Mozilla Plans Fix For Critical Firefox Vulnerability In Next Release
Trailrunner7 writes "A month after an advisory was published detailing a new vulnerability in Firefox, Mozilla said it has received exploit code for the flaw and is planning to patch the weakness on March 30 in the next release of Firefox. Mozilla officials said Thursday that the vulnerability, which was disclosed February 18 by Secunia, is a critical flaw that could result in remote code execution on a vulnerable machine. The vulnerability is in version 3.6 of Firefox."
OMFG, it's a critical vulnerability and it takes ONE month for them to fix. Those dogs of redmond... That's the advantage of OS. An open source project would have issued a fix in one day....oh wait...
No one claims Firefox is perfect
Part of the problem with trying to have a sensible discussion on this topic is that so many people do pretty much claim $FOSS_APP is perfect: with enough eyes, all bugs are shallow, yada yada. If a large chunk of your culture and advocacy is based on that sort of foolishness, you're bound to get negative press when inevitably you can't always live up to your own hype.
Even the parent poster seems to be somewhat guilty of this, throwing in a couple of knee-jerk IE bashing responses. Have you actually looked at the security record of IE vs. Firefox in recent versions, particularly the number of vulnerabilities and the time required to get systems in the field patched against them? Firefox still runs all its tabs under the same process, so its fans are hardly in a position to be throwing stones at anyone else over security and reliability.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
And what's funnier still is that no one likes Opera or really gives a fuck about it.