Author Topic: Firefox myths  (Read 8602 times)

toadlife

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #30 on: 20 June 2006, 07:32 »
Quote from: Mastertech
The average person doesn't care nor should they.

Nor should you, but you seem to be obsessed.

Why?
:)

Dark_Me

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #31 on: 20 June 2006, 07:35 »
Quote
Here is another good one. See how Firefox has 129 vulnerabilities with a relative danger of 381? Why then does Opera with only 56 vulnerabilities have a relative danger of 359? Shouldn't Opera's danger be more like 150? At least I don't play with figures like that. I simply count and report exact numbers.

You sir are a fool. But since I, unlike you do not like ad honem attacks I shall debunk your misconception.
You are talking about the "Security vulnerabilities" table in about the middle of the web page yes? Well your figures are completly incorrect. I suggest you read the table again.
Even if your figures are correct you did not meantion how many where critical vulnerabilities. Perhaps nearly all of Operas vulnerabilities where/are of a "critical" type.
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piratePenguin

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #32 on: 20 June 2006, 10:19 »
Quote from: Mastertech
David Hammond made his page AFTER I refused to add excuses to mine.
OH - FF needs an excuse for not being 100% standards compliant?

I wouldn't call them excuses. I'd call them extra facts that are very useful because they bring things back into perspective.

The only people who will give a crap that "FF isn't standards compliant" are the people uninterested in computers and how the web works etc. You tell them "FF doesn't support either of XHTML, CSS, or SVG fully" they'll begin to think FF sucks bollox, when in fact it does not. Standards compliance is one of FF's strong-points. These people are getting a very false impression from your page. If you explained "no web-browser is 100% standards compliant" etc, they would get more of a positive impression because of a better understanding of the reality (the reality that FF is one of the top web-brosers when it comes to standards compliance).
Quote
That is not an excuse it is a fact. The page is called FIREFOX MYTHS!
Which is very convenient.
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piratePenguin

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #33 on: 20 June 2006, 10:38 »
http://www.techspot.com/vb/topic44405.html

Greatest loser I've come into contact with ever, without a shadow of a doubt.
« Last Edit: 20 June 2006, 11:19 by piratePenguin »
"What you share with the world is what it keeps of you."
 - Noah And The Whale: Give a little love



a poem by my computer, Macintosh Vigilante
Macintosh amends a damned around the requested typewriter. Macintosh urges a scarce design. Macintosh postulates an autobiography. Macintosh tolls the solo variant. Why does a winter audience delay macintosh? The maker tosses macintosh. Beneath female suffers a double scum. How will a rat cube the heavier cricket? Macintosh calls a method. Can macintosh nest opposite the headache? Macintosh ties the wrong fairy. When can macintosh stem the land gang? Female aborts underneath macintosh. Inside macintosh waffles female. Next to macintosh worries a well.

Dark_Me

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #34 on: 20 June 2006, 11:44 »
The following was taken from an email to the site creator. The header has been removed, otherwise this is the letter in its eternity. It may also be found here.
Quote

Your own stated definition of myth is "A fiction or half-truth,
especially one that forms part of an ideology."  I feel compelled to
point out that most of the "myths" listed on the site are themselves
myths according to your definition.


System Requirements:

True, stated Firefox system requirements are higher on Windows.  First,
have you ever tried running IE on a 486 66 with 32 MB RAM?  Sometimes
meeting the "minimum" requirements is not sufficient for a positive
experience in using the software.  I don't know for sure they're not in
this case, but I'm just pointing out the possibility.

Have you tested performance of IE on a system barely meeting its minimum
requirements, and compared that with the performance of FF on a system
barely meeting its minimum requirements?  Until you do, the point about
system requirements is meaningless.


Performance:

All references for this section link to a page for a single study
conducted by an individual.  This far from proves anything about
performance between browsers in general, under all situations for all
users.  And that's exactly the point.  In his specific case according to
his metrics on his machine IE was faster than FF on Windows.

In my own experience (back when I still used Windows regularly), a clean
install of Firefox with a minimal set of extensions was slightly faster
when navigating between pages than a fresh copy of IE (read: a clean
Windows install).  Does this mean that FF is always faster than IE?  No,
but it does show that IE is *not* always faster than FF.

I will concede your point that a "cold" startup of a sterile copy of IE
is usually faster than FF (for me, the difference was a few seconds,
which I suspect the majority of FF users are more than willing to
tolerate).  However, keep in mind that in the real world, few users have
the luxury of our lab conditions.  Many Windows machines on which IE is
the primary browser are infected with malware targeted toward IE, thus
significantly degrading its performance (including startup times and
responsiveness).


Security:

Clicking on the link to Secunia shows that the most severe *unpatched*
vulnerability is "Less Critical".  The "Highly Critical" and "Extremely
Critical" vulnerabilities have all been patched.

