Great idea. It would be nice to have this. Would you like to volunteer and, in the future, regularly send me an email with the list of fixes/security status so that I can post on a page in http://gnu.org/s/icecat
Building the next IceCat and LibreJS keep me busy enough, so more help, not just development, but such work as documenting, as you suggest, would be extremely helpful! I don't think the gnu.org offers an easy way to securely allow someone to post content on a single page only, unfortunately, but maybe it will be worth at some point to set up a simple wiki app, even if a lot of the documentation would actually end up linking to mozilla.org. Thanks again for your suggestion! Loic Mauricio Fernandez Vitri <[email protected]> writes: > That's good to know. > > It would be nice to see information about future (and past) versions > and their security status in the main GNUzilla web site. This way > everyone would know which version is secure and which one isn't, so > they won't just use a free web browser, but a secure one also. > > On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 5:28 PM, Loic J. Duros <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> We're working on the release of IceCat based off 27.0.1, actually. >> >> >> Mauricio Fernandez Vitri <[email protected]> writes: >> >>> Hello, >>> >>> I've done some research and found that there are security updates >>> which fix more than 14 critical bugs for Firefox ESR [1]. >>> >>> Aren't those critical bugs important enough to update IceCat? Would >>> you please consider updating it to the latest ESR? >>> >>> Thanks for your work, >>> >>> Mauricio >>> >>> [1] http://www.mozilla.org/security/known-vulnerabilities/firefoxESR.html >>> >>> -- >>> http://gnuzilla.gnu.org > > -- > http://gnuzilla.gnu.org -- http://gnuzilla.gnu.org
