It took a pretty big fiasco, but as the Ars Technica notes, this is the first time Microsoft has very clearly suggested users move away from IE6 because of a specific flaw. Now if they would all just heed that advice…
It’s a step forward, but then: two steps back. “I’m not aware that the vulnerability exists in other [non-IE browsers]… But those products may have other vulnerabilities.” Sigh.
That’s like saying: “I know smoking can cause cancer, but you might get cancer from something else, so you might as well smoke.”
(via @elliothere)
As you can see, the client configuration currently at risk is Windows XP running IE6,” the blog post reads. “We recommend users of IE6 on Windows XP upgrade to a new version of Internet Explorer and/or enable DEP. Users of other platforms are at reduced risk. We also recommend users of Windows XP upgrade to newer versions of Windows.
Microsoft, After Google hack, Microsoft asks users to abandon IE6, XP
01/19/10
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Comments
Sean Berger
It’d be nice if they emailed their XP user base with the recommend upgrades because I don’t see this blog post finding its way into the hands of those currently using IE6. I strongly doubt they are reading the aforementioned Microsoft blog.
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