The wording of this section also begs the question whether the number of
vulnerabilities is even a meaningful measure of security.  First, the
number of known vulnerabilities does not translate directly to the
number of actual vulnerabilities.  Second, traditionally Mozilla has
patched discovered vulnerabilities (particularly severe ones) quickly.
Thus, the sooner one is discovered, the sooner it is fixed.  If Firefox
flaws are being discovered at a faster rate, they are consequently being
fixed at a faster rate.  This seems to suggest that more discovered
vulnerabilities actually leads to better security.  Also note that no
comparison to the number of vulnerabilities for IE can be made, since it
is a closed-source product.  Any programmer can tell you it's easier to
find bugs in a program when the source code is available.

As for the claim about "most secure web browser", I've never heard
anyone make this claim so I checked your "source", which appears to be
from a forum post by a member of spreadfirefox.com.  Whether a statement
by a individual about a product counts as a "myth" about that product if
proven to be false is questionable.

On the issue of OS integration you link to a Microsoft Employee's blog.
This is, needless to say, hardly an objective source of information on
the matter.  Even so, the claim I hear on this topic is usually made in
the context of the following: "a flaw found in Internet Explorer will
affect more applications than a flaw found in Firefox."  Strictly
speaking, this is true, since IE is a "critical component" of Windows by
Microsoft's own legal admission and is used by a wide variety of other
applications (including Windows Explorer, MSN Explorer, Steam, and many
others; you can find a full list through searching).  This means that a
vulnerability in IE is much more far-reaching than a flaw in Firefox.

With regard to ActiveX, the page you link to is again an article by one
person.  And many who commented on that very article disagreed with it.
The most important point about ActiveX vs. Extensions (FF's closest
equivalent), is that in order to install a malicious ActiveX control,
the user has only to click a bunch of "yes" buttons.  From my
experience, many users do this without bothering to read the text in the
dialog box, let alone understand its implications.  To install a
malicious Extension, a Firefox user must first add the source site to
the list of trusted sites, then click the extension file *again*, then
wait for a few seconds before the "OK" button becomes available, then
click OK.  This makes "casual click" installing much much less likely.
So in a narrow sense the argument I just made does not show that ActiveX
is insecure.  But its implementation on Windows IE (which is just as
important) is insecure and leads to unintended consequences.

Spyware is much more of a Windows issue than a browser issue, as you
hinted at in your "Solution to Spyware" issue.  The point here is an
astronomically low percentage of users even know enough to realize they
need to secure their system before using IE.  An even lower percentage
know how to do this, and even fewer users actually go through all the
steps (the most important of which is running under a restricted user
whenever possible).

That said, let's look at your example of Firefox infecting the user with
spyware.  The vulnerability you link to relies on a flaw in the Java
runtime, not any particular browser.  You may argue that Mozilla's
confidence in Sun JRE is misplaced and constitutes a vulnerability, but
you cannot argue this infection is the fault of Firefox.


Features

You state the myth that "Firefox is Bug Free."  What is your source for
this?  It's a single post from a member of the "PetLovers.com" forums.
This cannot reasonably be construed as a "Firefox myth".

Looking at the supposed "memory leak", keep in mind IE6 (without
extensions) does not even offer tabbed browsing (yet).  Thus to make a
valid comparison of memory usage, we would have to open as many IE
windows as Firefox tabs pointing to the same pages.  From my experience,
the difference in memory usage between the two processes when this
exercise is carried out is insignificant and varies.  This does not seem
to indicate that Firefox "leaks memory".  Most individuals who make this
argument are also using the incorrect term.  What they really mean to
say is that Firefox memory usage is excessive.  (True memory leaks are
completely different).

With extensions, the question is not about whether or not IE supports
extensions, but the actual extensions available for both browsers.  In
this sense, there are many more useful Firefox extensions available than
IE extensions.  If one only carries out the exercise of examining some
of the top rated and top downloaded FF extensions, and attempts to find
IE equivalents, one will see the evidence of this.

In the "Integrated Search" section, I find no mention of the supposed
claim in the linked blog post.

I do not agree with your interpretation of the sentence "Firefox has
been widely praised for its stability, trustworthiness and innovative
features including tabbed browsing, live bookmarks, built-in pop-up
blocking, and hundreds of available extensions." amounting to a claim
that Firefox was the first browser to offer pop-up blocking.  But I can
see where your interpretation comes from, so I will not argue that.
However, I posit this is a very minor point.

The link cited in "Pop-up Blocking All" makes no claim that Firefox
blocks all pop-ups.  The relevant section from the referenced page is
"Some web pages open endless pop-up advertisement windows. Firefox *can*
stop these annoying windows from opening." (emphasis mine).

