Help Kill IE6

I was sent an interesting email today containing just the following:

http://ie6update.com/ 😉

So I took a look and liked what I saw.

As the highly educated and brilliant sysadmin you are, I know that you know that Internet Explorer 6 has reached it’s end of life. Meaning that the developer (Microsoft) is no longer supporting or maintaining the product (code).

It’s dead. Therefore one can now assume that IE6 is both out of date and insecure. Not only that, it lacks the compatibility of newer technologies and support of newer (and older) web standards that today’s web community demands.

What is interesting though is a large percentage of the internet still uses it! I have to admit advantages to IE6 include it is really quick and simple. Plus I don’t get NAGGED by the application to setup/configure the browser with a billion step wizard every time I login to a new workstation!

That aside however, the website attempts to encourage a move from older technology to the new. Being a part of the web community and being a web developer, I think it’s a brilliant way we can all easily participate in the education of users. As the image above demonstrates, a simple prompt appears for users of IE6 when arriving at your website, encouraging them to upgrade. Clicking takes to the Microsoft IE website. Integration into your website or blog is simple – download the provided zip from http://ie6update.com/, upload the files within the zip package, and finish by adding the code in the example.html file to your webpage. If you use WordPress Blog, it’s a simple plug-in install.

I’m in!

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Firefox Google Search Plugin for Australia (AU)

I’m a big user of Firefox. It’s my preferred browser for many reasons, but none more than Internet Explorer just right royally annoys me. I’ve been using a lot more of Windows these days and every new computer or server I login to wants to welcome me to Internet Explorer and setup all my settings! Go Away! I just want to download something real quick!

Back to the point though – Firefox – when you use the Google Search plugin that comes with the default install of Firefox, it goes to some long and unnecessarily complicated URL on the google.com domain. Now I’m Australian, and proud to be. My preferred domain is google.com.au. While the Google SSL search (https://encrypted.google.com/) is helpful, you lose a lot of the quick access to Image search, time and… just useful search options I’ve come to rely on. Regardless, as users we typically like to use the search for our own country.

Recently in my tinkering with the Firefox config files… I lost my Google Search plugin. I’ve been using the Google SSL search instead (which I strongly dislike) or to type google.com.au into the address bar – so old school.

I found this profoundly awesome page however which lists the Google Search plugins for nearly every nation/country/language Google has a search page for.

http://mycroft.mozdev.org/google-search-plugins.html

Just to pick a few out, there’s Google Search plugins for:

  • Google Australia (google.com.au)
  • Google AR (google.com.ar)
  • Google CA (google.ca)
  • Google DE (google.de)
  • Google FR (google.fr)
  • and more!

I also want to point out there appears to be a few options to pick from:

  • Google AU – pages from Australia (google.com.au) by Mycroft Project
  • Google AU – the web (google.com.au) by Mycroft Project

The “pages from” is like using google.com.au and selecting to only return results from Australia (or whatever country). However “the web” (my preference) just uses the .com.au Google domain to search.

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Rant: Google In Trouble Over Collecting Unprotected WiFi Data

Rant Time

I am utterly sick to death of hearing about “Google breeching privacy” or “spying on private data”. If anyone is stupid enough to leave their wireless network unsecured, then they deserve everything coming to them! There is nothing stopping anyone from driving around in a car, collecting wireless data exchanged through the medium we all share (air). People have been doing it for years! Who hasn’t done it? I have! Why is Google any different? Why has this event turned into a ridiculous worldwide scandal?

The points are, Google stored very small fragments of data that was broadcasting at the time a Google car drove past. If the wireless network was secured (encrypted like all good sysadmins will ensure) then the data was not readable. The scare is, if you were logging into a website at the exact second Google drove past, your information may have been stored.

Lets assume for a second it was… Who cares!!? As soon as it was discovered, the information was segregated and stored on an encrypted volume. Where a nominated representative for a country was selected, the data was securely deleted and verified by independent source.

But it comes back to one thing – if any residence or business operates a wireless network that is not “secured” then it is common knowledge that any data travelling on that network is publicly accessible. Grow the hell up n00bs, and take some responsibility for your own stupidity.

It’s similar to saying “I want cake, but I’m too lazy to get up and get some. ” If you’re too lazy to do something about it, then you don’t get the right to complain about it!

EDIT:

The Media

They really aren’t helping the situation by relaying misleading information to readers, who have no choice but to accept it at face value. Check this news article out by The Australian IT:

Google Street View cars may have obtained bank details

BANK details and other private information of Australians may have been illegally obtained by Google, the federal government says.

Employees of the internet giant are under police investigation for collecting personal information about Australians while they photographed streets for the Google Maps website.

Federal Attorney-General Robert McClelland revealed on Sunday that he had referred the matter to the Australian Federal Police.

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy told a Senate hearing in May that if proven, it would amount to the “single greatest breach in the history of privacy”.

“(If) you were doing a banking transaction, or transmitting personal information, they could have hoover-ed it up, sucked it up into their machine,” he told ABC Television on Monday.

“What we want to ensure now is that we get access to the information that’s been collected.

“We want to know where it’s stored, we want to know what the information is, and importantly we want to ensure that Google don’t destroy this information.”

It was a reminder that Australians should always be alert to online security, Senator Conroy said, while spruiking Cyber Security Awareness Week.

Up to one third of Australians don’t always tap into their wireless connections with passwords, making them vulnerable to security attacks, he said.

Senator Conroy said it was up to police to accept Google’s claim that the collection of personal information was a mistake.

Source: The Australian IT
Last Accessed: 14 Jul 2010

My response to that:

As previously mentioned, it’s called SSL, Conroy you pathetic excuse for existence. “What we want to ensure now is that we get access to the information that’s been collected” is what I would call the “single greatest breach in the history of privacy” – why does the government need access to this information? I trust Google with it more than Conroy. It’s not Google’s fault “Up to one third of Australians” are idiots who can’t secure their wifi connection.

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