Security Gets a Makeover in Netscape 8.0
By Jim Wagner
http://www.internetnews.com/xSP/article.php/3506216

AOL (Quote, Chart) unwrapped its latest Netscape 8.0 browser with more
security and ease-of-use functionality for novice Web surfers.

"It's been a while since anyone's mentioned Netscape's name and we think
we've come out with what we think is a really exciting browser product
that's got a unique take on the security question, that really
differentiates it from any other browser out there," said Jeremy Liew,
Netscape general manager.

The Netscape team included many of the features already promised and hyped
during its public beta tests that drew about one million downloads -- such
as tabbed browsing, RSS (define) notifications and pop-up blocking.

One of the most noticeable changes to come out of the beta tests held in
November was the removal of Netscape's signature green coloring. "Kill the
green" and turn down the colors and clutter was the message they received
from a lot of beta testers, Liew said.

"It was very sad for us, we kind of liked our original stuff but you can't
argue with users, the users are always right," he said. The tradition green
skin has been replaced with a choice of a sleek gray skin called Fusion or a
generic Windows skin called Winscape.

Nowhere is Netscape's commitment to ease-of-use more clear than with its
security controls, designed to help novice surfers detect bogus Web sites
designed to steal personal information or put spyware on your computer.

To do that, the browser downloads from AOL servers three times a day a list
of Web sites known to be trusted or not-to-be-trusted, as verified by the
non-profit TRUSTe organization, VeriSign (Quote, Chart) or ParetoLogic. When
a blacklisted site is encountered, Netscape will direct the user to a Web
page saying the site isn't to be trusted and require them to hit the
"continue anyway" button before going to the Web page.

Also, in every browser tab is a shield icon that tells users whether the
site they are visiting is a trusted site or not. A trusted site gets a green
shield, while blacklisted sites get a red shield; sites that haven't been
verified one way or the other are denoted by a gray shield icon. Clicking on
the shield takes users to the Site Control feature, allowing surfers to
modify the security rating of the page they're currently visiting as well as
enabling Java, cookies, ActiveX controls and other security features.

AOL has incorporated another security feature into its new browser with a
dual rendering engine, one emulating Firefox and the other on Microsoft's
Internet Explorer (IE). IE has been plagued with security problems in recent
years, many times through its use of the ActiveX features which have been
subject to exploits by malware (define) writers, though most Web sites are
designed and developed around viewing in IE.

By default, Liew said, Netscape 8.0 will view trusted sites using the IE
rendering engine but when it gets to a site that hasn't been verified or is
blacklisted, Netscape will switch over to the Firefox engine to protect
customers.

"It is the core to our safety mechanism," he said.

Also included in Netscape 8.0 is an automatic form filler feature aimed at
foiling keystroke loggers that monitor and record a person's keystrokes when
filling out online forms or logging into a site.

In this version AOL has gone out of its way to make the browser's advanced
features easier. An eraser icon at the top left of the browser allows users
to clean out their cache, cookies, and search and download history, right
next to the form auto-fill icon. A multi-bar feature allows users' to group
and create customized toolbars.

Integrated into the browser is an integrated search function, which includes
Google, Ask and Netscape. AIM, AOL's instant messaging platform, has been
integrated into the Netscape 8.0 suite as well, though the company has no
plans to incorporate other IM platforms at this time, Liew said.

He also said the company's research found that many people would rather type
in the name of a company through a search engine and click through the
results, rather than type in the URL. As such, he said, the search engine
box was given more emphasis and the URL windows shoved off to the right
side.

This increased functionality comes at a price, though. Web sites take longer
to come up than either IE or Firefox, based on visits to several image-laden
sites. Liew said the added security features -- verifying good/bad Web sites
-- will always make surfing a trifle slower than with other browsers. He
said slowdownn doesn't mean as much to users as a browser that keeps them
safe.

"As the world moves to broadband that extra half-second doesn't matter as
much," he said. "What matters more is the longer-term affects of spyware,
which slows your entire computer down all the time."

Liew said AOL and the Netscape team are committed to constant updates to the
Netscape platform in the coming years. Incremental feature updates are
expected throughout the year and the team is thinking about what features
they want to include in Netscape 9.0, due out sometime next year.

He said any Firefox updates will be added to the browser soon after they are
published on the Mozilla site. Netscape 8.0 is based on Firefox 1.0.3; Liew
said they didn't include the latest Firefox release, version 1.0.4, because
the security vulnerability patch only affected Firefox users.

"The beauty of being built on the same code base is that we get the benefit
off of a lot of what they do," he said, "so I think you'll see us moving as
quickly as Firefox." The latest version comes nearly three years after AOL
released a major update to to the Netscape browser, with version 7.0 in
August 2002.

A lot has changed since then. The Netscape 7.x series of browsers were based
on the Mozilla Foundation's Mozilla Suite.

Netscape 8.0 and future versions will be based on Firefox, the open source
browser that split off from the Mozilla Suite as a standalone application.
The Mozilla Foundation recently scuttled future development of its Mozilla
suite.

Netscape is no longer the browser darling it was in past years, either. The
once-dominant browser competed head-to-head with Microsoft's Internet
Explorer (IE) for popularity. IE ended up on more than 95 percent of the
world's PCs, thanks in part to the browser's bundling into the Windows
operating system platform.

Now it's not just IE on the PC. A rash of security vulnerabilities has a
growing number of users moving to alternative browsers like Firefox and
Opera. According to recent numbers by Web analytics company WebSideStory, IE
use in the U.S. has dropped to 89 percent with Firefox gaining to nearly 7
percent. Netscape and Mozilla broswers make up a little more than 2 percent
of Web surfers, according to the report. 



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