The RSS icon issue is again a very minor and basically irrelevant one.
Nobody familiar with the situation claims that "Microsoft stole the
icon."

Again with the "Tabbed Browsing" issue you cite a book where the author
supposedly makes the mistaken claim.  This is fine, but again whether or
not Firefox was the *first* to introduce feature X is not terribly
relevant.


Standards

The W3C standards section links to a page which 404ed for me.  In any
case, to my knowledge neither Mozilla nor any Firefox developers have
ever stated that Firefox is "100% standards compliant."

The next two points on the site ("W3C Standards Development" and "W3C
Standards define a Webpage") refer to philosophical debate over web
standards and have nothing to do with Firefox myths.  As such, I fail to
see their relevance to the site.

The points about the Acid 2 test are complete misinformation.  The first
claim you have listed is "Firefox fully supports the most important W3C
Standards".  The link (a rather tongue-in-cheek method of using the
Greasemonkey extension to ostensibly make Firefox pass the test) makes
no such claim, and in fact humorously points out the truth - that
Firefox doesn't pass the test.

The next point regarding the Acid 2 test is also completely absurd.
"Firefox passes the Acid2 Test".  In the reality section you quite
correctly state "No official public release of Firefox passes the Acid2
Browser Test."  The linked article makes it clear the screenshot is from
a version of Firefox in the "reflow branch", which is not released to
the public.  In the context of "Firefox" being "publicly released
versions of Firefox", the given myth from the given source is utterly
intractable.

Your claim of "Firefox is completely compatible with every Web Site"
comes from, again, a forum post from applegeeks.com.  And again, nobody
from Mozilla or the Firefox community makes this claim.  Quite the
contrary, many go to great pains to point out the sites that *don't*
work with Firefox.  In many cases these sites only work with IE by using
ActiveX controls or relying on IE "quirks" rendering modes to display
correctly, making them innavigable in other browsers.


General:

You state "Yet this page is clearly about Myths relating to Firefox
running on Windows."  In that case, it would seem prudent to title the
page "Windows Firefox Myths" or something similar.

The introduction states that "All Myths relate to running the default
install of Firefox in Windows with no extensions. Please read carefully
and look at the sources."  Given that many of your "sources" are posts
on web forums taken out of context, how can you make this claim?  Have
you personally contacted each of the posts' authors to garner their true
meaning and verify they were using "the default install of Firefox in
Windows with no extensions"?  Perhaps they were using a few of the slew
of Firefox-enhancing extensions, creating a condition in which their
statements were true?

You also seem most concerned about open and uncensored debate.  In the
spirit of this, why not have an official, unmoderated (excepting spam,
vandalism, etc.) FirefoxMyths.com comments section or forum in addition
to the "Testimonials" section?  If all your rebuttals have indeed been
"merely filled with opinions, rhetoric and conjecture", why not post
them and allow your readers to see that for themselves?  Show that you
are confident in your position by allowing full transparency of
responses (positive and negative).

Finally, allow me to paraphrase what seems to be the crux of your
argument: "Some person made statement X (whose context cannot be
determined) about Firefox.  X is false.  Therefore, X is a Firefox
myth."  I suggest you change your definition of myth given at the top of
the page to one that reconciles with the actual "myths" you have listed.
Capitalism kicks ass.
-Skyman
If your a selfish, self-centred prick, who is willing to leave half the world in poverty, then yes.
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Mastertech

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #35 on: 20 June 2006, 13:46 »
Quote from: piratePenguin
I started a thread about the IE is dangerous page before.
http://www.microsuck.com/forums/showthread.php?t=10327
Get over there and post your thoughts.

I have no interest in debating that obvious nonsense.

Quote from: toadlife
Nor should you, but you seem to be obsessed.

Why?
I am obsessed with what? Some open source/Anti-Microsoft crusade? I could care less. It is really pathetic. Don't get me wrong I respect products like FreeBSD ect... I even recommend Open Office since it is free and works well for Home Users. None of which has anything to do with the Firefox Myths page.

Quote from: Dark_Me
You sir are a fool. But since I, unlike you do not like ad honem attacks I shall debunk your misconception. You are talking about the "Security vulnerabilities" table in about the middle of the web page yes? Well your figures are completly incorrect. I suggest you read the table again. Even if your figures are correct you did not meantion how many where critical vulnerabilities. Perhaps nearly all of Operas vulnerabilities where/are of a "critical" type.
Is anyone here capable of communicating without insults? Seriously. Anyway READ what I said.

