Andrew Joakimsen
unread,Feb 16, 2013, 2:54:20 AM2/16/13You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
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to Doug Turner, Brian Smith, dev-tech-plugins, dev-se...@lists.mozilla.org, mozilla.dev.planning group, dev-apps-firefox List
I would like to see an example of how click-to-play could be "clickjacked."
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 15, 2013, at 11:45 PM, Doug Turner <
doug....@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 2/15/13 3:11 PM, Brian Smith wrote:
>>> From
http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/02/facebook-computers-compromised-by-zero-day-java-exploit/
>>
>> 'Facebook officials said they recently discovered that computers belonging to several of its engineers had been hacked using a zero-day Java attack that installed a collection of previously unseen malware.
>>
>> [...]
>>
>> The attack was injected into the site's HTML, so any engineer who visited the site and had Java enabled in their browser would have been affected," Sullivan told Ars, "regardless of how patched their machine was."'
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Brian
>
>
> The worse part of this is that most users don't have security engineers
> detecting the compromise. People's machines will just get owned and
> these users will probably not know it.
>
> I know CTP is a step forward on blocking many of these plugins. But I
> think we all know that this approach can probably be worked around by
> click-jacking. There are ways to improve or reduce the likelihood of
> this (see bug 832481).
>
> Considering this, maybe it is time to not just click-to-play, but
> require users to go to some menu item (maybe "View / Enable Legacy
> Mode") to enabled Java, and other less useful and typically more
> vulnerable, NPAPI plugins.
>
> Just a thought.
> Doug
>
>
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