Posts Tagged ‘Mozilla’

Chrome Store Soon Open to All Browsers

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Chrome Store Soon Open to All Browsers

Soon many Chrome apps will be available to other web browsers.
Just days after Google officially launched the new Chrome Web Store, the search engine giant is already talking about opening its doors to all web browsers. In fact, Google has even developed tools that will allow the apps to install in Firefox, Safari and more.

The news arrived on Thursday during the annual Add-on-Con 2010 browser conference in Mountain View, California. Google engineer Eric Kay was asked if the company planned to follow Mozilla’s lead by opening the store to all browsers rather than lock it down to Chrome. Kay responded by saying that “CRX-less” web apps– those that won’t have the Chrome file extension– will be announced soon.

“Basically, this gets rid of the Chrome-specific parts of the installable web-app metaphor,” Kay said. He explained that CRX-less web apps are actually hosted apps that mimic installation on third-party browsers. “Hosted” apps are defined as websites with extra metadata that adds an app-launch icon to the browser. Google’s other group of apps– the “packaged” ones– can actually be downloaded, installed, and use Chrome Extension APIs. These will likely remain tied to Chrome indefinitely.

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Firefox 4 Beta 8 Scheduled, Beta 7 GPU Acceleration Detailed

Monday, November 15th, 2010

Firefox 4 Beta 8 Scheduled, Beta 7 GPU Acceleration De tailed

Firefox 4 Beta 7 was a big release for Mozilla, but Beta 8 is already scheduled for release at the end of the month. The company also detailed improvements to its hardware acceleration engine for Windows XP – 7, as well as changes to HTML 5 support.

If there aren’t any hiccups in Mozilla’s development over the next couple weeks, we should expect Beta 8 to arrive on November 30. There are currently 66 bugs (19 critical) that are blocking the release of this browser. There will be at least one more beta after version Beta 8 and before Mozilla will release the first release candidate early in 2011.

While Beta 8 and Beta 9 will not bring any major feature additions, it appears that new features will get some fine-tuning and enhancements. Mozilla has especially some work to do to improve its GPU acceleration technology, which did not see a noticeable speedup in Beta 7.

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Critical Security Updates for Firefox, Safari

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Critical Security Updates for Firefox, Safari

Apple and Mozilla have each issued updates to fix a large number of critical security flaws in their respective Safari and Firefox Web browsers. The Apple update, which brings Safari to version 3.2, is reportedly causing many users to experience frequent browser crashes.

According to an article Friday at MacFixIt, some of the problems seem related to several Safari plug-ins, including “Concierge” bookmarks manager, “PithHelmet” ad-blocking software, and “AcidSearch” search enhancement software.

Other problems with this update may be related to a new anti-phishing feature built into Safari 3.2 (Firefox and Microsoft’s Internet Explorer have had this feature for more than two years now). MacFixIt and other forums suggest those having trouble with the Safari update should disable the phishing filter and see if that helps. If not, check to see if removing any installed add-ons fixes the problem.

While the Safari update fixes more flaws in the version built for Windows (all 11 flaws fixed in this bundle affect Windows vs. just four on the Mac version), I haven’t yet seen any reports of major problems with the Windows flavor.

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Mozilla patches Firefox side of Safari ‘carpet bomb’ threat

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

Mozilla patches Firefox side of Safari ‘carpet bomb’ threat

Mozilla has patched a pair of critical vulnerabilities in Firefox, taking the unusual step of updating the older version 2.0 on Tuesday but delaying the fixes for the newer version 3.0 until Wednesday.

Both updates, labeled Firefox 2.0.0.16 and Firefox 3.0.1, plug two holes rated “critical” by Mozilla, which uses a four-step threat ranking system. Firefox 2.0.0.16 was posted to Mozilla’s servers Tuesday afternoon.

Firefox 3.0.1, the first update since the open-source browser was upgraded almost a month ago, won’t reach users until Wednesday at the earliest, according to notes from a Mozilla status meeting published online.

One of the flaws patched in 2.0.0.16 and 3.0.1 was credited to security researcher Billy Rios, who wrote last month about a “blended” threat to Windows users who had both Apple’s Safari browser and Firefox installed on the same system. Then, Rios said that Safari’s “carpet bomb” bug—first disclosed in May and patched in June by Apple—could be combined with other vulnerabilities to attack not only systems with Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, but also those equipped with Firefox.

Back in June, Rios refrained from providing technical details or exploit code, saying that he had reported the vulnerability to Mozilla. “I’m sure we’ll see a fix soon,” Rios said in a June 20 entry to his blog.

Mozilla confirmed Rios’ findings. “Rios demonstrated that the so-called ‘Safari Carpet-bombing vulnerability’ could be used for this, as well as other techniques that do not rely on that now-fixed Safari vulnerability,” read the write up for one of the two just-patched vulnerabilities.

Firefox 3.0, although also patched, was at much less risk from the blended threat because of changes that limited access to local files from scripts running in the browser.

Mozilla also gave itself a plug in the advisory. “This attack only works if the user is using another Internet-connected application with Firefox not running. Using Firefox, or making sure it is at least running, prevents this attack,” read Mozilla’s description.

The second quashed bug, also judged critical, was in Firefox’s CSSValue array data structure and could be used by hackers to force a crash, and from there, run malicious code.

That flaw also affects Thunderbird 2.0, Mozilla’s e-mail client, which shares Firefox’s rendering engine. Thunderbird, however, hasn’t been updated since early May. In lieu of a patched Thunderbird — something now scheduled to release July 23—Mozilla recommended that users disable JavaScript in the mailer.

Mozilla also reminded users that it will support Firefox 2.0 with security updates only until mid-December 2008, a warning it first gave last month after the debut of Firefox 3.0. Mozilla’s standard policy is to support older software for only six months after the release of a major update.

Users can download Firefox 2.0.0.16 in versions for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux from the Mozilla site, call up the browser’s built-in updater or wait for the automatic update notification, which typically appears within 24 to 48 hours.

Firefox 3.0.1, although not expected to appear until Wednesday afternoon Pacific time, will be posted to the Mozilla site when it does launch.

Source: .macworld.com