On his Firefox Myths page. Go to this Myth "Firefox is completely secure"
Now look at the chart. It only has TWO categories:

1. Highest values at one time
2. Present values - What the hell are these anyway?

It used to have THREE! The third one can be found on his Web browser security summary

3. Historical cumulative values (Product life)

He cut the "Historical cumulative values (Product life)" off the chart on the Firefox Myths page. I know I saw his myths page the first time it went up. He cut the top off because it made Firefox look bad in the vulnerability count.

Forget the fact that neither chart matches up anymore. He is literally lying about the data. The chart on The Firefox Myths page is pure FUD.

If you think all the Opera vulnerabilities (All are currently patched FYI) are critical go check this yourself and get back to me. Don't assume go check and then take your foot out of your mouth.

Quote from: piratePenguin
OH - FF needs an excuse for not being 100% standards compliant?
Apparently you think so.

Quote from: piratePenguin
I wouldn't call them excuses. I'd call them extra facts that are very useful because they bring things back into perspective.
The Myth is clear. "Firefox fully supports W3C Standards". There is no Myth that Firefox supports some standards. What you want is clearly an excuse that does not change the facts. Firefox is NOT fully standards compliant.

Quote from: piratePenguin
The only people who will give a crap that "FF isn't standards compliant" are the people uninterested in computers and how the web works etc. You tell them "FF doesn't support either of XHTML, CSS, or SVG fully" they'll begin to think FF sucks bollox, when in fact it does not. Standards compliance is one of FF's strong-points. These people are getting a very false impression from your page. If you explained "no web-browser is 100% standards compliant" etc, they would get more of a positive impression because of a better understanding of the reality (the reality that FF is one of the top web-brosers when it comes to standards compliance). Which is very convenient.
I don't care who is interested in it so long as people stop making this false claim. So now telling people the truth about Firefox will make people think it sucks? That is the most absurb thing I have ever heard. If standards compliance is Firefox's strong point why does it have incomplete support? Why does it not pass Acid2? People are getting the reality NOT excuses. People can run the Acid2 test themselves. They can also look at the source for standards compliance and clearly see how much support Firefox does have for standards.

piratePenguin

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #36 on: 20 June 2006, 14:22 »
Quote from: Mastertech

Apparently you think so.
What makes you think that?
Quote

The Myth is clear. "Firefox fully supports W3C Standards". There is no Myth that Firefox supports some standards. What you want is clearly an excuse that does not change the facts. Firefox is NOT fully standards compliant.
I FUCKING KNOW.
Quote

I don't care who is interested in it so long as people stop making this false claim. So now telling people the truth about Firefox will make people think it sucks? That is the most absurb thing I have ever heard.
Telling "dumb" (as in: uninterested in how the web works, computers etc) people INCOMPLETE TRUTHS will make "dumb" people think Firefox sucks. Tell them the COMPLETE truth ("no web-browser is fully standards compliant") to bring things into perspective - they don't know that no web-browser is fully standards compliant, so some would think FF sucks, when it does not.
Quote

If standards compliance is Firefox's strong point why does it have incomplete support?
No web-browser has complete support for all applicable W3C standards. Are you telling me that no web-browsers have standards-compliance as a strong point?
Quote
Why does it not pass Acid2?
I've discussed acid2 with aloone_jonez here before. see also
You are absolutely fooling yourself if Acid2 results are your measure of how compliant a web-browser is. Where does ECMAscript fit in with it? SVG? XML, XSLT etc.? XHTML? DOM?

The CSS features tested in acid2 aren't that big on the grand scheme of things.

EDIT: oh and the passing acid2 is on the agenda for gecko 1.9 which will power Firefox 3.0. It was never on the agenda for firefox 1, 1.5 or 2.
Quote
People are getting the reality NOT excuses. People can run the Acid2 test themselves. They can also look at the source for standards compliance and clearly see how much support Firefox does have for standards.
I've developed web-pages, I know the story, and I know that standards support on Firefox is very good - it's among the best in any web-browser.
« Last Edit: 20 June 2006, 14:29 by piratePenguin »
"What you share with the world is what it keeps of you."
 - Noah And The Whale: Give a little love



a poem by my computer, Macintosh Vigilante
Macintosh amends a damned around the requested typewriter. Macintosh urges a scarce design. Macintosh postulates an autobiography. Macintosh tolls the solo variant. Why does a winter audience delay macintosh? The maker tosses macintosh. Beneath female suffers a double scum. How will a rat cube the heavier cricket? Macintosh calls a method. Can macintosh nest opposite the headache? Macintosh ties the wrong fairy. When can macintosh stem the land gang? Female aborts underneath macintosh. Inside macintosh waffles female. Next to macintosh worries a well.

Mastertech

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #37 on: 20 June 2006, 14:27 »
Quote from: Dark_Me
The following was taken from an email to the site creator. The header has been removed, otherwise this is the letter in its eternity. It may also be found here.
Oh man I responded to all of this before Ad Nauseum. Not sure why he did not include my responses in his post. Oh I know why because it would make him look ridiculous. But before I start lets try to come up with your own material. I know this is something very hard to do.

