Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Day of the Browser

Patch arrives for IE hole targeted by Chinese

Microsoft has released an update that fixes the Internet Explorer vulnerability behind the recent, highly publicized cyberattacks on Google and other major corporations. The sophisticated "Aurora" exploit is delivered through common file attachments or links — typically in e-mail or other messages that appear to come from trusted sources — but proven security measures and a little common sense can negate all such threats.

OK, should you dump Internet Explorer? Well, if you are using an old version (IE6, IE7) then you really should. These are old, outdated browsers that you should make the break from. If you are running IE6 then you really need to do that as a matter of urgency. Just download IE8, right now. What are you waiting for?


One day after a Google security researcher released code to expose a flaw that affects every release of the Windows NT kernel — from Windows NT 3.1 (1993) up to and including Windows 7 (2009) — Microsoft dropped a security advisory to acknowledge the issue and warn of the risk of privilege escalation attacks.


Think that your browser's private mode keeps your browsing completely private? Not so! More often than not, you're still leaving traces of your browsing session behind, and today we'll tell you how to get rid of them for truly private browsing.

FlashCookiesView Shows Exactly How Web Sites are Tracking You

We've already explained how to clean up Flash cookies in our guide to browsing without leaving a trace (see item above), but FlashCookiesView makes viewing and deleting the cookies extremely simple no matter what browser you're using

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