Netscape 8 to Emphasize Security 226
wikinerd writes "Netscape is building Netscape 8 which will include several anti-phishing enhancements and will emphasize security. Netscape obtains blacklists of scam and spam sites which will be denied access to ActiveX and cookies. RSS capabilities will also be included in Netscape 8, which will be released on 17 February."
ActiveX (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:ActiveX (Score:2)
Re:Windows Update (Score:3, Funny)
Um, no... why don't I just give MS my admin login while I'm at it?
Re:ActiveX (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:ActiveX (Score:3, Interesting)
ActiveX will never go away if we encourage sites to keep using it. At any rate, only about 0.5% of sites actually *require* ActiveX to be used (in my experience). And those can usually be easily spurned for a competitor..
Re:ActiveX (Score:5, Insightful)
They win, we (including you) lose.
The whole idea is to pressure sites to clean up their code, make it standard, and stop using ActiveX. You do that by increasing the marketshare of browsers that DON'T accept bad/nonstandard code and DON'T use ActiveX.
If you allow sites to be crap, they'll happily do so. It's the whole "give them an inch..." thing.
Someone once referred to this as a big game of chicken. Netscape loses by blinking and putting in ActiveX. This removes a lot of the pressure sites have to wake up and stop making their pages IE-only.
It's very unfortunate for all of us.
ActiveX to load a Direct3D game (Score:2)
The whole idea is to pressure sites to clean up their code, make it standard, and stop using ActiveX.
How do you make a Direct3D game [cartoonnetwork.com] load from a web site without loading through an ActiveX control? What about client-side apps that access the file system, such as an ActiveX virus scanner?
Re:ActiveX to load a Direct3D game (Score:3, Insightful)
D3D Games from websites: "Why the fuck would you want to?"
Virus scans from websites: "Why not just have them download and run the fucking executable?"
ActiveX: A virus of a solution still looking for a problem.
Business models (Score:2, Insightful)
D3D Games from websites: "Why the fuck would you want to?"
To advertise to children. The Kids Next Door game is based on a TV series, which is supported by TV advertising.
Virus scans from websites: "Why not just have them download and run the fucking executable?"
A downloadable version of the online virus scanner would compete with the retail version.
Re:Business models (Score:2, Insightful)
I think you just lost your argument...
Re:ActiveX to load a Direct3D game (Score:5, Insightful)
You don't. You use something that's actually cross-platform and isn't Windows-specific. Not all internet users run Windows (I sure don't). It's the internet, not the Wintelnet.
What about client-side apps that access the file system, such as an ActiveX virus scanner?
They shouldn't. That's not the place for such things. Convenient? Sure. Worth the price? Hell no. There are far better ways to scan for viruses than to give websites full access to every file on your computer.
An analogy would be saying that unless you leave your doors unlocked at all times, how is the cable guy going to fix your TV? Or the telephone guy fix the static on your lines? Or the furnace guy fix the boiler? Sure, we get robbed ever week... but we've GOT to leave our house unlocked for these other things.
And some of us run operating systems that don't get viruses anyhow.
Re:ActiveX to load a Direct3D game (Score:2)
Maybe we wouldn't have as many viruses if browsers couldn't do what they wanted with the filesystem?
Open Zee Eyes (Score:3, Interesting)
Since no one uses Netscape anyway (come on, this is not a troll, it's a reality), I don't think this has effect at all on anything. I continue to be surprised that AOL has anyone at all working on a browser that they refuse to use or promote. Is it charity? Contractual? Who knows, but Netscape is a non-player,
Re:Open Zee Eyes (Score:3, Insightful)
Not even remotely true.
"I continue to be surprised that AOL has anyone at all working on a browser that they refuse to use or promote."
I can't argue that AOL's strategy with Netscape has been maddeningly inconsistant; it would indeed be nice if they would use the Gecko engine as the standard in their own product.
"Who knows, but Netscape is a non-player, and so a non-issue in any way."
Netscape is now the standard browser throughout my workplace, and is the browser
Re:ActiveX (Score:3, Interesting)
Our parent company has spent many millions on the development of in-house apps that depend on ActiveX. They're only just realizing their conundrum now. Because the malware problem was getting so bad, we spent a significant amount of time trainin
Re:ActiveX (Score:2)
Incidentally, I view Windows Media on my FreeBSD box all the time using mplayer.
There are other codecs available though that are far better-supported across different platforms/browsers/OSes. By using them, a company can open its media to a wider audience (and the non-Windows audience continues to grow
Re:ActiveX (Score:2)
Why not just use Firefox? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why not just use Firefox? (Score:2, Interesting)
As to why they don't just use Firefox directly? Because owning the user's homepage is money and power. People hear the name "Netscape" which has a long history prior to AOL cannibalising it and they decide to download it rather than this new "firefox thing".
