Research Shows 80% of Web Browsers Are Not Secure Enough

Posted on the 05 August 2011 by Bonsoni.com @bonsoni

Almost all of the internet users are not using the essential safety measure of installing updates for identified security loopholes, which makes them a comparatively easy victim for personal identity thieves as well as other attackers.

The finding unfolds soon after the government calculated that online identity theft costs users £3.1bn each year, from a full cost on the economy of £27bn. Organisations put up with a £17bn expense, the Cabinet Office said.

The web browser study was carried out by Qualys, a US security firm. It accumulated the information using a complimentary service it provides which scans web browsers and their plug-ins for unpatched vulnerabilities.

Exluding plug-ins, the safety snapshot for web browsers which includes Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Opera and Safari, which is much less unsatisfactory. Only 25 % of those examined in January experienced unpatched vulnerabilities. It is because these are generally automatically up to date, Qualys said at the RSA security convention in San Francisco.

However plug-ins, software add-ons that offer most of the internet’s sophisticated functions for example video clips as well as interaction, are very frequently not even routinely up to date by leaving consumers open to the cyber crooks.

The easiest target is Oracle’s Java plug-in, which were prone to hacking on greater than 40% of the systems scanned. Adobe’s Reader plug-in, enabling consumers to see Pdf file within the browser windows, is 2nd, having close to 32% of installs requiring safety enhancements.

Apple’s Quicktime media player plug-in at the same time possesses unpatched vulnerabilities on 25 % of systems.

In January, the networking leader Cisco claimed that vulnerabilities in Java can be probably the most successful for online crooks. Effective strikes on the plug-in, which could give cyber criminals distant control of the browser and enable the criminals to gain access to sensitve information for example online banking information, outnumbered strikes on Adobe Reader by a factor of 3.5.

Cisco stated a number of latest vulnerabilities openly revealed at the start of 2010 had created Java a simpler target and “continuing to be a success is simply because individuals were not really dedicated to the requirement to patch Java”.

A Java upgrade unveiled on October patched 29 security holes that Oracle classed “essential”.

Security specialists wish the next generation of internet browsers and internet sites may help fix the issue,simply because the launch of HTML5 will mean lots of the features presently supplied by plug-ins would be integrated into automatically-updated browsers.

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