In the latest edition of the Microsoft Security Newsletter there was a link to a series of articles on CIO magazine that discuss a series of claims from FireFox that it is the safest browser and the analysis of that by Jeff Jones who is a director of security strategy at Microsoft. I went back and read the first 2 articles and some of the surrounding discussions. While I don’t consider myself qualified to make a critique of the bug reporting methodologies or how to know which browser is more secure. Overall I think that security should not be a marketing feature but something that every company is trying their best to provide to us as consumers. It is hard and I know I have made stupid mistakes in the past so I am in no position to throw stones at anyone else.
One thing that caught my attention was the comments on the articles. There was definitely a lot of passion from supporters of both browsers. Some of it might be attributable to “fan boys” but I think it goes deeper. With so much of our lives moving online the browser becomes the platform we use to interact with the world. As long as 10 years ago I can remember having discussions about whether Microsoft would be selling an operating system in 2 years. Certainly if everything moves into a browser the OS will become irrelevant to a large extent. I don’t see that happening any time soon since there are still many user experience reasons (like shortcut keys and the ability to keep client state) where “fat client” applications are easier to use. These problems are not easy to solve so I don’t expect to see a fix soon. However, I can certainly see where people are passionate about their computing platform because it influences so much of what they can and can’t do easily and to a large extent their thinking of how to write programs and interact with the online world.