ABANDONAR INTERNET EXPLORER

26/06/2004 - 23:17 por EXPERTO EN SEGURIDAD | Informe spam
SE RECOMIENDA ABANDONAR INTERNET EXPLORER E INSTALAR UN
SOFTWARE DE MAYOR CALIDAD QUE NO SEA TAN VULNERABLE NI
RIESGOSO.

CUIDADO CON LA DESINFORMACION EN ESTE FORO, LAS SOLUCIONES
CHAPUCERAS (SITIOS DE CONFIANZA) DEJARLAS DE LADO Y
SOLUCIONAR EL PROBLEMA DE LA SEGURIDAD DE NUESTROS DATOS
CON SERIEDAD.

www.opera.com
www.mozilla.org

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#1 JM Tella Llop [MVP Windows]
26/06/2004 - 23:24 | Informe spam
SE RECOMIENDA ABANDONAR



¿por parte de quien?

Jose Manuel Tella Llop
MVP - Windows
(quitar XXX)
http://www.multingles.net/jmt.htm

Este mensaje se proporciona "como está" sin garantías de ninguna clase, y no otorga ningún derecho.

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
You assume all risk for your use.




"EXPERTO EN SEGURIDAD" wrote in message news:2173a01c45bc2$fa6ce4c0$
SE RECOMIENDA ABANDONAR INTERNET EXPLORER E INSTALAR UN
SOFTWARE DE MAYOR CALIDAD QUE NO SEA TAN VULNERABLE NI
RIESGOSO.

CUIDADO CON LA DESINFORMACION EN ESTE FORO, LAS SOLUCIONES
CHAPUCERAS (SITIOS DE CONFIANZA) DEJARLAS DE LADO Y
SOLUCIONAR EL PROBLEMA DE LA SEGURIDAD DE NUESTROS DATOS
CON SERIEDAD.

www.opera.com
www.mozilla.org
Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#2 EvilAngel
26/06/2004 - 23:25 | Informe spam
Como decimos en mexico, dame una mamada en la planta baja.

on 26/06/2004, EXPERTO EN SEGURIDAD supposed :
SE RECOMIENDA ABANDONAR INTERNET EXPLORER E INSTALAR UN
SOFTWARE DE MAYOR CALIDAD QUE NO SEA TAN VULNERABLE NI
RIESGOSO.

CUIDADO CON LA DESINFORMACION EN ESTE FORO, LAS SOLUCIONES
CHAPUCERAS (SITIOS DE CONFIANZA) DEJARLAS DE LADO Y
SOLUCIONAR EL PROBLEMA DE LA SEGURIDAD DE NUESTROS DATOS
CON SERIEDAD.

www.opera.com
www.mozilla.org



Sueños
Never its mysteries are exposed, to the weak human eye unclosed...
E.A.P
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#3 Ivan \(desde la web\)
27/06/2004 - 01:49 | Informe spam
¿Este "experto en seguridad" no sera por casualidad el
mismo "ingeniero de microprocesadores" que no hace mucho
estuvo tratando de hurgar en la maquina de Vulpes?




SE RECOMIENDA ABANDONAR



¿por parte de quien?

Jose Manuel Tella Llop
MVP - Windows
(quitar XXX)
http://www.multingles.net/jmt.htm

Este mensaje se proporciona "como está" sin garantías de


ninguna clase, y no otorga ningún derecho.

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and


confers no rights.
You assume all risk for your use.




Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#4 col_mailbox-win4lin
14/07/2004 - 15:23 | Informe spam
"JM Tella Llop [MVP Windows]" wrote in message news:<#...
>SE RECOMIENDA ABANDONAR

por parte de quien?

