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Access "IE security risks: Making the switch to a more secure browser"

Jay Beale Published: 13 Dec 2012

Following the discovery that several major financial institutions' Web sites were being used to spread an Internet Explorer exploit, The Register ran the story, "CERT recommends anything but IE." CERT's point is that enterprises and individual users can reduce their risk exposure by using browsers that aren't as susceptible to Web-based exploits. So, why are we giving malware writers easy targets? Why aren't we switching to more secure browsers? When Robert Morris released his famous worm in 1988, it wasn't capable of infecting most Internet-attached systems because there was a healthy diversity of OSes. But, modern worms achieve huge infection rates because we're all running the same operating systems and programs. Given this apparent problem with IE, should we look to alternatives? Absolutely. The commercial Opera browser runs on Windows, Unix, Mac and even cell phone OSes. Opera is blindingly fast and relatively inexpensive. But, if commercial tools don't fit your budget, there's Mozilla, the open-source offshoot of Netscape (the original Web browser). ... Access >>>

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