Quote
Your own stated definition of myth is "A fiction or half-truth,
especially one that forms part of an ideology." I feel compelled to
point out that most of the "myths" listed on the site are themselves
myths according to your definition.
All of the Myths on the page are actual Myths and clearly debunked with facts and sources. Read Myth Origins if you do not understand.


Quote
System Requirements:

True, stated Firefox system requirements are higher on Windows. First,
have you ever tried running IE on a 486 66 with 32 MB RAM? Sometimes
meeting the "minimum" requirements is not sufficient for a positive
experience in using the software. I don't know for sure they're not in
this case, but I'm just pointing out the possibility.

Have you tested performance of IE on a system barely meeting its minimum
requirements, and compared that with the performance of FF on a system
barely meeting its minimum requirements? Until you do, the point about
system requirements is meaningless.
I have since I build systems for a living and it works fine. Spoken by someone with no hardware experience. It flat out works. And the point is very meaningful since it shows that IE requires less hardware to run.


Quote
Performance:

All references for this section link to a page for a single study
conducted by an individual. This far from proves anything about
performance between browsers in general, under all situations for all
users. And that's exactly the point. In his specific case according to
his metrics on his machine IE was faster than FF on Windows.

All the tests are fully documented and reproduceable. This is how all benchmark and speed testing works. Check out any hardware site and you get the exact same test methods for games ect... The tests clearly prove what browser is faster in what performance measure.

Quote
In my own experience (back when I still used Windows regularly), a clean install of Firefox with a minimal set of extensions was slightly faster when navigating between pages than a fresh copy of IE (read: a clean Windows install). Does this mean that FF is always faster than IE? No, but it does show that IE is *not* always faster than FF.
Then please provide documented, reproduceable evidence of this. I have yet to receive any.

Quote
I will concede your point that a "cold" startup of a sterile copy of IE is usually faster than FF (for me, the difference was a few seconds,
which I suspect the majority of FF users are more than willing to
tolerate). However, keep in mind that in the real world, few users have
the luxury of our lab conditions. Many Windows machines on which IE is
the primary browser are infected with malware targeted toward IE, thus
significantly degrading its performance (including startup times and
responsiveness).
This is the most ridiculous argument I have ever heard. Anyone with an ounce of common sense knows why.


Quote
Security:

Clicking on the link to Secunia shows that the most severe *unpatched*
vulnerability is "Less Critical". The "Highly Critical" and "Extremely
Critical" vulnerabilities have all been patched.

The wording of this section also begs the question whether the number of
vulnerabilities is even a meaningful measure of security. First, the
number of known vulnerabilities does not translate directly to the
number of actual vulnerabilities. Second, traditionally Mozilla has
patched discovered vulnerabilities (particularly severe ones) quickly.
Thus, the sooner one is discovered, the sooner it is fixed. If Firefox
flaws are being discovered at a faster rate, they are consequently being
fixed at a faster rate. This seems to suggest that more discovered
vulnerabilities actually leads to better security. Also note that no
comparison to the number of vulnerabilities for IE can be made, since it
is a closed-source product. Any programmer can tell you it's easier to
find bugs in a program when the source code is available.
The number of vulnerabilities has everything to do with a browser touted as "Secure". It is clearly not. I have also debunked the quickly patched Myth. Open Source vs Closed Source is irrelevant to this and used as an excuse. All that can be measured is the reality of the number of actual vulnerabilities. But this is NOT about a comparison to IE yet EVERY fanboy attempts to make one all while conviently leaving out Opera.

Quote
As for the claim about "most secure web browser", I've never heard
anyone make this claim so I checked your "source", which appears to be
from a forum post by a member of spreadfirefox.com. Whether a statement
by a individual about a product counts as a "myth" about that product if
proven to be false is questionable.
It is documented to being made and I have heard each one of these many times ad nauseum. It doesn't change the facts. Opera in the most secure graphical web browser in Windows.

Quote
On the issue of OS integration you link to a Microsoft Employee's blog. This is, needless to say, hardly an objective source of information on the matter. Even so, the claim I hear on this topic is usually made in
the context of the following: "a flaw found in Internet Explorer will
affect more applications than a flaw found in Firefox." Strictly
speaking, this is true, since IE is a "critical component" of Windows by
Microsoft's own legal admission and is used by a wide variety of other
applications (including Windows Explorer, MSN Explorer, Steam, and many
others; you can find a full list through searching). This means that a
vulnerability in IE is much more far-reaching than a flaw in Firefox.
Right attack the source because the truth hurts. What he claims to hear is pure BS. People all the time say IE is dangerous because it is integrated ect... Talk about more FUD.

