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Firefox's 'retreat' ensures Microsoft excels
Contractor UK ^ | Aug 22, 2005 | Contractor UK

Posted on 08/26/2005 6:31:03 PM PDT by Bush2000

Firefox's 'retreat' ensures Microsoft excels

Open source web browser Firefox has lost the momentum it has steadily gained since it was unleashed last year, according to Web analysts at Net Applications.

The online portal’s unique Hit List service reveals a slump in the Mozilla browser’s market share, falling from 8.7% to 8.1 % in July.

Coinciding with its demise, was the advance of Microsoft's IE that has gained some of the ground surrendered in June, climbing back from 86.6 % to 87.2% last month.


The revival for the dominant browser comes on the back of average monthly losses of between .5 to 1% for Redmond, as Firefox started to gain acceptance among a wider audience than just tech-savvy users.

When asked by Contractor UK whether Microsoft’s sudden gains were from the unveiling of a new IE, Net Applications said a re-launch tends revive industry interest, and could have bolstered Microsoft’s market share of the browser market.

When a company launches a new product, there is always renewed interest in what the company has produced and it would also be fair to say that this may have had an effect, said a member of the Hit List team.

Although, there have been browser issues with Windows 2000 in the news, so it is possible that again you may see a dip [in Microsoft’s market share]. Right now, people are looking for security and whenever there are issues with the security of one's system, they will use what they feel will be the most secure.”

Besides Net Applications, web developer site W3 Schools, confirms that adoption of Firefox is falling, just as IE is reaching its highest share of the market in 2005.

According to W3's data on specialist users, Microsoft IE (6) enjoyed a 67.9% share in July, improving to 68.1% in August matched against Firefox’s top share of 21% in May, which has now dropped to 19.8% for the last two months.

Observers noted that both sets of analysis concur that Microsoft’s loss, up until now, has been Firefox’s gain, but over the last month roles have reversed.

Security fears concerning Mozilla and its browser product have recently emerged, coinciding with Microsoft’s high-profile trumpeting of its new safer browser product (IE 7), complete with glossy logo.

Experts at Net Applications said they were surprised at Firefox’s sudden retreat, saying they expected a slow down before any decline.

Yet they told CUK: “Whenever there may be problems with security, there always is a decline with users changing browsers.”

Data from the Web analytics company is based on 40,000 users, gleaned from their global internet operations, prompting some commentators to question the so-called ‘global decline’ in the Firefox market share.

The Counter.com reportedly finds that between June and July, Firefox actually increased its share by two points, and overtook IE5 for the first time ever.

The Web Standard Project suggests webmasters should treat data from web analysis providers with caution, before rushing to make service changes.

So what can we conclude?” asks the WSP, a grass roots project fighting for open access to web technologies.

“Not much: Mozilla-based browsers are probably used by just under 10% of the web audience and their share is growing slowly. IE5.x is probably used by somewhat less than that and its share is declining slowly. IE6 is roughly holding steady.”

Meanwhile, Spread Firefox, which measures actual download rates of the browser, reports that it took just one month for the Mozilla Foundation’s showpiece to reach 80 million downloads in August – from its July total of 70 million.

At the time of writing, Firefox had been downloaded 80701444 times, meaning adoption rates of over 10m occurred one month after Net Applications says Firefox bolted in light of the dominant IE.


TOPICS: Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: canthandlethetruth; firefox; forqclinton; fud; gatesbot; gatesfanclub; gatesgroupies; geisforqclinton; ie; microsoft; msfanboys; paidshill; redmondpayroll; shillboy2000; spyware; trojans; valentilapdog; viruses; worms
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To: antiRepublicrat
How about I buy the list, you give me remote access to your machine, have a thousand passwords conforming to the above and if I can't crack them with a 99.9% success rate, you win.

The bet was I give you a table of windows hashes. I get to set the password policy not you.

However, if you really want to do that. I'll agree, but your linux hash table has to have passwords that conform to the same standard (which includes the salt). So if the salt is 8 characters the password needs to be no more than 6 characters.

561 posted on 09/01/2005 8:32:15 AM PDT by for-q-clinton (If at first you don't succeed keep on sucking until you do succeed)
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To: for-q-clinton
The bet was I give you a table of windows hashes. I get to set the password policy not you.