So, by using that name and that slightly customized/modified browser, they draw a larger group of users. And a lot of those users never get around to
Re:Why not just use Firefox? (Score:2)
No, That was a direct quote from the article.
They are, aren't they? (Score:2)
Netscape is building Netscape 8 which will...
when it should have read:
Mozilla developers have built 99.9% of Netscape 8 which will...
Re:They are, aren't they? (Score:2)
Re:They are, aren't they? (Score:2)
Re:They are, aren't they? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:They are, aren't they? (Score:2, Insightful)
You do know that your talking complete rubbish don't you?
The majority of the Mozilla code was written by Netscape employees.
Now I know what you mean. You mean that all the old Netscape Communicator code was rewritten. Well, firstly, that's wrong (things like NSPR [mozilla.org] and NSS [mozilla.org] are still kicking around) and secondly, most of the code was rewritten by Netscape employees.
While Netscape may not have written any Mozilla code since July 2003 (the fact tha
Re:They are, aren't they? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:They are, aren't they? (Score:2)
I know that Netscape is the base - and today when I use Firefox I no doubt look at it and see that same ol' application.
I know...
I was just pointing out that "Netscape" is no longer building browsers on their own without any outside influence. I'm sure most of the code which makes/will make the browser run smoothly on today's computers comes from the mozilla foundation developers. Not all code
Re:They are, aren't they? (Score:2)
Re:Why not just use Firefox? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why not just use Firefox? (Score:3, Insightful)
Netscape was cool like 10 years ago, and that was only because there simply wasn't anything else. To be honest, in looking back, all of their browsers sucked. But the company has been bought and bastardized and not even used by AOL. The only thing I know about Netscape nowadays is that they their name has been now sold by AOL to some cheesy dial up company that is competing with Netzero for $9.99 a month internet access at blazing speeds at 56 whatever or less.
Re:Why not just use Firefox? (Score:2)
Netscape, Mozilla and Firefox are all three based on Gecko.
Additionally, Mozilla, Firefox and Gecko are all three products of the Mozilla foundation.
Go for the Gold. (Score:5, Funny)
OK, and what were they emphasizing before? Market Share?
Of course (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Of course (Score:2)
There's now an emphasis on marketshare as well, but it doesn't seem like it's being engineered specifically for mass-appeal. the marketing is a seperate effort.
And in general, for companies, the motivation is profit, not marketshare. Marketshare is a means to that end. If a company can be profitable with a fraction of the market (think apple) it's doing pretty well.
Re:Go for the Gold. (Score:2, Funny)
ActiveX on Netscape (Score:5, Insightful)
I thought that was one of the reasons to use Netscape/Mozilla/Firefox.... cuz they DIDN'T support ActiveX... ??
Re:ActiveX on Netscape (Score:5, Informative)
Re:ActiveX on Netscape (Score:2)
Not counting that my wife and myself use the same PC at home and if I could have two hotmail sessions opened at the same time (one in IE, one in Gecko), it would be pretty cool too.
Re:ActiveX on Netscape (Score:4, Informative)
Nescape 7.1 (or maybe it was 7.2) came with the Mozilla ActiveX plugin preinstalled, although it was whitelisted to allow only the Windows Media Player ActiveX control.
The Netscape 8 betas however can use either the Gecko or Trident (WinIE) engines for rendering web pages. If the user decides to use trident for viewing a web page that tab is marked as "low security" (little red or yellow sphere in the top right corner of the tab) IIRC.
Re:ActiveX on Netscape (Score:2)
This new Netscape 8 (for some ungodly reason) appears to supports hosting IE rendering engine in addition to Gecko so perhaps there is a more pressing need for blocking ActiveX after all.
Of course (Score:5, Funny)
I wish they'd come up with... (Score:3, Insightful)
users designed to resist phishing schemes and ENLAR6E Y0||R PE|\||5 spam.
Should have taken the *easy* route (Score:4, Insightful)
Just give users an extension:
http://www.speakeasy.net/software/fir
That way, they can keep up to date with Firefox.
Now Netscape, as usual will lag in updates... which means security holes may remain, etc.
If they did an extension, users could likely update with no problems.
Re:Should have taken the *easy* route (Score:3, Informative)
Nobody in their right mind who reads slashdot would install stuff blindly.
Re:Should have taken the *easy* route (Score:2)
No big deal... it's just easier for everyone.