Quote
With regard to ActiveX, the page you link to is again an article by one person. And many who commented on that very article disagreed with it. The most important point about ActiveX vs. Extensions (FF's closest
equivalent), is that in order to install a malicious ActiveX control,
the user has only to click a bunch of "yes" buttons. From my
experience, many users do this without bothering to read the text in the
dialog box, let alone understand its implications. To install a
malicious Extension, a Firefox user must first add the source site to
the list of trusted sites, then click the extension file *again*, then
wait for a few seconds before the "OK" button becomes available, then
click OK. This makes "casual click" installing much much less likely.
So in a narrow sense the argument I just made does not show that ActiveX
is insecure. But its implementation on Windows IE (which is just as
important) is insecure and leads to unintended consequences.

The article is clear. People constantly blame everything on ActiveX. That is clearly not so. The fact is people have to click yes to install an ActiveX control on a default install of IE. That is the reality. The problems people have are due to not applying security patches not ActiveX.

Quote
Spyware is much more of a Windows issue than a browser issue, as you hinted at in your "Solution to Spyware" issue. The point here is an
astronomically low percentage of users even know enough to realize they
need to secure their system before using IE. An even lower percentage
know how to do this, and even fewer users actually go through all the
steps (the most important of which is running under a restricted user
whenever possible).
Simply applying all security updates, install an AntiVirus Program, an AntiSpyware Program and turning on the XP Firewall (something SP2 does for you) is all that is really needed. Running as a restricted user has nothing to do with it.

Quote
That said, let's look at your example of Firefox infecting the user with spyware. The vulnerability you link to relies on a flaw in the Java runtime, not any particular browser. You may argue that Mozilla's
confidence in Sun JRE is misplaced and constitutes a vulnerability, but
you cannot argue this infection is the fault of Firefox.
Vulnerabilities like this that infect IE are usually blamed on ActiveX and then get spun into "Auto-install infections". This doesn't change the fact that it clearly can happen. Nor the second source I have since added that is automatic on Firefox.


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Features

You state the myth that "Firefox is Bug Free." What is your source for
this? It's a single post from a member of the "PetLovers.com" forums.
This cannot reasonably be construed as a "Firefox myth".
Idiot, read the page the EXAMPLES are NOT the SOURCES.

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Looking at the supposed "memory leak", keep in mind IE6 (without
extensions) does not even offer tabbed browsing (yet). Thus to make a
valid comparison of memory usage, we would have to open as many IE
windows as Firefox tabs pointing to the same pages. From my experience,
the difference in memory usage between the two processes when this
exercise is carried out is insignificant and varies. This does not seem
to indicate that Firefox "leaks memory". Most individuals who make this
argument are also using the incorrect term. What they really mean to
say is that Firefox memory usage is excessive. (True memory leaks are
completely different).
IE with the same amount of Windows as FF Tabs uses less memory. But the excessive memory usage of FF is well documented. The developers claim this is a "feature".

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With extensions, the question is not about whether or not IE supports extensions, but the actual extensions available for both browsers. In this sense, there are many more useful Firefox extensions available than IE extensions. If one only carries out the exercise of examining some of the top rated and top downloaded FF extensions, and attempts to find IE equivalents, one will see the evidence of this.
Yeah right. Read the Myth again, it is not what you want it to be. The fact is IE has supported extensions since IE 5.

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In the "Integrated Search" section, I find no mention of the supposed claim in the linked blog post.
This is clearly implied he only makes concessions for Tabbed Browsing.

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The link cited in "Pop-up Blocking All" makes no claim that Firefox
blocks all pop-ups. The relevant section from the referenced page is
"Some web pages open endless pop-up advertisement windows. Firefox *can*
stop these annoying windows from opening." (emphasis mine).
That link has changed, as many of the examples do since this page went up to try and make me look bad. I get tired of finding new links and screen copying them.

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The RSS icon issue is again a very minor and basically irrelevant one. Nobody familiar with the situation claims that "Microsoft stole the
icon."
People clearly made this claim. Obviously no one familiar with any of the actual facts makes ANY of these claims.

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Again with the "Tabbed Browsing" issue you cite a book where the author supposedly makes the mistaken claim. This is fine, but again whether or not Firefox was the *first* to introduce feature X is not terribly relevant.
This is extremely relevant since many believe it to be true.


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Standards

The W3C standards section links to a page which 404ed for me. In any
case, to my knowledge neither Mozilla nor any Firefox developers have
ever stated that Firefox is "100% standards compliant."
That has since been fixed. I had to post the screen capture because the site was taken down.

