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Date: 1998-09-30
Netscape: Bad News mal zwei
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q/depesche 98.9.30/2
updating 98.9.11/2
Netscape: Bad News mal zwei
Fast zehn Prozent Marktanteile im ersten Halbjahr 98 an
Microsoft verloren & dann sind da noch diese 30 Zeilen Java
aufgetaucht. Sobald der Communicator entweder via WWW oder
auch Mail (attachment) damit in Kontakt gerät, verrät er
alle Geheimnisse des Cache. Wie oft wann welche Websites
abgerufen wurden, Online/Registrierungen & c - eben alles,
was man zum Erstellen von Bewegungs- und Interessensprofilen
im Netze brauchen kann.
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Although still the market leader, Netscape lost nine points
of market share in the U.S. browser market in the first half
of 1998. Microsoft's branded product gained just under five
points of market share in the same period.
...
Joan-Carol Brigham, a research manager in IDC's Internet and
eCommerce Strategies research program: "It appears that
Microsofts current battle with the U.S. government and
Netscape's software giveaway have had little effect in
keeping Netscapes market share from eroding."
full text
http://www.idg.net/
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JOHN MARKOFF
September 28, 1998 A potentially serious security flaw has
been discovered in the programming language used in the
Navigator and Communicator software of the Netscape
Communications Corp., with the defect possibly allowing an
outsider to read information on a personal computer user's
hard disk.
...
He was able to take advantage of the vulnerability by
writing a 30-line piece of Javascript code that is able to
capture and copy information automatically from the
so-called cache, or temporary storage area, on a PC's hard
disk. The captured information can reveal which Web sites a
computer user has recently visited.
The captured information could also include data that a
computer user might have created when communicating with a
Web site -- including personal data typed in when
registering at a site or conducting a retail transaction.
Credit card information, however, would not be revealed,
because it is protected by separate security software.
...
Although there is no evidence that the security flaw has
actually been exploited by someone with harmful intent, the
gravity of the threat was noted by other computer security
specialists. They noted that a user's vulnerability extends
beyond visiting a hostile Web site that might exploit the
flaw. The flaw could also be exploited through e-mail
received using Netscape's software, they said, by sending an
intended victim an e-mail message that would secretly force
the user to run an illicit Javascript program.
...
"This is pretty scary," said Richard M. Smith, president of
Phar Lap Software Inc., a software development company in
Cambridge, Mass. "In some sense the cache on your computer
tells a lot about your life."
Full text
http://www.nytimes.com
http://search.nytimes.com/search/daily/bin/fastweb?getdoc+site+iib-site+54+
0+wAAA+privacy
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edited by Harkank
published on: 1998-09-30
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