All clients need to do to update is download the latest firefox.
Essentially the auto-updater will let them know when a new firefox is available. And it will also notify them when a new version of the extension is available.
Re:Should have taken the *easy* route (Score:2)
Blacklists don't work (Score:5, Insightful)
Having said that, there are a few javascript phishing techniques that work perfectly well in Firefox with Gecko...
Re:Blacklists don't work (Score:2)
Re:Blacklists don't work (Score:2)
The big deal of course for ActiveX is that as you say it's not in whitelist mode which encourages sites to insist the user install utter crap and for the spyware to live in that atmosphere. However, when you do put it in whitelist mode it becomes quite useful. For example Netscape 7.1 uses ActiveX in whitelist mode to support the Windows Media Player. Thus sites get the scriptin
Sludging Your Sludged Sludge-marks. (Score:2)
I wouldn't throw ActiveX as far as I can see. It is the favorite of crackers and is considered by many in the IT security industry as inherently "dangerous regardless of settings."
So, I simply kill off ActiveX (aka use another OS flavor) so that I wouldn't have to "keep my enemy closer.".
As for non-IE plugins, at least, the end-us
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Re:from AOL to Netscape? (Score:2)
Yeah, but Netscape 4.x went through so many "beta" versions that most people thought Netscape to mean "crap". And Netscape 6 was a total disaster. Plus, most people believe that Netscape "lost" to IE (which, let's be honest, they did). So AOL wants to change to a brand notorious for buggy software and losing?
There's still a Netscape? (Score:2, Troll)
hmm (Score:5, Funny)
a few tidbits (Score:2, Insightful)
2) I still think FireFox is the way to go. Much more attention to security and features. Easier to use and less bloat.
3) This is more of a question: Does anyone have any statistics of what browsers and versions of browsers are most being used? I mean, I'd love to see that broken down by country and by versions.
the window of opportunity (Score:3, Interesting)
Stay with Firefox. It's sensibly disconnected from the #1 security weakness in Windows.
Re:the window of opportunity (Score:2)
Re:the window of opportunity (Score:2)
There's nothing vaguely resembling a modem or other network connection.
For that matter, there *won't* be a modem attached even for FreeBSD until I've figured out how to rip enough out of XP that it can't connect or even recognize that the modem is there . .
hawk
A little slower than Firefox but much more solid (Score:3, Informative)
NS4.72-4.78 were the reference standards for years and were the coding baseine for a great deal of web apps. There was no NS5 and NS6 was shit. Admittedly it was slow buggy crap. NS7.1 was a huge improvment and NS7.2 was a polished version of that. It's got all the biggies that FF has; tabbed browsing, popup blockers, profiles.
Re:A little slower than Firefox but much more soli (Score:2)
Re:A little slower than Firefox but much more soli (Score:2)
Re:A little slower than Firefox but much more soli (Score:2)
Embarassment coming... (Score:2, Insightful)
What about the whitelists? (Score:2)
How long before Netscape offers a "preferred partner program" where they promise not to blacklist the spyware produced by any of their partners?
Netscape lives? (Score:2)
I understand that the name "Netscape" itself has huge mindshare, but does anyone really associate that with AOL or Time Warner? Does it give their brands any additional mindshare by association? The article says Netscape claims to be the No. 2 browser now, but how much of that is due to people like me who have an ol
Blacklisting ActiveX - Backwards! (Score:4, Insightful)
I only have a handful of pages that I *need* ActiveX on, and the rest can go pound sand.
Solves the problems of Netscape having to maintain the lists, too.
People are being too hard on AOL/NS (Score:3, Interesting)
I can understand why some people are angry at AOL, and why all of NS's exemployee's are still peeved at them. However, from what I've read NS8 will use a tweaked version of the Gecko in Moz 1.7.5/FF1.0 and anything that might increase the marketshare of standards-based browsers is a good thing. And if AOL can use its muscle to drive even 2% of users over to Gecko, it will be a huge accomplishment.
And I think NS8 represents a challenge to IE users, not existing Firefox users. I don't see it as stealing marketshare (or even potential marketshare) from Firefox, and even if it does, its still less marketshare for IE. Netscape, if managed properly, presents another flank in the battle for desktop browsing. They are allies, people, not the enemy. Sure, they could be doing some things better, but let's give them a chance to win over some new users before we hang them out to dry.
And to those who would say that AOL should give more to the community, we shouldn't forget that they did pour a shit tonne of loot into NS/MoFo. There are plenty of reasons to be pissed at AOL/NS, but we shouldn't attack them for this.