So you set the password policy far beyond that which is used by almost all organizations, something rarely found in practice, to get something that Rainbow Crack can't crack. Sorry, I'm not interested in something that unrealistic.

but your linux hash table has to have passwords that conform to the same standard (which includes the salt).

Again unrealistic. An organization sets password policy across the board. We go on what the users type in. The toughest I've ever had to use was 12 characters, no dictionary, at least two numbers and at least two special characters (!@#$%^&*()-_+=~`[]{}|\:;"'<>,.?/). Sorry, you can't crack that in modern *NIX, but you can in Windows.

You tried to backdoor your bet, but you got caught.

562 posted on 09/01/2005 8:50:15 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
It still amazes me that you aren't capable of admitting Windows is inferior in something.

It amazes me that you can't read at least 2 if not 5 posts made by me in this thread where I admit Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

How many more times do I need to say that for you to read it? Well obviously 2 isn't enough.

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

Linux allows users to have a shorter password and remain as secure as Windows

How is that. Can you read it now?

563 posted on 09/01/2005 9:30:57 AM PDT by for-q-clinton (If at first you don't succeed keep on sucking until you do succeed)
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To: antiRepublicrat
OS X has stronger passwords and a better user experience.

Ok, so let me see we are talking about Linux but then you throw in Mac. And then a little Unix at times. What next? Solaris?

Ok, so combine all three systems and and you get something that can compete with windows. I'll admit that to, so don't ask me a million times to admit it later. Here let me make it easy on you.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

When you combine the best features of Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Solaris you get a better system than Windows overall.

564 posted on 09/01/2005 9:35:20 AM PDT by for-q-clinton (If at first you don't succeed keep on sucking until you do succeed)
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To: antiRepublicrat
decent passwords are breakable on Windows, but not on Linux.

this just proves you don't know jack. What makes a decent password is one that can't be broken--not the one that most people use.

In the past it was impractical to break 7 character passwords, but as computers advanced password standards have become more complex. Linux using salting allows them to keep the old standard (shorter less complex passwords) instead of requiring the user to us a longer more complex password. Once again giving the user a better password experience. It's that's simple, you don't even know when to shut up on your point. I've admitted this time and time again, but yet you just keep on going and going and going in circles and switching topics and points. It's a good thing GW doesn't take debate class from you, or we'd have President Gore or Kerry right now.

565 posted on 09/01/2005 9:39:40 AM PDT by for-q-clinton (If at first you don't succeed keep on sucking until you do succeed)
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To: antiRepublicrat
So you set the password policy far beyond that which is used by almost all organizations, something rarely found in practice, to get something that Rainbow Crack can't crack. Sorry, I'm not interested in something that unrealistic.

Let's just follow one of the biggest users of Microsoft technology. I'll pick a branch of the Military and use their standard. That would be realistic, right?

566 posted on 09/01/2005 9:41:07 AM PDT by for-q-clinton (If at first you don't succeed keep on sucking until you do succeed)
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To: antiRepublicrat
So you set the password policy far beyond that which is used by almost all organizations, something rarely found in practice, to get something that Rainbow Crack can't crack. Sorry, I'm not interested in something that unrealistic.

Also if you want realistic scenarios only, I guess this bet is off because it assumes that Linux is being used as a desktop throughout the enterprise..an even more unrealistic possibility.

567 posted on 09/01/2005 9:43:56 AM PDT by for-q-clinton (If at first you don't succeed keep on sucking until you do succeed)
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To: for-q-clinton
Also if you want realistic scenarios only,

I see you continue to fail to admit it, preferring to go off on tangents. I guess it doesn't matter, because what you think has no bearing on the fact that Windows passwords are cryptographically relatively weak because Microsoft decided not to do what the computer industry had known was a good thing for over two decades -- salting hashes. Salts make a weak password stronger, and make a strong password too impractical to break with current technology.

568 posted on 09/01/2005 10:26:21 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: for-q-clinton
I'll pick a branch of the Military and use their standard. That would be realistic, right?

