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dilluns, 26 / setembre / 2005 |
Això ho va publicar e-noticies:
Mick Jagger no sap qui és Jordi Tardà.
Mick Jagger va preguntar qui era Jordi Tardà en una entrevista al dominical d'El País d'aquesta setmana. L'entrevistador li explicava que "per Espanya circulava una exposició titulada The Rolling Stones. 40 anys, amb objectes de la col·lecció de Jordi Tardà". Jagger va respondre "Qui?", i el periodista li va haver d'aclarir que era "un fan fatal dels Rolling Stones". A més, Jagger, en ser informat sobre els objectes que s'exhibeixen a l'exposició, va preguntar si "de veritat la gent paga diners per veure una vitrina amb una cervesa que m'he begut jo?". El presentador del Tarda Tardà sempre ha manifestat que és amic dels Rolling Stones, i fins i tot té una empresa anomenada Paraula de Stone.
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22:42 (# Enllaç permanent) | Comentaris: | Trackback:
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[SecurityFocus] Mozilla's popularity stressing its security image.
"There is no easy way to compare (Firefox and Internet Explorer), because Microsoft is really a black box," said Oliver Friedrichs, senior manager for Symantec's Security Response. "When Microsoft fixes problems, the public generally doesn't know about them. For Firefox, the nature of the process means that we know what gets fixed."
(...)
Recently, one researcher who found a flaw complained that he didn't like the response from the Mozilla Corporation--and outed the details of the vulnerability to punish the developers.
Tom Ferris, an independent security consultant in southern California, found a flaw in Internet Explorer and a different flaw in Mozilla's Firefox browser within weeks of each other. With the Internet Explorer flaw, Ferris publicized the existence of the vulnerability but withheld all significant details. However, for the Firefox issue, he made public the flaw and enough detail that vulnerability researchers were able to reportedly exploit the issue.
The difference in how he handled the flaws was driven by how he was treated by each development team, Ferris said. While Microsoft and the Mozilla Foundation responded quickly, the Mozilla security group seemed to be hesitating on paying him a bounty on the bug he found, Ferris claimed.
(...)
Hypponen pointed to the early 1980s, when virus writers created their first malicious programs for Apple's Macintosh computers. At first, Windows seemed safe from viruses, then the popularity of Microsoft's operating system made that the most threatened platform, while the Macintosh--and most notably, Mac OS X--has seen hardly any viruses in the past decade.
"If you run a Mac right now, you don't need antivirus," Hypponen said. "If you want to be safer, you should be using software that other people are not using."
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22:32 (# Enllaç permanent) | Comentaris: | Trackback:
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© Copyright 2003-2005 Xavier Caballe. . Si no s'indica expressament el contrari, el material publicat en aquest weblog es distribueix d'acord amb la llicència Creative Commons. El contingut és responsabilitat única i exclusivament del seu autor i no té cap relació amb les seves activitats professionals.
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