First things first (Score:5, Informative)
Based on the interface I saw in the preview version [jasonlefkowitz.net], it might be better if they concentrated on not sucking first.
The "Netscape Browser Preview" had the most God-awful UI I've seen in a desktop app in a long, long time. It was like they went out of their way to avoid learning the big lesson from the success of Firefox (which was keep it simple, stupid), preferring instead to chrome it up six ways to Sunday.
They even pushed the menu bar over to the right side of the screen -- in complete defiance of the way every other app does it. Who goes to look for "File", "Edit", etc. over there? Nobody. So there's years of muscle memory that you have to un-learn to be productive with the thing.
Their ActiveX "solution" sounds similar. Why go to all the trouble of keeping blacklists, etc. when there is a much simpler and easier for users to understand solution at hand -- just leave ActiveX out of the default install altogether, and offer it as a plugin. Users who need ActiveX for vertical apps are also likely to have sysadmins handy to keep their network secure, so installing a plugin is no big deal. Everybody else, why do they need ActiveX? The only ActiveX control I've seen in mainstream use in years is FilePlanet [fileplanet.com]'s download manager, and they offer standard downloads for the ActiveX-challenged, too, so you could ditch ActiveX without too much pain there as well.
Somebody put a silver bullet in the zombie corpse of Netscape already before it embarrasses its legacy any further...
ie with spyad (Score:2)
I'm not sure the concept works.
Only a beta on feb 17 (Score:2)
Email client? (Score:2)
Netscape exec: Ohhh so thats what they wanted. (Score:3, Interesting)
What kills me is how in the world did companies like Netscape miss what the public wants? They made netscape communicator, a monolith for people who only wanted yahoo.com to come up faster. Next they made netscape 6, then 7, never slower or smaller. IE was competing with Opera easily since you have to purchase opera, and IE is free for the most part.
Mozilla was a joke. Period. I always thought mozilla was an org of programmers with itchy fingers who just wanted to make an OS-in-a-browser.
Someone grew brains there.
Two words: Name Recognition (Score:4, Insightful)
The do know the name 'netscape', however; and it's a safe, corporate-friendly name (unlike mozilla or firefox).
Re:Two words: Name Recognition (Score:2)
It's a bad thing in this case.
Netscape? That bloated trash with all the crud bundled in with it?
Yeah, but it's better now... it's based on a lightweight Mozilla browser and its cousin Firefox.
... later that day...
This thing sucks. AIM keeps popping up and the browser is trying to sell me stuff. Glad we didn't consider any of that viral open source crud.
Re:Can some one tell me ... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Can some one tell me ... (Score:2)
Isn't Safari based on KHTML? Isn't Konqueror also based on KHTML?
I guess you can't just go and install Safari on KDE, but you can use Konqueror which will parse html the same way Safari will... I'd say that it's "Close Enough". JMO...
Re:Why does Netscape development continue? (Score:2)
Many alternatives to IE is not a bad thing at all, embrace and extend should work from our side too I reckon.
Re:Why does Netscape development continue? (Score:2)
Netscape will always be able to feed on Mozilla as long as such drones exist.
Defnition: (Score:2)
Re:Defnition: (Score:2)
Re:Defnition: (Score:2)
Re:But who controls it? (Score:3, Interesting)
All in all, this really could shape up to be a killer feature. I'd feel a lot safer leaving my parents surfing on NS 8 with this feature enabled, than I would with Firefox, and I LOVE Firefox - I just feel that less experienced users need their hands held more, and if Netscape are willing to do tha
Re:Gee... (Score:2)
Re:Gee... (Score:2)
That is not correct. Netscape 6 was simply a clone of an early Mozilla beta.
Re:Gee... (Score:2)
Re:Gee... (Score:2)
It was a slightly-customized version of Mozilla 0.6 suite.
I seem to remember a project that WAS trying to make a Java-based version of Mozilla, but it didn't get far and got virtually no press or users. I'd be very surprised if you actually used it. I had trouble obtaining it when I actually wanted to find it.
The reason Netscape 6.0 sucked so bad was because it was based upon a premature version of Mozilla and the code just simply wasn't ready for prime-time yet. Th
Re:Java browser. (Score:2)
http://java.sun.com/products/archive/hotjava/inde
As a side note, the current version of the Java FAQ lists the current version of HotJava as 1.1beta1...
http://java.sun.com/products/jdk/faq.html#A6 [sun.com]
Re:Gee... (Score:2)
Netscape 6 was a complete disaster, but netscape 7 and up, which are based on more recent Mozilla Suite (Seamonkey) versions, are actually decent. It still doesn't have an advantage over Mozilla proper, though, unless you like the integrated AIM/ICQ client.
Re:Gee... (Score:2)
Ditto. I also started using gaim [sourceforge.net] instead of AOL instant messanger for the same reason. It's just too tempting for a corporation to use their product as an advertising vector. OSS projects don't seem to succumb to this temptation outside of the Help About dialog.
Re:ActiveX? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:ActiveX? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:ActiveX? (Score:5, Funny)
That would be the Pwn3d button?
Re:ActiveX? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:ActiveX? (Score:2)
Thus, if a site is using and depending on active x, they have been rejecting business from customers using browsers other than msie, and even if netscape starts using active x, these sites would still be basically telling all non-microsoft-using custome
Re:i dont get it (Score:2)
But you are. So.
Re:i dont get it (Score:5, Informative)
Netscape 4 was the last Netscape that stood from the orignial lineage.
Netscape 5 was begun and the source released. The Mozilla open-source project was formed. They took a look at the Netscape 5 source, and gave up on it, deciding to start over. Although the Mozilla "suite" was made to work/look like Netscape, it was new code.
Mozilla was developed for a while. The first public release was "M3" (I used it). Later on they changed from "M"(ilestone) releases to version numbers. I think it was version 0.6 that Netscape then used as the basis for Netscape 6.0 (which flopped). We saw a Netscape 6.1 later, based upon a later release of Mozilla (0.9.2)
Netscape 7 was based upon Mozilla 1.0.1, a much better (recent) version of Mozilla. The current version of Netscape, 7.2, is based upon Mozilla 1.7.2.
Firefox is based upon Mozilla, not Netscape.
There have so far been no Netscape browsers based upon Firefox. Netscape 8 will be the first.
Re:i dont get it (Score:5, Informative)
In the begining there was NCSA and its child mosaic, and all was good, but Marc got greedy and formed Netscape 1.0 from Mosaic and made lots of money
And lo, BillG had released windows 4.0 to the world, known as 95, but it had not a browser, so it purchased spyglass, who had built another browser based on mosaic, this abomination was internet explorer 1 and it sucked
And internet explorer 2 sucked as well, but 3 was a decent browser that had basic support for CSS and what we call ActiveX today
Netscape 2 and 3 were giants, but Netscape 4 and IE 4 were of equal strength, and then AOL purchased Netscape.
Netscape began to decline as it fell behind, IE5 and 5.5 were much faster the 4.5 and 4.7 of netscape, but there was a new day dawning, AOL saw fit to release the preliminary code of Netscape 5 to the world.
But this code did suck very much, so the mozilla foundation, with help of many netscape employees began writing a browser essentially from scratch
this took time and IE got faster, but people started using its holes to exploit windows boxes around the globe
And lo Mozilla starting releasing builds, called milestones, and some were good and some were evil, but they became stronger, until netscape took one of the milestones and released netscape 6.
And it was good, but people had forgotten about netscape, so they ignored it
And mozilla worked on until it released 1.0 and people celebrated
And Netscape released 7.0, which was Mozilla 1.0 with some of the features turned off, and some people switched fleeing the pestilence following internet explorer.
And mozilla toiled away until 1.4, and netscape took of this and released netscape 7.1
Now some in the mozilla community wanted to build a new browser that was lighter than Mozilla, ready to do battle with Microsoft, and they called themselves phoenix, but the could not use that name due to copyright
So they changed their name to firebird, but they could not use that name either
So they settled on firefox, but as they kept changing their name, they were releasing very good web browsers
And mozilla kept working until 1.7 came, and netscape released 7.2, and firefox synced their trunk to the mozilla 1.7 branch.
And development began quickly on firefox, through 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9, until 1.0 came, and 20 million downloaded it.
AOL saw the favor firefox had with the people and coveted it, so they made a beta based on Firefox, and it was ok.
And now Netscape is poined to release netscape 8 which is really Firefox 1.0, but mozilla is still working on 1.8 and IE is going nowhere.
Corrections and additions apprecitated, especially for Opera's, Safari's, and Konquerer's lineages
Re:i dont get it (Score:2)
Err, no. In the beginning, hypertext was in text. Mosaic added graphics to the existing www.
hawk
Re:i dont get it (Score:2)
Good thing he "got greedy," because that gave us Netscape 1.x, which pushed new boundaries on the web. And in the end, through a tangly road, we now have an awesome Mozilla/Firefox/Thunderbird browser base.
I understand that the Mozilla codebase does not really resemble the stuff originally released from Netscape, but I seriously doubt we'd be where we are today without Netscape in our history, and that money infusion from AOL/
Re:i dont get it (Score:2)