Why Internet Explorer Still Dominates South Korea.
New submitter bmurray7 writes "You might think that the country that has the fastest average home internet speeds would be a first adapter of modern browsers. Instead, as the Washington Post reports, a payment processing security standard forces most South Koreans to rely upon Internet Explorer for online shopping. Since the standard uses a unique encryption algorithm, an ActiveX control is required to complete online purchases. As a result, many internet users are in the habit of approving all AtivceX control prompts, potentially exposing them to malware."
From TFA:
Holy crap!
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
Why hasn't the SEED cipher (RFC 4269) been reimplemented in Flash, Java, JavaScript, native code using an NPAPI plug-in (Netscape's counterpart to ActiveX, now used by Firefox), or native code using a PPAPI plug-in (Chrome's counterpart to ActiveX)? Without any chance of support for ActiveX on mobile phones or ARM-powered tablets, I'd guess it'd have to be.
"Modern browsers" have real developer tools. IE 10 does not. Therefore, only IE 11 could possibly be considered modern. Since it represents less than 1% of all IE web traffic, it's probably fair to just lump them all together for the purpose of their argument.
Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
You're wrong about Korean culture...
Well, partially wrong. They built their IT infrastructure based on the *best* available at the time: Microsoft
Blame Microsoft for making shitty products that lock-in users (and whole countries) to an inefficient half-assed software system.
caveat emptor? sure...but at some point you have to acknowledge that they culpability can't rest only on the consumer....M$ parasitic system design was/is truly evil
If you want to fault Korean culture, fault them for being too trusting of the USA in general....poor people actually take what we say at face value.
I lived there for 1 year...I know the ass-backwards way they sometimes adapt new technology...but this isn't that...the aren't inherently inefficient as a culture...they showed us what happens when a country actually does what M$ suggests...
Sort of like a 'Super Size Me' kind of project only with IT infrastructure for a whole country not fast food
Thank you Dave Raggett