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IE10 under attack

Lewis

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Internet Explorer 10 under attack as hackers exploit zero-day bug FireEye uncovers attacks emanating from a U.S. website just two days after Microsoft issued huge IE patch collection
http://www.computerw...it_zero_day_bug

FireEye today said it had discovered that attackers are actively exploiting a new, unpatched vulnerability in Internet Explorer 10 (IE10).

Microsoft confirmed the Milpitas, Calif. security company's report.

"Microsoft is aware of targeted attacks against Internet Explorer, currently targeting customers using Internet Explorer 10," a Microsoft spokesperson said via email. "We are investigating and we will take appropriate actions to help protect customers."

FireEye's disclosure came just two days after Microsoft patched every edition of IE with a large update that fixed 24 flaws, 15 of which applied to IE10. The IE update, which was not originally on this week's Patch Tuesday slate, was added at the last minute by Microsoft, which said it had completed testing of the repairs in time to make the cut.

The attack code, said FireEye, was hosted on a compromised website based in the U.S. The company called the exploit a "classic drive-by download attack," a term reserved for the most dangerous kind of browser-based assaults, one that only need entice people to a malware-infected site.

According to FireEye, the exploit sidesteps ASLR (address space layout randomization) using Flash ActionScript, an Adobe-owned scripting language most often used on sites that rely on Flash Player to execute content. ASLR is one of Windows' most important anti-exploit technologies.

"Upon successful exploitation, this zero-day attack will download a XOR-encoded payload from a remote server, decode and execute it," FireEye added.

FireEye said that it is "currently collaborating" with Microsoft's security engineers on researching the IE10 vulnerability and the related exploit.

IE10 has been on the downturn for the last four months. Starting in October 2013, Microsoft has been replacing IE10 with the newer IE11 on Windows 8 devices, including PCs and the tablets -- such as Microsoft's own Surface Pro 2 -- that run the full-featured Windows 8 and 8.1 rather than the subset-of-an-OS Windows RT.

Microsoft released IE11 for Windows 7 in November, at which point it was automatically pushed to those machines as a substitute for IE10.

Web metrics firm Net Applications estimated IE10 user share, a rough calculation of the percentage of all Internet users running a specific browser, at 9.3% in January. Most people running IE remain tied to 2009's IE8.

IE%20distribution%20Jan%2014.jpg

IE10, targeted by attackers exploiting a "zero-day" vulnerability, is on its way out as Microsoft pushes the newer IE11 to Windows 7 and Windows 8 users. Last month, IE10 accounted for about 16% of all versions of Internet Explorer used to browse the Web. (Data: Net Applications.)
 
IE continues to be a terrible browser. Why anyone still uses it except for testing website compatibility is beyond me.
 
IE continues to be a terrible browser. Why anyone still uses it except for testing website compatibility is beyond me.

There are still certain websites and web-based applications that only work in Internet Explorer.

The TOG​
 
There are still certain websites and web-based applications that only work in Internet Explorer.

The TOG​
Really? Not that I don't believe you, but it is hard to believe. IE has been on the downturn for years now.

Check this out -geographical spread of web browser usage as of last month: http://gs.statcounter.com/#all-browser-ww-monthly-201401-201401-map
Also, the W3C have some stats: http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp

It appears that Chrome and Firefox are the most used browsers today, and by a long way.
 
It seems that not everybody agrees. According to your statistics (w3schools), IE is in 3rd place with just over 10% of users. But according to statcounter.com (your other link), it is in 2nd place with just over 27%. That's nearly a 3-fold difference. Which is correct?

The TOG​
 
It seems that not everybody agrees. According to your statistics (w3schools), IE is in 3rd place with just over 10% of users. But according to statcounter.com (your other link), it is in 2nd place with just over 27%. That's nearly a 3-fold difference. Which is correct?

The TOG​
Actually take another look at the Stat Counter, IE is at 17%, check the bar graph.

I'd probably trust the W3C the most, but either way, the focus has shifted away from IE and has been for a while.
 
Really? Not that I don't believe you, but it is hard to believe. IE has been on the downturn for years now.

Check this out -geographical spread of web browser usage as of last month: http://gs.statcounter.com/#all-browser-ww-monthly-201401-201401-map
Also, the W3C have some stats: http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp

It appears that Chrome and Firefox are the most used browsers today, and by a long way.
Hi Eora. In your opinion which is the best browser between Firefox and Chrome, or can there be advantages to one or the other depending the operating system of my computer? I sure agree with your opinion of IE. I have no idea why they have allowed it to go down so much; there are multiple things I cannot do with it that I do with Chrome. Even the presentation of posts are different; at least they were when I finally switched.
:wave2
 
IE continues to be a terrible browser. Why anyone still uses it except for testing website compatibility is beyond me.

I would go one step further..... Why anyone would use the operating system that has IE10 is way, way, beyond me! :hysterical
 
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