His byline says PC World, not TWP.  Apple also offered an update this
morning to my (office) laptop for Safari, which I haven't tried in
Windows.

Thank you,
 
Mark Snyder
-----Original Message-----
>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/26/AR20080
42600260.html

The article tries too hard for drama, fortunately some less-prominent 
facts are in there too.

The Firefox and Safari vulnerabilities were discoveded and patched
before 
there were any exploits. He makes a strange assertion that is somehow 
bad. That software will have vulnerabilities is a given. To have 
vulnerabilities patched before they can be exploited should be met with 
praise, not derision.

He makes a strange assertion that a browser that you don't know you have

installed and therefore never use could somehow cause your computer to
be 
attacked. Looks to me like the reporter does not have a firm grasp on
how 
computers work.

He spends half the article on zero-day Office vulnerabilities but is 
unclear about which versions have which problems. The main thrust seems 
to be that Vista is the safest way to avoid scary problems. Is this MS 
using insecurity as a marketing tool?

I hope this writer is quickly transferred to the obituary desk where he 
can do less harm.


************************************************************************
*
**  List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy
**
**  policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/
**
************************************************************************
*


*************************************************************************
**  List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy  **
**  policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/  **
*************************************************************************

Reply via email to