Firefox whinges about everything lately. eg I don't care if Java is "insecure" 
again when I updated less than half an hour ago, but it forces either update or 
go without.

Does anyone perhaps know how to block the service Firefox uses to check for 
plugin updates?

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Monday, 17 February 2014 11:06 AM
To: 'ozDotNet'
Subject: RE: Security scaremongering

I have noticed firefox complaining about Silverlight recently, saying "security 
vulnerability"....anyone else  seen this?


Anthony Salerno | Consultant | SmallBiz Australia
Software Developers | Mobile | Tablet | Software | Web | eCommerce | IT Support
Phone  : +613 8400 4191 Email  : 2Anthony (at) smallbiz.com.au   Postal : Po 
Box 135, Lower Plenty 3093 ABN : 16 079 706 737



From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Scott Barnes
Sent: Saturday, 15 February 2014 12:54 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Security scaremongering

I don't see the correlation between IE and Silverlight here - sure the browser 
has some exploits that *POTENTIALLY* are available but to throw Silverlight out 
is to throw Java, Flash, Quicktime etc also out.

Focus on the role not the person is your first approach, if this person is 
trying to build their Security Empire and using anti-Microsoft bias as a way to 
fuel the flames, ask questions about the role, interrogate their actual 
position boundaries to determine if its a person with accountability & 
authority or just some loud mouth (like me) shooting shit from the sidelines?

Next is risk assessment, ok so there's a flaw in the system. There are 1000's 
of flaws in every corporations systems (even Microsofts) now comes back to 
Consequences vs Likelihood of that actually being a risk. It's all well and 
good to argue "If 1x genius finds this flaw and triggers it, well its 
Zombieland for mankind..." but what's the consequences really of that activity 
from happening and lastly how likely is it from actually happening. If you're 
tucked snugly inside a DMZ it comes back to now "What's the likelihood of an 
employee exploiting this hole to add further pain to other employees?" because 
once a corporations firewall gets penetrated... IE flaws become 1 of 1000+ 
problems that company will face (not saying it should be patched, just ...i 
dunno...reality check that shit).

It reminds me of the virus scanner debates where Security Essentials got a low 
rating because it didn't track something like 100+ virus signatures... and 
Microsoft Security came back and said something like "Yeah but nobody has seen 
those virus's since the 90's and even today the likelihood of them working is 
still low" ..basically they apparently (dont quote me on this) outlined the 
risk matrix and told these other jackasses to calm down but in their own polite 
manner.

I'm pretty confident Silverlight is secure to the point where during its 
creation there was a lot of effort that went into making sure there was 0 
security issues known, because ultimately during that period had one existed 
we'd have been crucified and Adobe would have seized that as a moment to choke 
us PR wise. I can't say for sure exactly how secure Silverlight is but I do 
remember Program Managers saying with high confidence "I'd like to see them 
try"..

Just tell the dude "fine you win, we'll use Chrome. so back to 
Silverlight..where's the data champ..." :) as personally I think IE should have 
been taken out to the woodshed long ago...so idiots like these don't get to use 
the branding cancer against its ACTUAL technical rehabilitation ...

---
Regards,
Scott Barnes
http://www.riagenic.com

On Sat, Feb 15, 2014 at 10:57 AM, Stephen Price 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Why so much hate?

Haters are going to hate. I wouldn't bother, it would be like that cartoon 
about someone being wrong on the internet...
On Feb 15, 2014 8:00 AM, "Greg Keogh" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:
Folks, one of our customers has an IT admin guy who is a Linux fan and runs a 
farm of Linux servers. He has the typical cultural anti-Microsoft bias that I'm 
sure we encounter now and then. Not normally a problem, but he's forwarding 
around scary emails warning of vulnerabilities in IE and Silverlight which 
could put our deployment at risk.

I became suspicious when yesterday he said something like "because IE is 
'closer' to the operating system than other browsers, a flaw in IE makes 
Windows more vulnerable". This seems preposterous to me, and it's vague, but it 
pleases me to imagine that the User/Kernel mode boundaries between IE and 
Windows are no different than any other normal application.

Anyway, in his email he links to these pages:

http://www.cvedetails.com/vulnerability-list/vendor_id-26/product_id-19887/Microsoft-Silverlight.html
http://cwonline.computerworld.com/t/8857906/669819191/656856/12/

I don't see anything particularly scary in these. It looks like a Silverlight 
app would have to be specifically crafted to be a threat (and I'm not intending 
to do that!). The other stuff about IE is just the usual stuff you see on quiet 
news days.

Any comments anyone to help us slap this Linux guy down?

Greg K



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