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The next two points on the site ("W3C Standards Development" and "W3C Standards define a Webpage") refer to philosophical debate over web
standards and have nothing to do with Firefox myths. As such, I fail to
see their relevance to the site.
These have everything to do with Firefox Myths since these are used in arguments against the page.

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The points about the Acid 2 test are complete misinformation. The first claim you have listed is "Firefox fully supports the most important W3C Standards". The link (a rather tongue-in-cheek method of using the
Greasemonkey extension to ostensibly make Firefox pass the test) makes
no such claim, and in fact humorously points out the truth - that
Firefox doesn't pass the test.
It is misleading and clearly not true.

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The next point regarding the Acid 2 test is also completely absurd.
"Firefox passes the Acid2 Test". In the reality section you quite
correctly state "No official public release of Firefox passes the Acid2
Browser Test." The linked article makes it clear the screenshot is from
a version of Firefox in the "reflow branch", which is not released to
the public. In the context of "Firefox" being "publicly released
versions of Firefox", the given myth from the given source is utterly
intractable.
I received MANY emails from fanboys making this claim the day that was posted. It is clearly debunked.

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Your claim of "Firefox is completely compatible with every Web Site" comes from, again, a forum post from applegeeks.com. And again, nobody from Mozilla or the Firefox community makes this claim. Quite the
contrary, many go to great pains to point out the sites that *don't*
work with Firefox. In many cases these sites only work with IE by using
ActiveX controls or relying on IE "quirks" rendering modes to display
correctly, making them innavigable in other browsers.
This guy is a complete IDIOT. No where is it claimed these Myths come from Mozilla ect.. None of which changes the facts of these Myths that are clearly debunked.


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General:

You state "Yet this page is clearly about Myths relating to Firefox
running on Windows." In that case, it would seem prudent to title the
page "Windows Firefox Myths" or something similar.
Not going to happen it is clearly titled.

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The introduction states that "All Myths relate to running the default install of Firefox in Windows with no extensions. Please read carefully and look at the sources." Given that many of your "sources" are posts on web forums taken out of context, how can you make this claim? Have you personally contacted each of the posts' authors to garner their true meaning and verify they were using "the default install of Firefox in
Windows with no extensions"? Perhaps they were using a few of the slew
of Firefox-enhancing extensions, creating a condition in which their
statements were true?
What a Complete IDIOT - Sources are LABELED SOURCES NOT EXAMPLES!!!!

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You also seem most concerned about open and uncensored debate. In the spirit of this, why not have an official, unmoderated (excepting spam,
vandalism, etc.) FirefoxMyths.com comments section or forum in addition
to the "Testimonials" section? If all your rebuttals have indeed been
"merely filled with opinions, rhetoric and conjecture", why not post
them and allow your readers to see that for themselves? Show that you
are confident in your position by allowing full transparency of
responses (positive and negative).
That will never happen. The fanboys spam everything they can on the Internet now as it is.

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Finally, allow me to paraphrase what seems to be the crux of your
argument: "Some person made statement X (whose context cannot be
determined) about Firefox. X is false. Therefore, X is a Firefox
myth." I suggest you change your definition of myth given at the top of
the page to one that reconciles with the actual "myths" you have listed.
More like multiple people made false claim X and that is why this page exists.

I feel like a broken record. PLEASE try to come up with your own material.

worker201

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #38 on: 20 June 2006, 22:13 »
Quote from: "Mastertech"
Is anyone here capable of communicating without insults? Seriously.

Never mind that in your wild-eyed defense of the insightful criticism article you refer to the author as an idiot 3 times.  Hypocrite!

Another thing I find humorous is the way Mastertech refers to everyone as a fanboy.  And he is even generous enough to provide a definition of a fanboy on his website.  I think someone is just angry about the "success" of the Spread Firefox campaign.  He hears a couple people talk about how cool Firefox is, and he has a little conniption fit and starts screaming "FANBOY!!!"  Unfortunately, while screaming fanboy, he has become a sort of fanboy himself.  This sort of 'fanboy of nothing' is usually called a hater.

Don't be a hater.

ReggieMicheals

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #39 on: 20 June 2006, 23:45 »
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Why am I an "idiot"? Because I can backup everything I say and disprove every pathetic argument? Same nonsense different website.

http://www.webdevout.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=38
That's why. I see really that you are a spammer trying to rack up hits for your misinformed site by trolling about firefox, that is if Refalm or another Admin can check out your IP matches one of the ones at the topic over at Webdevout.
Operating System Advocacy. I've given up on the Microsuck project, as well as any of the minisite spinoffs. You can still view the new beta site, though!

