Craptastic Software

Posted By on October 20, 2004 at 12:27 am

People ask me why I use and recommend the Mozilla browsers, rather than Microsoft’s Internet Explorer (or, as I am wont to call it, Internet Exploder.)
I’m a network and internetwork geek. It’s been my living for the past 8 years or so. I’ve been working on the infrastructure of the internet since before 90% of Americans ever even heard of the “information superhighway.”
As a professional network geek, I have long despised any Microsoft product that touches the network. They are unreliable, and in most cases are actually dangerous to the stability and security of the network.
All those viruses circulating out there? Zombies, trojan horses, browser hijackers…? Virtually all of them target specific problems in Windows, Outlook Express, Internet Explorer, or any combination thereof.
Part of this is simply because the evil SOBs who create the virii know that 90+% of people on the ‘net are using Windows; it’s what you might call a target-rich environment.
I think the main reason that Windows is exploited is because it’s so damned easy. The fact that MS is slow to acknowledge problems and provide fixes doesn’t help matters any.
I regularly receive advisories in my e-mail from CERT — the Computer Emergency Readiness Team. Advisories like Technical Cyber Security Alert TA04-293A, the headers of which I reproduce here:

Multiple Vulnerabilities in Microsoft Internet Explorer
Original release date: October 19, 2004
Last revised: —
Source: US-CERT
Systems Affected
Microsoft Windows systems running

  • Internet Explorer versions 5.01 and later; previous, unsupported versions of Internet Explorer may also be affected
  • Programs that use the WebBrowser ActiveX control (WebOC) or MSHTML rendering engine

Overview
Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE) contains multiple vulnerabilities, the most severe of which could allow a remote attacker to execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the user running IE.

And so on.
That is why I run (and recommend) Mozilla on my PCs, and why I use Linux, except for one Windows machine.
Hey — a guy has to have his IL 2 Sturmovik: Forgotten Battles.

Reflections on Team America: World Police, Part 2

Posted By on October 19, 2004 at 5:52 pm

You can stop terrorist marionettes by using a bunch of fancy armament.
But it’d be simpler to cut their strings.
Cheaper, too.