy those rights?
He got repeatedly warned about what he was doing, had to click through an awful lot of 'Yes, I'm sure'-type dialogue boxes to do it, and at the end was able to wipe out pretty much all of the toolbars very easily.
This is indeed news. It looks like Microsoft are actually getting something right this time!
Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
Now we just aren't being reasonable. If Microsoft didn't allow people to install these things every post here would be calling it anticompetitive and complain about how they don't give the user choices. I'm pretty sure I could make a "Log all credit card numbers and email them to me" extension for Firefox and if someone really wanted to install it I bet it would let them.
The fact of the matter is it isn't always obvious if something is going to break functionality, making a user aware that it might and giving them the choice is IMHO better than telling them they can only run signed software on their computer.