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Quote from: !Donovan on April 25, 2013, 11:29:01 PMQuote from: Pondus on April 24, 2013, 01:27:22 AMaccording to Symantec report Opera and IE have the lowest number of vulnerabillitiessee charts. http://www.dinside.no/915410/faerreste-saarbarheter-i-operaNot that many people use Opera on a regular basis. We should look for vulnerabilities in more common browsers, n'est-ce pas?Well there are a few that use IE
Quote from: Pondus on April 24, 2013, 01:27:22 AMaccording to Symantec report Opera and IE have the lowest number of vulnerabillitiessee charts. http://www.dinside.no/915410/faerreste-saarbarheter-i-operaNot that many people use Opera on a regular basis. We should look for vulnerabilities in more common browsers, n'est-ce pas?
according to Symantec report Opera and IE have the lowest number of vulnerabillitiessee charts. http://www.dinside.no/915410/faerreste-saarbarheter-i-opera
# 86% of all websites had at least one serious* vulnerability.# The average number of serious* vulnerabilities identified per website was 56, continuing the downward trend from 79 in 2011 and 230 in 2010.# Serious* vulnerabilities were resolved in an average of 193 days from first notification.# 61% of all serious* vulnerabilities were resolved, slightly less than the 63% during from 2011, but still up from 53% in 2010 and far better than 2007 when it was just 35%.
Can Facebook videos be a scam?Q. I tried to watch a video on Facebook, but it didn't work. It made me install a new driver and then still didn't play the video. What gives?A. I doubt that was a real video at all. This is a scam that is common on Facebook. The post looks like a really interesting or scandalous video. When you click it, it asks you to install a driver to watch it. What you actually download is usually a junk file or a virus.http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2013/05/05/5-burning-tech-questions-answered/