Mozilla on Tuesday fixed 11 security flaws in Firefox, following in rival Google's footsteps in patching its browser before a hacking contest kicks off next week.
Nine of the 11 flaws were rated "critical," a threat rating that implies hackers could use the vulnerabilities to compromise a computer or infect it with malware. Of the two remaining bugs, one was labeled "high" and the second was tagged as "moderate."
The updates, which brought the open-source browser to versions 3.6.14 and 3.5.17, were the first since December, a longer-than-usual span between Mozilla patch shipments. Part of the reason was that Tuesday's updates were delayed. They had been slated to show in mid-February, but Mozilla held them to investigate a non-security bug that caused some users' browsers to crash.
More: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9212479/
Nine of the 11 flaws were rated "critical," a threat rating that implies hackers could use the vulnerabilities to compromise a computer or infect it with malware. Of the two remaining bugs, one was labeled "high" and the second was tagged as "moderate."
The updates, which brought the open-source browser to versions 3.6.14 and 3.5.17, were the first since December, a longer-than-usual span between Mozilla patch shipments. Part of the reason was that Tuesday's updates were delayed. They had been slated to show in mid-February, but Mozilla held them to investigate a non-security bug that caused some users' browsers to crash.
More: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9212479/