Kamis, 13 Januari 2011

Google pays first top-end bounty for Chrome vulnerability

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January 13, 2011
In this issue
redarrow Google pays first top-end bounty for Chrome vulnerability
redarrow FireWire hits 2 billion ports, still far behind USB
redarrow Adobe tackling 'Flash cookie' privacy issue
redarrow Firefox beta getting new database standard
redarrow Microsoft mocks Google's Web video decision

A critical Chrome vulnerability dealing with speech handling yields a $3,133.70 payment and a new stable version of the browser.

The 1394 Trade Association is touting the success of FireWire ports , saying that the technology has reached the 2 billion ports mark. But that puts it far behind its competitor, USB.

With changes coming to Flash and browsers, it'll be easier to control when Web sites can store information that can be used to track people's identity online.

A standard called IndexedDB, useful for storing lots of data on a computer for tasks such as Web apps that work offline, is getting closer to being useful for Web developers.
A satirical Microsoft blog post asserts that H.264 is the lingua franca of digital video and that Google is foolish--at best--for trying to convince the world to move to WebM instead.

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