Perhaps you could utilize privoxy and snort/clamav instead? Protect both email and web traffic
------Original Message------ From: David Kaiser Sender: linuxusers-boun...@socallinux.org To: SoCal LUG Users List ReplyTo: SoCal LUG Users List Subject: [LinuxUsers] Finally got around to trying Google Chrome for Linux Sent: Jan 28, 2010 10:46 PM I know everyone has gotten Chrome for Linux installed for a few weeks now, but I'm just getting around to trying it out. One interesting thing I noted... On the download page ( http://www.google.com/chrome/index.html ) they provide pre-built binaries for Debian/Ubuntu/Fedora/openSUSE... but no commercial RedHat, SuSE builds. I found that very interesting, because the distributions they provide a download for are typically going to be the ones that someone will quickly package it up for anyway - versus the commercial distributions would take their sweet time to eventually put Chrome in a future release. Of course, it is also just plain cool that Google is choosing the non-commercial distributions. The source is available for anyone to build - technically they don't even need to release binaries, but they're making it easier for the most popular distros I guess. Anyway, it is a very fast browser... but I think there is one thing missing... the NoScript extension, or an equivalent. I try to block most javascript unless I white-list a particular site. Has anyone found a good "noscript-like" extension for Chrome browser on Linux? Thanks, DK _______________________________________________ LinuxUsers mailing list LinuxUsers@socallinux.org http://socallinux.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/linuxusers Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile _______________________________________________ LinuxUsers mailing list LinuxUsers@socallinux.org http://socallinux.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/linuxusers