Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 18th Jan 2010 22:00 UTC
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RE: Microsoft's answer:
by larwilliams2 on Tue 19th Jan 2010 15:48
in reply to "Microsoft's answer:"
http://www.techradar.com/news/internet/microsoft-switch-from-ie-and...
In short: Microsoft tells us, that switching to other Browsers would actually increase the risk.
I do not know, how they can possibly arrive at this conclusion. No other major browser has a zero-day exploit on the rampage, and IE is not really fixed yet. The second line of defence prevents the attack from succeeding in Vista, Win7 with EI8, but the flaw is still there.
I know, that in USA you cannot do anything against Microsoft issuing such moronic statements, here in Austria however, if you say "competition is worse than us", you might have to prove this statement in court. If you cannot prove it, you have to pay damages for tarnishing the competitor's reputation.
In short: Microsoft tells us, that switching to other Browsers would actually increase the risk.
I do not know, how they can possibly arrive at this conclusion. No other major browser has a zero-day exploit on the rampage, and IE is not really fixed yet. The second line of defence prevents the attack from succeeding in Vista, Win7 with EI8, but the flaw is still there.
I know, that in USA you cannot do anything against Microsoft issuing such moronic statements, here in Austria however, if you say "competition is worse than us", you might have to prove this statement in court. If you cannot prove it, you have to pay damages for tarnishing the competitor's reputation.
yes, because you can trust a website that has an image caption of "Microsoft: IE8 all this bad publicity" to not mis-quote someone. The fact that part of the quote is missing casts doubt over its accuracy.




Member since:
2006-01-19
http://www.techradar.com/news/internet/microsoft-switch-from-ie-and...
In short: Microsoft tells us, that switching to other Browsers would actually increase the risk.
I do not know, how they can possibly arrive at this conclusion. No other major browser has a zero-day exploit on the rampage, and IE is not really fixed yet. The second line of defence prevents the attack from succeeding in Vista, Win7 with EI8, but the flaw is still there.
I know, that in USA you cannot do anything against Microsoft issuing such moronic statements, here in Austria however, if you say "competition is worse than us", you might have to prove this statement in court. If you cannot prove it, you have to pay damages for tarnishing the competitor's reputation.