Microsoft Issues Workaround For IE 0-Day
Orome1 writes "Microsoft has issued a security advisory with advice on how to patch a Internet Explorer zero-day vulnerability recently spotted being exploited in the wild by attackers that might be the same ones that are behind the Nitro attacks. News that there is a previously unknown Internet Explorer vulnerability that is actively being misused in the wild by attackers that are believed to be the same ones that are behind the Nitro attacks has reverberated all over the Internet yesterday."
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It may be that the same thing is mentioned twice in a very short summary of the story, but that the same thing is mentioned twice in a very short summary of the story does obfuscate the lack of content. That is why the same thing is mentioned twice in a very short summary of the story. Why else would it be that the same thing is mentioned twice in a very short summary of the story?
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
The work around is load firefox or chrome.
What does this even mean? Is it the same 0-day? Is it a different 0-day? Can we get some editing up in this bitch or what?
There's so many it doesn't really matter. They'll be another next month, and the month after that, and the month after that.... You can safely assume that at any given instant there exists at least one active zero-day infecting IE users.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
Disable ActiveX and then demand it runs to "Prompt" in both Internet AND Intranet????? This is NOT a "work-around." A work-around would be how to allow our users to continue running without being prompted to run or not run things they don't understand and don't want to.
Or install an alternate browser.
Sheesh, is the Internet really worth this crap? Really?
Seriously, I don't use IE at home but until Chrome, Firefox, or Opera have tight integration and customization that can be centralled managed (GPO) IE will be the defacto standard browser for a lot of businesses. As an IT Manager I have tried repeatedly to move to a different browser and the tools to manage them just aren't there.
"Hahaha those losers use IE, they suck they should just switch to chrome" are not helpful comments and show just how little you know about the many current business environments. Your beloved Chrome and Firefox, by their actions, don't want to be the default browsers in business. They just don't. That leaves us with IE which, despite these 0 days and standards issues, is superios in every way in a Windows comprate environment. Until that changes IE will be what many businesses use because browser management is just so easy it's automagic.
And those Linux folks, switching to Linux isn't helpful either until some sort of same tier GPO management alternative that has simple interpoability is available. We could actually drop Windows and go full linux if I could gain the control I get from a Windows environment.
Disclaimer: I use Firefox, Opera, Ubuntu, and Mint at home.
What does this even mean? Is it the same 0-day? Is it a different 0-day? Can we get some editing up in this bitch or what?
With Microsoft you can make every day a 0 day!
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/security/advisory/2757760
Linking from "Microsoft issued an advisory" to submitter's site is kinda lowbrow.
Last time I had looked into it, IE9 was more secure in several ways than Firefox. It also had comparable number of security holes.
Have things changed substantially in the last year?
You speak with authority but do not understand the principles and abstractions.
It's called COM. Windows is based on COM. It allows components to be reused, which is good design and good practice.
This is the same concept as WebKit being a shared library on Linux and gnome help, gnome file manager and Epiphany importing it.
I they discovered a WebKit hole: waah waah whinge whinge there is a hole in Gnome Help - save us all from the 0-day
That complaining never happens but if Microsoft fall to the same thing, they get slated. Hardly fair is it?
I haven't had a Windows virus since I started using it 24 years ago and I've used IE all that time.
Then again, I don't go surfing pr0n, cracks, warez, torrents, rapidshare, mp3 sites etc.
Intimacy with the wrong people is only going to end in an STD regardless of which prophylactic device you or they wear.
IE9 was more secure in several ways than Firefox. It also had comparable number of security holes.
Oh really? You might want to check what Secunia has to say on the matter.
For IE 9
For Firefox 15
The two aren't even close in terms of vulnerabilities. Too soon for Fx 15? Let's go with the 14 version:
Less than half the problems.
And one more for good measure; Firefox 13. Again, less than half the vulnerabilities of IE 9. Even the unpatched vulnerabilities for Firefox are less critical than the ones for IE 9.
So yes, things have changed substantially in one year. Either IE 9 has gotten worse or Firefox has gotten better. Take your pick.
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower