Nieuws

Daarnaast zal het nieuwe 64-bit Firefox-platform voor Windows geheel zonder ondersteuning van plug-ins worden gelanceerd, omdat dit volgens de browserontwikkelaar niet meer nodig is.
Het lijkt erop dat Mozilla gebruikers van Firefox tegen hackeraanvallen beschermd, door een kwetsbare Java plugin uit te schakelen. Het gaat om een zeer ernstige kwetsbaarheid in de Java ...
Mozilla’s flagship product Firefox just released its latest version, number 26, and although it comes with an array of features, one stands out: by default it blocks all Java plugins, you have ...
Mozilla is disabling older versions of the Java Deployment Toolkit plugin for Firefox users, in a bid to block attacks against a newly-discovered Java security hole that attackers have been ...
Java problems, solutions As alluded to in the above section, a number of users are having problems with Java content after in Firefox 1.5.
Mozilla has released a major new version of Firefox, which includes fixes for more than a dozen security vulnerabilities as well as an important change that makes all Java plugins click-to-play be ...
Mozilla has blacklisted unpatched versions of the Java plug-in from Firefox on Windows in order to protect its users from attacks that exploit known vulnerabilities in those versions. Mozilla can ...
Mozilla's "click to play" move will block all plug-ins from executing without explicit user authorization.
Mozilla must have seen the news this week: Security companies are recommending you disable Java, or just uninstall it. The organization is recommending the same to its Firefox users: At this time ...
I was browsing ars this morning when AVG piped up saying that it had found a virus. The virus is the java/byte verify. I have had a look around on the net for information on this virus, and from ...
Mozilla has blacklisted unpatched versions of the Java plug-in from Firefox on Windows in order to protect its users from attacks that exploit known vulnerabilities in those versions. Mozilla can ...
The Firefox web browser will, henceforth, require users to manually activate Java objects on sites that they visit, Mozilla has confirmed. The change is aimed at improving security and moving away ...