Friday, December 30, 2005

Time Warner loses Missouri muni fiber fight

"Time Warner this week lost an appeal aimed at blocking the city of North Kansas City, Mo., from extending its fiber optic network to residents and local businesses.

A federal judge rejected the argument, that, under state law, the city could not offer cable television service without first getting voters' approval, and pointed out that although the city was moving forward with plans to provide high-speed Internet access (to which the state law does not apply), it had no plans to offer cable.

Time Warner's lawsuit was dismissedthis spring, and this week's ruling by a three-judge panel in the 8Th Circuit upheld that dismissal.

The city broke ground on the construction of the network on Dec. 8. and expects to begin offering services this spring. Extending the fiber optic network that already connects municipal buildings, the city hopes to offer five tiers of broadband service to nearly all of its 2500 homes and 900 businesses. Speeds will range between a 256 kb/s service for $15 per month to a 30 Mb/s for $160 per month. The standard offering will be a symmetrical 5-Mb/s service for $35 per month."

http://telephonyonline.com/home/news/time_warner_municipal_123005/

Thursday, December 29, 2005

Is the Firefox honeymoon over? | George Ou | ZDNet.com

"Is the Firefox honeymoon over? Posted by George Ou @ 2:13 am

Note:
It's always difficult to know how much of someone else's work to quote, but this is important. I don't think Firefox is any more vulnerable than Explorer, but it's being downloaded by a lot of people who think it's invulnerable. Whatever browser you choose you will have to patch and upgrade. You'll have to be vigilant and informed, because software's not perfect, isn't likely to ever be perfect, and only informed users can exert the pressure to make any software better. Ignorance means someone else controls and owns your computer. You're just the one who paid for it.

Be informed. Don't keep paying in time, anguish or money.
Sermon ends here.
Alfred Ingram


[Updated: 9/16/2005 7:22PM] Now that Firefox has become the first viable contender to Microsoft Internet Explorer in years, its popularity has brought with it some unwanted attention. Last week's premature disclosure of a zero-day Firefox exploit came a few weeks after a zero-day exploit for Internet Explorer appeared on the Internet. Firefox not only has more vulnerabilities per month than Internet Explorer, but it is now surpassing Internet Explorer for the number of exploits available for public download in recent months.
Update: A lot of people have complained that I didn't list the number of actual 'in-the-wild' attacks against the two browser platforms. The problem with this theory is that they either didn't read the entire article or they don't understand what I meant by 'published exploits' in the second chart in this blog. When I say published exploit, I mean a downloadable script or source code that can be used to attack real live browsers in the wild. These are not simple advisories that talk about certain theoretical exploits. Published exploits are basically freebies for professional hackers and script kiddies to use in the wild.… "

Here is a break down of recent vulnerabilities:

MonthFirefox 1.x VulnerabilitiesIE 6.x Vulnerabilities
Sept 200510
Aug 200504
July 2005101
June 200521
May 200531
Apr 200593
Mar 2005150
Total4010

Note that this is not a count of the number of advisories because advisories can contain multiple vulnerabilities. This is a count of the actual number of vulnerabilities.

Here is a break down of recent published exploits:

MonthFirefox ExploitsIE Exploits
Sept 200510
Aug 200503
July 200541
June 200500
May 200540
April 200522
Total116

http://blogs.zdnet.com/Ou/?p=103&tag=nl.e550

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