I'll pick one currently in Army use right now on thousands of Windows and some UNIX systems in an environment that ranges from FOUO to TS: 10 characters, no dictionary, minumums: two uppercase, two lowercase, two numbers, two symbols (picked from any found on a standard keyboard).

Rainbow Crack will break all of them with a 99.9% probability. The RC screen output here (notice the very strong passwords) has it cracking longer passwords than that. In fact, it cracked ten of them in under six minutes. No table big enough exists to crack those passwords on a modern *NIX.

569 posted on 09/01/2005 10:43:08 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
Mitigation, mitigation, mitigation. That's what Windows security is all about. Got something unsecure? Turn it off or hide it. ActiveX a gaping security hole? Turn it off. Cached passwords a gaping security hole? Turn it off too. If we're turning every feature off because it's a security risk, then why would security-conscious company include them in the first place?

So what. Password-salting is a mitigation against crackers, as well. It doesn't prevent cracking. All vendors try to mitigate weaknesses. So, tell us, given a Windows box with EFS installed and 14+ character passwords, how long is it going to take you to crack the passwords?
570 posted on 09/01/2005 10:43:24 AM PDT by Bush2000 (Linux -- You Get What You Pay For ... (tm)
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To: for-q-clinton
Ok, so let me see we are talking about Linux but then you throw in Mac. And then a little Unix at times. What next? Solaris?

Sure, what I'm talking about applies to all modern *NIX systems. They deprecated Crypt() and a two-character salt long ago, once they realized that computer technology was getting close to the point where it could be broken. They realized that it was a security concern and did something about it. The technology is already here, and Microsoft has done nothing (unless Vista is better).

571 posted on 09/01/2005 10:47:43 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: for-q-clinton
How is that. Can you read it now?

Sure, how about this:

Even a relatively long, hard password exceeding most guidelines for password security is breakable in Windows, yet secure in *NIX.

Nobody suggested password lengths go down when *NIX moved from Crypt() with a two-character salt to MD5 with an eight-character salt. The password requirements remained the same so security could go up.

The idea of being able to use a shorter password with *NIX never even occured to me. Only a Microsoftie would see something like this and think "Gee, now I can use a shorter password." instead of "Wow, my current password length now gives me better security."

I have to admit, the security mindset of many of its users is one of the problems Windows endures.

572 posted on 09/01/2005 10:55:17 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
Show me the smallest amount of evidence that IBM, the world's largest multinational computer corporation, wasn't capable of finding what it wanted. Bill offered something, and they were happy with the terms, period. Bill would not have gotten his non-exclusive deal if IBM didn't want to allow it.

It isn't my burden to show that IBM couldn't find alternative OSes. *You* are the one who argued that IBM could have found an alternative to CP/M. So prove it. Show even the slightest amount of proof that IBM knew about alternatives. Because that's what you're trying to argue. IBM went to Gates to find out what it should use. Gates recommended CP/M. Clearly, IBM did not have this information -- and certainly wouldn't have it without Gates's recommendation.

Neck and neck in most places, behind in some, ahead on others.

Look, you lied. You said: "most applications ran faster under it due to the better memory handling offered by the parent OS." These numbers prove that that is false. Now, you're trying to spin those numbers because they aren't supported by what you were trying to sell earlier. And here's another thing: These numbers don't encompass the impact of running both Classic and standard OS X applications simultaneously. There is additional overhead in running Classic applications that wouldn't be present if these were standard native OS X applications.



Jobs ditched because IBM wasn't supporting the platform. The PPC had a great architecture with great capabilities and lots of room to grow, but that doesn't mean anything if the vendor won't continue R&D and constantly has supply problems.

In other words, contrary to your opinion earlier, the Mac as it currently exists ain't the "best platform". Anyone buying one is essentially buying a deprecated piece of hardware that is going into mothballs before it even leaves the showroom floor.

I still stand by my criticism of Intel's P4-based architecture, as well as Intel's design for dual-core (Intel recently admitted it was badly slapped together). Both the PPC and AMD are far superior in every way.

The advantage of having multiple suppliers (Intel and AMD) is that competition can reign; in other words, it brings out the best.
573 posted on 09/01/2005 10:59:29 AM PDT by Bush2000 (Linux -- You Get What You Pay For ... (tm)
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To: Bush2000
So what. Password-salting is a mitigation against crackers, as well.

