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miscellaneous
Topic Started: Friday, 26. September 2008, 15:49 (57 Views)
Karin
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Karin
Right Derekap, it looks like things are heating up again over there. I've never understood all the violence. You know, the wine has been produced and distributed for so long, it doesn't make sense not to continue shipping it, but we aren't there in the middle of things, so ... All we can do is continue our prayers for peace in that region.
Karin

Hvaljen Isus i Marija. Kraljica Mira, moli za nas.
"Praised be Jesus and Mary. Queen of Peace, Pray for Us."

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Timothy
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I don't think wine is the main cause for concern in Israel at the moment, hopefully the Christmas period will be peaceful.
"An adult faith does not follow the waves of fashion and the latest novelty."
"Having a clear faith, according to the credo of the church, is often labelled as fundamentalism."
Pope Benedict XVI
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Emee
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My Mother has just returned from a trip to the Holy Land. She had a great time and didn't see any trouble at all.

I just wanted to mention that it's not all trouble over there all of the time.
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Patrick
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Quote:
 
Serious security flaw found in IE

Users of Microsoft's Internet Explorer are being urged by experts to switch to a rival until a serious security flaw has been fixed.

The flaw in Microsoft's Internet Explorer could allow criminals to take control of people's computers and steal their passwords, internet experts say.

Microsoft urged people to be vigilant while it investigated and prepared an emergency patch to resolve it.

Internet Explorer is used by the vast majority of the world's computer users.

"Microsoft is continuing its investigation of public reports of attacks against a new vulnerability in Internet Explorer," said the firm in a security advisory alert about the flaw.

Microsoft says it has detected attacks against IE 7.0 but said the "underlying vulnerability" was present in all versions of the browser.

Other browsers, such as Firefox, Opera, Chrome, Safari, are not vulnerable to the flaw Microsoft has identified.

Browser bait

"In this case, hackers found the hole before Microsoft did," said Rick Ferguson, senior security advisor at Trend Micro. "This is never a good thing."

As many as 10,000 websites have been compromised since the vulnerability was discovered, he said.

"What we've seen from the exploit so far is it stealing game passwords, but it's inevitable that it will be adapted by criminals," he said. "It's just a question of modifying the payload the trojan installs."

Said Mr Ferguson: "If users can find an alternative browser, then that's good mitigation against the threat."

But Microsoft counselled against taking such action.

"I cannot recommend people switch due to this one flaw," said John Curran, head of Microsoft UK's Windows group.

He added: "We're trying to get this resolved as soon as possible.

"At present, this exploit only seems to affect 0.02% of internet sites," said Mr Curran. "In terms of vulnerability, it only seems to be affecting IE7 users at the moment, but could well encompass other versions in time."

Richard Cox, chief information officer of anti-spam body The Spamhaus Project and an expert on privacy and cyber security, echoed Trend Micro's warning.

"It won't be long before someone reverse engineers this exploit for more fraudulent purposes. Trend Mico's advice [of switching to an alternative web browser] is very sensible," he said.

PC Pro magazine's security editor, Darien Graham-Smith, said that there was a virtual arms race going on, with hackers always on the look out for new vulnerabilities.

"The message needs to get out that this malicious code can be planted on any web site, so simple careful browsing isn't enough."

"It's a shame Microsoft have not been able to fix this more quickly, but letting people know about this flaw was the right thing to do. If you keep flaws like this quiet, people are put at risk without knowing it."

"Every browser is susceptible to vulnerabilities from time to time. It's fine to say 'don't use Internet Explorer' for now, but other browsers may well find themselves in a similar situation," he added.


Source
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KatyA
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Use Firefox - it's always been safer than IE
http://en-us.www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/
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Patrick
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http://www.mozilla-europe.org/en/firefox/
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KatyA
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Thanks Patrick
I needed to find a link quickly to send to a friend and just picked the first thing I came to.
(I've now sent him the correct link for UK users)
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Rose of York
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7787445.stm

BBC
 
security flaw believed to have affected as many as 10,000 websites.

The emergency patch should be available from 1800 GMT on 17 December, Microsoft has said.


The flaw in Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser could allow criminals to take control of people's computers and steal passwords.

Internet Explorer is used by the vast majority of computer users and the flaw could affect all versions of it.

So far the vulnerability has affected only machines running Internet Explorer 7.
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Catholic and proud of it!
Talk to God before Mass. Talk to each other afterwards
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Patrick
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Thanks for the update, Rose. :)
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Patrick
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Here is the link to Microsoft's urgent security update for IE users:

http://www.microsoft.com/protect/computer/updates/bulletins/200812_oob.mspx
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Timothy
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This weekend there has been much written about the potential disestablishment of the Church of England, it seems many Labour MPs are pushing for this to occur, perhaps as one of the few legacies of a Labour government in the coming years.

Sunday Telegraph - Labour MPs push for Disestablishment

Holy Smoke - Case for retaining status quo

Daniel Hannan - Conservative case for disestablishment


I subscribe to both bloggers, and on this issue personally Hannan hasn't given a particularly convincing argument for why I as a Catholic would actually favour disestablishment, I can't imagine how Anglicans would feel reading it! Isn't it good that in some way there is a Christian composition to our state, something devoid in most of the rest of Europe.

What would/should the Catholic Church's position be on this?
"An adult faith does not follow the waves of fashion and the latest novelty."
"Having a clear faith, according to the credo of the church, is often labelled as fundamentalism."
Pope Benedict XVI
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