
How did it do that
A
security update for a Microsoft Windows component installed on tens of
millions of computers has quietly installed an extra add-on for
Mozilla's Firefox Web browser.
It all started earlier this year, when
Redmond shipped a bundle of updates known as a "service pack" for a
programming platform called the Microsoft .NET Framework. The service
pack for the .NET Framework, like other updates, was pushed out to users and
apparently it automatically installed its own Firefox add-on that is
difficult if not dangerous to kill.
According to Annoyances.org, "this
update adds to Firefox one of the most dangerous vulnerabilities present in
all versions of Internet Explorer: the ability for Web sites to easily and
quietly install software on your PC."
While it is not quite as
doomsday as that, it might be pretty annoying for those anti-internet
exploder issuers to find that their beloved Firebadger has been stroked by
the hand of Steve Ballmer. To make matters worse Microsoft has disabled
the "uninstall" button on the extension and the only way to fix it is to
modify the Windows registry.
The question is why Microsoft did not run
the add-on like every other company in the world through the Mozilla site.
Then it would be honest, and not sail up anyone's nasal
passages. However as it is it must make some people wonder if they can
trust Redmond to install security patches that will not interfere with other
aspects of their machines.