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Microsoft Adds Selective ActiveX Filtering to IE9

An anonymous reader writes "A post on the IE blog details the new ActiveX filtering feature in the IE9 release candidate. Microsoft's Herman Ng writes, 'ActiveX Filtering in the IE9 Release Candidate gives you greater control over how Web pages run on your PC. With ActiveX Filtering, you can turn off ActiveX controls for all Web sites and then turn them back on selectively as you see fit. While ActiveX controls like Adobe Flash are important for Web experiences today for videos and more, some consumers may want to limit how they run for security, performance, or other reasons.' My favorite quote from the article is one of the image captions: 'ActiveX content may prevent you from having a good experience viewing a Web site'"

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  1. Re:Microsoft Virus Installer by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Badly written ActiveX controls much be registered globally, requiring admin to install it, however properly written ActiveX controls are happy to install themselves on a per user basis. As long as you are warned and given the option to say no, there is no issue, it gives the user a way to make it work without having to go to command line to register the component or finding a gui tool to do it.

    Here's the problem I have with this statement. Sure, you can write secure ActiveX if you know what you're doing. But in my experience, most still-being-written ActiveX code seems to be put together by poorly trained coders who, back in 2003, took a 2-day free Microsoft course "how to quickly and easily write intranet apps" and who have never updated their skillset since then. Those intranet developers who HAVE updated their skills stopped using ActiveX when it became obvious that being tied to IE-only development was not a good long-term strategy for numerous reasons - everything they've done in the last several years has been more of a LAMP-style model (even if it's on a Windows server with MS SQL behind it) that works with any reasonably recent client browser and doesn't treat HTTP as just a delivery platform for transferring Windows applications from server to desktop.

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    #DeleteChrome