From: John Hacker on 16 Jan 2010 16:40 Now this must be the news of 2010 After nearly 10 years of unlimited patches, hotfixes and service Packs, IE is still a weak link in recent attacks on Google's systems. Either M$ is now threatened by Googles rise to prominence or IE is completely rubbish. Either way we should start taking instructions from the German government if this article is anything to go by. <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8463516.stm> Is google's search engine more powerful than M$ Bing?
From: Peter Foldes on 16 Jan 2010 20:57 Are you talking about this Security Release from Microsoft below which was published a day before yesterday which addresses this issue. http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/advisory/979352.mspx -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "John Hacker" <xfsgpr(a)googlemail.com> wrote in message news:6a7ee581-5b7a-49df-9d60-a375ff807af1(a)30g2000yqu.googlegroups.com... > Now this must be the news of 2010 > > After nearly 10 years of unlimited patches, hotfixes and service > Packs, IE is still a weak link in recent attacks on Google's systems. > Either M$ is now threatened by Googles rise to prominence or IE is > completely rubbish. Either way we should start taking instructions > from the German government if this article is anything to go by. > > <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8463516.stm> > > Is google's search engine more powerful than M$ Bing? >
From: Anteaus on 17 Jan 2010 03:28 For some years we've been deploying an applet which warns users if an iexplore.exe process is found running, with an unauthorized URL. If they don't heed the warning then IE is terminated and a log-entry made. Since we did that, service-calls to deal with malfunctioning desktops have literally halved. "John Hacker" wrote: > Now this must be the news of 2010 > > After nearly 10 years of unlimited patches, hotfixes and service > Packs, IE is still a weak link in recent attacks on Google's systems. > Either M$ is now threatened by Googles rise to prominence or IE is > completely rubbish. Either way we should start taking instructions > from the German government if this article is anything to go by. > > <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8463516.stm> > > Is google's search engine more powerful than M$ Bing? > > . >
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