On 28th August 2008 @ 12:32 am by Arul N S

Space and Planet Wallpapers
For those who need a change of that boring wallpaper on your desktop and want to dream about the final frontier…, check out the collection complied at Hongkiat.com. Spice up your desktop with the compilation consisting of nearly 60 great, cool wallpapers covering space and planets. “Go where no man has gone before…“

Absolutely Stunning Space and Planets Wallpapers
Visit Hongkiat.com to download the wallpapers
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On 27th August 2008 @ 09:31 am by Arul N S
The developers back at Micro$oft have suddenly woken up to privacy concerns of their customer and decided to introduce Private Browsing a.k.a Porn Mode, in the upcoming Internet Explorer 8.
The fancy name for this feature is “InPrivate”. When activated, InPrivate won’t store new cookies, but still allows existing cookies to be read. Additionally, new history entries, search queries, form data, passwords and temporary web files will be purged at the end of the internet session. It is basically a step forward from the IE7 tool ‘Delete Browsing History’, which didn’t allow data – such as cookies from often-visited websites – to be retained if the user wanted the option. According to Micro$oft’s IEBlog, the features related with privacy would be
- InPrivate Browsing: This lets you control whether or not IE saves your browsing history, cookies, and other data.
- Delete Browsing History: This helps you control your browsing history after you’ve visited Web sites.
- InPrivate Blocking: This informs you about content that is in a position to observe your browsing history, and allows you to block it. InPrivate Blocking will also warn users of third-party content which gives others information about browsing habits without using cookies, and offer to prevent communication with this type of content.
- InPrivate Subscriptions: This feature allow you to augment the capability of InPrivate Blocking by subscribing to lists of Web sites to block or allow.
So, if you are asking when you can get this amazing kinky feature, the next beta is expected in November by some sources…
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On 25th August 2008 @ 10:41 pm by Arul N S

Colour Spectrum Desktop Wallpapers
For those who need a change of that boring wallpaper and need a dash of rainbow in their desktop, check out the collection complied at Hongkiat.com. Spice up your desktop with the compliation consistsing of 30 great, cool wallpapers.

30 Impressive Colour Spectrum and Rainbow Wallpapers
Visit Hongkiat.com to download the wallpapers
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On 17th July 2008 @ 10:41 am by Arul N S

“No software is free from bugs” and that statement holds true for the mighty Firefox too. Yesterday the Mozilla Foundation released Firefox 3.0.1, the first update for Firefox 3.0, patching some of the known vulnerabilities. It mainly addresses several security and stability issues. A update was also released for Firefox 2.0 users upgrading them to 2.0.16.
The two critical patches deal with remote code vulnerabilities and command line URLs spawning tabs when Firefox is not running. MFSA 2008-34 is the first critical patch. It was reported via TippingPoint’s Zero Day Initiative, and centers on issues with Mozilla’s internal CSSValue array data structure. An attacker can create a large number of calls to common CSS objects, triggering a crash of the browser when it attempts to free the CSS object while still in use. The resulting crash could be used to execute code on the system.
The second critical issue comes from Billy Rios, who reported that, “if Firefox is not already running, passing it a command-line URI with pipe (“|”) symbols will open multiple tabs. This URI splitting could be used to launch chrome:i URIs from the command-line, a partial bypass of the fix for MFSA 2005-53 which was intended to block external applications from loading such URIsi,” Mozilla explains. The vulnerability in MFSA 2005-53 remains patched however.
“For example, web browsers normally handle file: URIs themselves, or block them from web content altogether, but this flaw enabled attackers to pass them from another browser into Firefox. In Firefox 2 scripts running from file: URIs can read data from a user’s entire disk, a risk if the attacker could first place a malicious file in a guessable location on the local disk. Rios demonstrated that the so-called “Safari Carpet-bombing vulnerability” could be used for this, as well as other techniques that do not rely on that now-fixed Safari vulnerability,” the advisory added.
Internal testing on Firefox 3.0 also showed that Rios’ research can be combined with various vulnerabilities to trigger code execution. “In Firefox 3 scripts running in local files have limited access to other files, almost entirely mitigating the file: attack. However, combined with a vulnerability which allows an attacker to inject script into a chrome document the above issue could be used to run arbitrary code on a victim’s computer.”

Firefox 3.0.1 Updated
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