Mastertech

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #40 on: 21 June 2006, 00:55 »
Quote from: ReggieMicheals
http://www.webdevout.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=38
That's why. I see really that you are a spammer trying to rack up hits for your misinformed site by trolling about firefox, that is if Refalm or another Admin can check out your IP matches one of the ones at the topic over at Webdevout.
Right.... A fanboy who can't stand that I used his data to prove Firefox is not fully standards compliant starts some posts about me on his forum must mean that is true. Didn't you read my Fanboy section? Here are the true spammers:

Here is a list of known people or aliases who will Spam any discussion of this page:

No Spam Nanobot AKA David Hammond, Nanobe
No Spam MrFlibble AKA Basil Brush, FreewheelinFrank
No Spam TSThomas

Oh lets get back on track and discuss my page. Wait I just disproved ever point so obvious it is easier to personally attack me. Forget finding actual facts on anything.

cymon

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #41 on: 21 June 2006, 01:26 »
The vast majority of so-called facts you present have been firmly pulled from your ass.

H_TeXMeX_H

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #42 on: 21 June 2006, 02:43 »
Well, really statistics don't mean much. But with experience of using many browsers I'd have to say that Firefox tops them all. IE is most certainly out of the question when considering browsers ... in fact I don't think it even qualifies as a browser ... reasons: it's very insecure, tons of popups, security holes, no standards compliance, not stable, and many other reasons (you need tons of external programs just to keep it alive and barely useful). Opera is alright, but limited, and not open-source, and has very bad java and javascript support. I don't see how anyone could argue for things that I have personally experieced and know that they suck huge ! I've used IE, it blows goats; I've use Window$, it blows goats; I've used Opera, it's ok; I've used Firefox, and it's the best. (And I've used Mac, and was not impressed; I've used Linux, and I really was impressed; I've used BSD, it could be better; I've used Solaris, looks nice, but no dvorak support that I can see)

Orethrius

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #43 on: 21 June 2006, 04:00 »
Mastertech, do you honestly Google your name and spread your opinions wherever you may find it?  I guess that must mean we're the fanboys for not doing the same.  Actually, on second thought, being as I am both an alternative software pundit AND a male, I'll take that as a compliment.  Thanks! :)

Having said that, you blatantly abuse (A), the DMCA (you might consider READING the link you provide, and even track down a copy of section 1201); (B), truth in advertising, by failing to provide complete quotes; (C), trade libel laws, by bringing allegations against several third parties that you have no means of proving; and (D), general common courtesy, by acting as if every counterpoint to your arguments is either sheer idiocy or blatant untruth.

If I had a Comcast page, that is to say, if I were too cheap to pay $20 for a year of basic hosting, I'd be far less arrogant than you are now.  Beyond that, I have nothing to say to you, but I can certainly see where others might have problems with you.  If you haven't noticed, you're not posting to WinBBS, so tread lightly.

Proudly posted from a Gentoo Linux system.

Quote from: Calum
even if you're renting you've got more rights than if you're using windows.

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WMD

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Re: Firefox myths
« Reply #44 on: 21 June 2006, 04:04 »
Quote from: Mastertech
Right.... A fanboy who can't stand that I used his data to prove Firefox is not fully standards compliant starts some posts about me on his forum must mean that is true. Didn't you read my Fanboy section? Here are the true spammers:

Here is a list of known people or aliases who will Spam any discussion of this page:

No Spam Nanobot AKA David Hammond, Nanobe
No Spam MrFlibble AKA Basil Brush, FreewheelinFrank
No Spam TSThomas

Oh lets get back on track and discuss my page. Wait I just disproved ever point so obvious it is easier to personally attack me. Forget finding actual facts on anything.

It's kinda hard to believe any of that when you've been banned from fourteen different websites for the same problem.  What, do you want us to think that it's all just a big conspiracy against you by a bunch of Firefox users?  lol.  I bet many of them don't even use Firefox...I know I don't.

Quote from: ReggieMicheals
that is if Refalm or another Admin can check out your IP matches one of the ones at the topic over at Webdevout.

Already been done.  They match.

Oh, by the way...
Quote from: Mastertech
If people come off with a negative view about Firefox after reading my page than it is only because they believed one of the Myths.

Speaking for myself, that's not the case.  Allow me to explain (with paraphrasing to save reading time):
Quote from: Your site, paraphrased
Myth: Firefox is 100% standards compliant.
Fact: Firefox has incomplete support for many web standards including HTMl, XHTML, CSS....

Quote from: David Hammond's site, paraphrased
Myth: Firefox is 100% standards compliant.
Fact: No web browser is 100% compliant, as the standards are extensive and take years to implement.  Some are better than others in certain places...here's how good a bunch of browsers fare...


From your page, one may come to think that there is some browser that has full support.  In fact, the only time you say anything contrary to that is when you're bashing David H. for apparently changing his page to make IE look worse (I don't know, I wasn't there.)
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