Peter if your going to post stuff like this which is misleading, as there aren’t 28 unpatched holes. Yes 28 holes (as you say) have been discovered by programmers since January 1st (an eternity in computer terms), what you fail to mention is how many have been fixed.
This is a more accurate state, 17 Secunia Advisories, only 4 unpatched and of those they are classed as Less Critical. http://secunia.com/product/4227/
Mozilla Firefox 1.x with all vendor patches installed and all vendor workarounds applied, is currently affected by one or more Secunia advisories rated Less critical
This is based on the most severe Secunia advisory, which is marked as “Unpatched” in the Secunia database. Go to Unpatched/Patched list below for details.
Currently, 4 out of 17 Secunia advisories, is marked as “Unpatched” in the Secunia database.
What surprises me more is having brought this to every firefox users attention, according to your signature you are still using firefox 1.0.3, not 1.0.4 the latest release patches a number of these security advisory vulnerabilities.
Some of these critical flaws have been fixed in FF. If IE were so quick as to fix theirs, there would not have been FF. A lot of FF’s vulnerabilities still only work through an unpatched IE browser on the system. What was wrong with IE is building a browser as a conclusive part of your OS, very very unsafe policy. Active X was another of these examples, where the whole comp is open to attackers. FF has their holes as well, even in the last version. They work on that. But I know all over the net anti-spyware, and adware experts advice FF, and not only because of their big blue Mozilla eyes,
It is misleading because it only tells part of the story (and an old one at that), nothing is mentioned even briefly that many are patched.
So only those interested enough are going to check, the rest are left with a misleading impression that firefox is full of holes (your words). Not to mention the page you sent them to does a security check so they would have to look even further.
Your link doesn’t go to the mozilla firefox security advisory page but to a page to run a security checking tool.
My reason for posting was in the Internet age of Instant Gratification and Headlines many would simply read the post and go no further. So I put the other side to the story and gave a link to the firefox security advisory page.
Really that humor is the salt of life, I would say- what a great cartoon. laugh your head off, and use a safer browser, like FF, Opera etc. If your configuration is lousy, or your programs unpatched, even this or other Holey Browser can not save your three letter behind.