THE IRISH-LANGUAGE . The link for this article located at The Journal IE is no longer available. . The link for this article located at The Journal IE is no longer available.. irish-language, article, located, journal, longer. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Microsoft's Internet Explorer 9 is now out for developers to try out and test -- well kinda/sorta. You see the IE9 Test Drive Platform Preview isn't really a browser is it? IE9 as it is currently available lacks tabs. It lacks a back button and it lacks an address bar. . In my view, it's a crippled browser that does not represent the modern web browsing usage model at all. The idea for Microsoft is to show off new features without the confusion of a full fledged browser -- though why tabs, address bar and tabs would do that is beyond my comprehension. In my experience, it is tabs, the back button and the address bar that actually help developers to determine if something works. There are plenty of security and performance issues related to having multiple tabs open at the same time. By limiting the IE 9 test drive, Microsoft if providing a pristine environment that doesn't reflect the real world. While I understand the motivation for the limited IE9 test drive, when you compare it to how their rival Mozilla is delivering a developer preview, Microsoft's approach makes even less sense to me. The link for this article located at Internet News is no longer available. . The dynamics between Microsoft Internet Explorer 9 and Firefox 3.7 shed light on browser evolution, impacting developers and security protocols significantly. Browser Comparison,Suggested Security Concerns,Web Standards,Developer Preview,Software Analysis. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Web's leading standards group proposed two recommendations for encrypting XML data and documents, a key development in the organization's push to standardize technologies crucial to Web services. . .. The Web's leading standards group proposed two recommendations for encrypting XML data and documents, a key development in the organization's push to standardize technologies crucial to Web services . The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) released proposed recommendations for XML Encryption Syntax and Processing and Decryption Transform for XML Signature. Together, the protocols will let Web sites and services send and receive sensitive data confidentially. While methods already exist for encrypting XML documents, the W3C's proposed recommendations will make it possible to encrypt selected sections or elements of a document--for instance, a credit card number entered in an XML form. The Decryption Transform recommendation provides a way of determining what parts of a document were encrypted or decrypted at the time a party signed it. The proposed recommendation is crucial to letting different parties authenticate discrete sections of a document at different times. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The Web's leading standards group proposed two recommendations for encrypting XML data and documents. web's, leading, standards, group, proposed, recommendations, encrypting, documents. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A new and controversial proposal under consideration by the World Wide Web Consortium could open the way for companies to claim patent rights--and demand royalties--on standards authorized by that body. The W3C works with developers, software makers and others to come . . . . A new and controversial proposal under consideration by the World Wide Web Consortium could open the way for companies to claim patent rights--and demand royalties--on standards authorized by that body. The W3C works with developers, software makers and others to come up with standards for the Web, which can then be used by just about anyone to build Web software, free of charge. To date, those standards have either not been based on patented technology, or the holders of patents have chosen to not enforce patents in order that the standards be widely adopted. But a new proposal may now open a few cracks in that wall, allowing companies to enforce patents based around those technologies and to potentially charge a royalty fee to developers who use them. The W3C's Patent Policy Framework, more commonly referred to as the "reasonable and non-discriminatory" (RAND) licensing proposal, acknowledges a central conflict to the standardization process: Companies that spend serious time and effort coming up with the technology behind the standards may be reluctant to simply give away the rights to what they consider their intellectual property. The link for this article located at CNET is no longer available. . Debated W3C initiative might permit corporations to secure patents on internet protocols and impose fees on programmers.. Web Standards, Patent Rights, Licensing Proposal, Royalty Issues, W3C Standards. . Anthony Pell
Microsoft, VeriSign and webMethods Wednesday introduced a specification that works to simplify the integration of Public Key Infrastructure and digital certificates with XML applications. The companies have released the spec, dubbed XML Key Management Specification (XKMS), and will submit it to . . . . Microsoft, VeriSign and webMethods Wednesday introduced a specification that works to simplify the integration of Public Key Infrastructure and digital certificates with XML applications. The companies have released the spec, dubbed XML Key Management Specification (XKMS), and will submit it to the appropriate Web-standards bodies for consideration as an open Internet standard, the companies said. XKMS is designed to let developers integrate authentication, digital signature and encryption services - such as certificate processing and revocation status checking - in Web-based applications. This will allow developers to avoid using proprietary software tool kits from PKI software vendors. The link for this article located at IT World is no longer available. . IBM, Symantec and JavaSoft collaborated to introduce JPKI, aimed at enhancing the interoperability of Public Key Infrastructure and digital signatures within Java applications.. XML Encryption, Digital Certificates, Public Key Infrastructure, XKMS, Authentication. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The W3C is working on creating a consistent means to find information on a site's security policy. "With a key proof-of-concept event looming in June, the leaders of a World Wide Web Consortium working group on Tuesday outlined changes . . .. The W3C is working on creating a consistent means to find information on a site's security policy. "With a key proof-of-concept event looming in June, the leaders of a World Wide Web Consortium working group on Tuesday outlined changes to an Internet privacy proposal they expect to finalize later this year. The newly released working draft of the W3C's Platform for Privacy Preferences Project, which offers Web sites a way to communicate their privacy policies in a standard machine-readable format, calls for online users to receive a snapshot of a site's privacy policy before they send any data to the site. They also would receive a warning if any health care information will be requested." The link for this article located at PC World is no longer available. . The W3C is developing a unified strategy that enables users to navigate site safety protocols with ease and assurance.. W3C Privacy Proposal, Security Policies, Data Privacy. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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