The Inquirer-Home
Comments
real cheeky

mozzarella.. open sauce.. your a fucking idiot..get a life cheeky moron

posted by : lou, 12 May 2008 Complain about this comment
Proof yet again....again.

The more popular a browser becomes, the more it will be targeted by ne'er-do-wells.

posted by : pizzaman, 10 May 2008 Complain about this comment
Tip of the Hat

The most important text in the article is that Mozilla pulled the update the exact same day the issue was spotted. Were it a Microsoft issue, we'd spend months getting an ear-full about how secure the system is and that the issue isn't really an issue at all. Mozilla was made aware of the problem and took immediate steps to resolve it, including a policy change which will mean they continually scan released patches for vulnerabilities in light of new data. I wish Mozilla would build an OS.

posted by : Phoenix, 09 May 2008 Complain about this comment
Not Korean.

The language pack was for Vietnamese.

And who knew there were enough Opera users to produce zealots?

posted by : Fredrik, 09 May 2008 Complain about this comment
What banner

1700 people got it, it makes banner ads, nobody noticed, I guess that's a testament to the market-penetration of adblock then?

posted by : W.-, 09 May 2008 Complain about this comment
Proof yet again.

Firefox Extensions are bad, and compromise security.

If you want to stay secure, your ONLY option is to use Opera (which also happens to be the fastest and most functional out of the box too, which is nice..)

posted by : Mark, 09 May 2008 Complain about this comment

Firefox fights Trojan

aboutus
Advertisement
Subscribe to INQ newsletters
Advertisement
INQ Poll

Authorities in several countries raided Megaupload recently, shut down all of its services, seized hundreds of servers and arrested several of its executives on criminal charges.

Do you think the move was justified?