Firefox Disables Microsoft .NET Addon
ZosX writes "Around 11:45 PM Friday night, I was prompted by Firefox that it had disabled the addons that Microsoft has been including with .NET — specifically, the .NET Framework Assistant and the Windows Presentation Foundation. The popup announcing this said that the 'following addons have been known to cause stability or security issues with Firefox.' Thanks, Mozilla team, for hitting the kill switch and hopefully this will get Microsoft to release a patch sooner." Here's the Mozilla security blog entry announcing the block, which Mozilla implemented via its blocklisting mechanism.
I (Mike Shaver) am the person who spoke with the person at Microsoft. I'm not going to name them, because that's not my place, but this was not a case of us sticking it to Microsoft -- it was a case of us protecting our mutual users, with their agreement. We're working (today, as I type this) on ways to make the blocklist entry less disruptive for people who have their systems patched up. If we had known about the vulnerability before it was publicly disclosed, we could have done a lot more to make it smooth for users, but timing left us with an unpleasantly reduced set of options.
Vulnerability to malware is very profitable for Microsoft and its main customers, computer manufacturers. When people have problems with their computer, they often buy a new computer. Then Microsoft sells another copy of Windows, which, of course, still has security risks. See the New York Times article Corrupted PC's Find New Home in the Dumpster.
Vulnerability is a business model for Microsoft, in my opinion and that of many people.
But that doesn't explain everything about Microsoft's manner of doing business. Windows Vista was released against the wishes of some Microsoft managers. Remember Windows ME and DOS 3.0 and DOS 4.0? The problems in those products made a huge amount of money for Microsoft. Because of the problems people migrated to the next version quickly, and paid the full price again. Releasing bad versions, apparently deliberately, is profitable when a company has a virtual monopoly and many buyers lack technical knowledge.
But, as they say in late-night informercials, there's more. Windows XP had serious problems until the release of service pack 2, only four years ago. Maybe Windows XP SP2 could be called the first release version.
Windows 7, apparently a small update to Vista that fixes the most annoying problems, allows no easy path to migrate from Windows XP. Anyone who doesn't want to re-install and re-configure all programs must migrate to Vista first, then to Windows 7, and pay the full price again for two versions, not just one.
So, maybe just being evil is another part of Microsoft's business model.