Jose Manuel Tella Llop
MVP - Windows
(quitar XXX)
http://www.multingles.net/jmt.htm



http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...Jun25.html
...CERT recommends that Explorer users consider other browsers that
are not affected by the attack, such as Mozilla, Mozilla Firefox,
Netscape and Opera. Mac, Linux and other non-Windows operating systems
are immune from this attack. For people who continue to use the
Internet Explorer, CERT and Microsoft recommend setting the browser's
security settings to "high," but that can impair some browsing
functions

Paul Boutin (http://www.paulboutin.com/)
http://slate.msn.com/id/2103152/
...Scob didn't get me, but it was enough to make me ditch Explorer in
favor of the much less vulnerable Firefox browser. Firefox is built
and distributed free by the Mozilla Organization, a small nonprofit
corporation spun off last year from the fast-fading remnants of
Netscape, which was absorbed by AOL in 1999. Firefox development and
testing are mostly done by about a dozen Mozilla employees, plus a few
dozen others at companies like IBM, Sun, and Red Hat. I've been using
it for a week now, and I've all but forgotten about Explorer

United States Computer Emergency readiness Team
(http://www.us-cert.gov/)
lo dice:
Vulnerability Note VU#713878 (http://networks.org/?src=cert:713878)
...Use a different web browser
There are a number of significant vulnerabilities in technologies
relating to the IE domain/zone security model, the DHTML object model,
MIME type determination, and ActiveX. It is possible to reduce
exposure to these vulnerabilities by using a different web browser,
especially when browsing untrusted sites. Such a decision may,
however, reduce the functionality of sites that require IE-specific
features such as DHTML, VBScript, and ActiveX. Note that using a
different web browser will not remove IE from a Windows system, and
other programs may invoke IE, the WebBrowser ActiveX control, or the
HTML rendering engine (MSHTML)
Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#5 JM Tella Llop [MVP Windows]
14/07/2004 - 15:41 | Informe spam
bien... ¿y?

yo no lo recomiento, quiza por tener el SP2 y no ser vulnerable a nada de eso?.

pues quizá sea eso, XDDDDDDDDDDDD

Jose Manuel Tella Llop
MVP - Windows
(quitar XXX)
http://www.multingles.net/jmt.htm

Este mensaje se proporciona "como está" sin garantías de ninguna clase, y no otorga ningún derecho.

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
You assume all risk for your use.




"Sarcastico" wrote in message news:
"JM Tella Llop [MVP Windows]" wrote in message news:<#...
>SE RECOMIENDA ABANDONAR

por parte de quien?

Jose Manuel Tella Llop
MVP - Windows
(quitar XXX)
http://www.multingles.net/jmt.htm



http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...Jun25.html
...CERT recommends that Explorer users consider other browsers that
are not affected by the attack, such as Mozilla, Mozilla Firefox,
Netscape and Opera. Mac, Linux and other non-Windows operating systems
are immune from this attack. For people who continue to use the
Internet Explorer, CERT and Microsoft recommend setting the browser's
security settings to "high," but that can impair some browsing
functions

Paul Boutin (http://www.paulboutin.com/)
http://slate.msn.com/id/2103152/
...Scob didn't get me, but it was enough to make me ditch Explorer in
favor of the much less vulnerable Firefox browser. Firefox is built
and distributed free by the Mozilla Organization, a small nonprofit
corporation spun off last year from the fast-fading remnants of
Netscape, which was absorbed by AOL in 1999. Firefox development and
testing are mostly done by about a dozen Mozilla employees, plus a few
dozen others at companies like IBM, Sun, and Red Hat. I've been using
it for a week now, and I've all but forgotten about Explorer

United States Computer Emergency readiness Team
(http://www.us-cert.gov/)
lo dice:
Vulnerability Note VU#713878 (http://networks.org/?src=cert:713878)
...Use a different web browser
There are a number of significant vulnerabilities in technologies
relating to the IE domain/zone security model, the DHTML object model,
MIME type determination, and ActiveX. It is possible to reduce
exposure to these vulnerabilities by using a different web browser,
especially when browsing untrusted sites. Such a decision may,
however, reduce the functionality of sites that require IE-specific
features such as DHTML, VBScript, and ActiveX. Note that using a
different web browser will not remove IE from a Windows system, and
other programs may invoke IE, the WebBrowser ActiveX control, or the
HTML rendering engine (MSHTML)
Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
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