One thing worth bearing in mind is that while it's true that creators of malicious code will mostly target
the most widely used browser, if Mozilla, Opera or any other non-IE browser were about as widely
used as IE is at the moment (about 85%) they would find that they're quite a lot harder to crack,
thanks to a number of reasons, particularly the technologies they don't support . . .
Internet Explorer is so tightly integrated into the inner workings of the Windows operating system, any
code that exploits IE could have seriously adverse effects on the rest of the system. Other browsers
that don't rely on IE technology do not integrate into the operating system, so any security problems
found in them cannot actually cause any damage to any part of the OS. And, unlike IE, if you no
longer want to use them, you can easily remove them. If you're a user of Windows, you get IE
whether you want it or not, and you cannot get rid of it without third party assistance.
Internet Explorer supports ActiveX, a proprietary MS technology that does have some legitimate
uses, but has unfortunately been hijacked by malicious code writers, and is now mostly used to
download and install unwanted extras, and often without the users prior knowledge or consent.
Other browsers do not support (or have very limited support for) ActiveX, therefore this risk
is minimized, if not eliminated. Limited ActiveX support can be added to non-IE browsers
such as Mozilla, but this is usually just to enable embedded Windows Media based
content to play on a webpage, within the browser window
Internet Explorer supports arbitary code execution. By default, no other browser does.
Internet Explorer supports Visual Basic Scripting. VBS is
not a web scripting language, and
should
not be used on
any webpages, especially since a lot of viruses are written in VBS.
Any web developer that uses VBS on a webpage in place of a geniune web scripting language
such as the (industry standard) JavaScript, either needs a brain scan, or seriously needs to
re-examine why they have access to any form of online computer equipment!
To be honest, I don't want ANY browser to be as dominant as IE is at the moment. Personally, I'd
much prefer there to be a more level playing field between browsers, where IE has a share of
around 40-50%, and the remaining percentage is shared between all the other browsers
Neil Jones wrote:
Mozilla and Opera prefer to release an entirely new version instead
of a patch which makes it more cumbersome to download . . .
And as more and more people are switching to broadband, that is fast becoming a non-issue.