Salting is a simple common practice in cryptography that was in place long before Microsoft made NT. Microsoft's inability to follow common practice simply resulted in another weak link in the security chain.

So, tell us, given a Windows box with EFS installed and 14+ character passwords, how long is it going to take you to crack the passwords?

Okay, exactly how many systems out there does that apply to? I've already told you what Rainbow Crack can crack, and it applies to all but a tiny fraction of home, corporate and government Windows systems out there. That is a security problem.

574 posted on 09/01/2005 11:00:44 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
You know as well as I do that it's not about short passwords, but about your good passwords being unbreakable.

Password salting doesn't make your passwords unbreakable, n00b.
575 posted on 09/01/2005 11:01:06 AM PDT by Bush2000 (Linux -- You Get What You Pay For ... (tm)
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To: killjoy
Statistically, these numbers have no meaning.

Yes, they do. They reveal that Firefox momentum has chilled to the point that it's not gaining market share. That's significant, given all the bluster and bravado we've heard around here lately.
576 posted on 09/01/2005 11:03:54 AM PDT by Bush2000 (Linux -- You Get What You Pay For ... (tm)
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To: Bush2000
Password salting doesn't make your passwords unbreakable, n00b.

Quit reaching for straws, you know what I mean. I'm trying to save typing since I have to do it over and over and over for you guys. Look back, I've used qualifiers showing that I mean breakable in a practical sense, either by the time it would take to do a computational brute-force or the disk space it would take to hold a lookup table.

577 posted on 09/01/2005 11:08:02 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
Salting is a simple common practice in cryptography that was in place long before Microsoft made NT. Microsoft's inability to follow common practice simply resulted in another weak link in the security chain.

Yet again, salting does not make passwords unbreakable. So you're not making any point.

Okay, exactly how many systems out there does that apply to? I've already told you what Rainbow Crack can crack, and it applies to all but a tiny fraction of home, corporate and government Windows systems out there. That is a security problem.

Look, here's the challenge. I'll use strong passwords. I'll encrypt my filesystem with EFS. You tell me how long it's going to take you to (1) crack EFS and get the hashes, and (2) crack the hashes and give me plaintext passwords.
578 posted on 09/01/2005 11:09:16 AM PDT by Bush2000 (Linux -- You Get What You Pay For ... (tm)
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To: antiRepublicrat
Quit reaching for straws, you know what I mean. I'm trying to save typing since I have to do it over and over and over for you guys. Look back, I've used qualifiers showing that I mean breakable in a practical sense, either by the time it would take to do a computational brute-force or the disk space it would take to hold a lookup table.

You aren't making any point at all. Using a sufficiently strong salt/password is no more unbreakable than using a sufficently strong Windows password. Again, you're trying to get into a thing-waving contest over whose passwords are more secure AFTER THE MACHINE HAS ALREADY BEEN COMPROMISED PHYSICALLY. That's a ridiculous scenario, and nearly all security experts would agree with me.
579 posted on 09/01/2005 11:12:50 AM PDT by Bush2000 (Linux -- You Get What You Pay For ... (tm)
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To: Bush2000
It isn't my burden to show that IBM couldn't find alternative OSes.

Yes it is.

Look, you lied.

Nope. What I just found wasn't as favorable to Classic as the one I was originally referring to (that was run on a 512MB box, kicking the VM performance advantage more). To paraphrase, there are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and benchmarks.

don't encompass the impact of running both Classic and standard OS X applications simultaneously.

Running multiple apps hurts the performance of any one app? Wow Bush, what a new concept!

In other words, contrary to your opinion earlier, the Mac as it currently exists ain't the "best platform"

I guess you're now talking about the hardware it sits on instead of the OS. Make up your mind. Current PPC chips are definitely good enough into the near future (and upgrades are planned before the MacTels hit), but they don't have a long-term future.

The advantage of having multiple suppliers (Intel and AMD) is that competition can reign; in other words, it brings out the best.

Gotta love it. We win in the end, no matter what platform we're on.

580 posted on 09/01/2005 11:21:32 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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