Quantcast
0
0

Mozilla CEO Criticizes Apple's Stealth Safari Update

Jim Dalrymple, Macworld

Saturday, March 22, 2008 5:30 AM PDT

Apple updated its Safari Web browser for Mac and Windows on Tuesday and offered the new version for download from its Web site. The company also began pushing the browser to Windows users -- whether it was previously installed or not -- via the Apple Software Update, a practice Mozilla CEO John Lilly said is just "wrong."

"It undermines the trust relationship great companies have with their customers, and that's bad -- not just for Apple, but for the security of the whole Web," said Lilly in a post on his blog.

The Apple Software Update application is installed on Windows PCs when iTunes and QuickTime are installed. With so many people owning an iPod and installing iTunes, there are quite a few people Apple could potentially reach using the updater.

Lilly doesn't have a problem with Apple using its software update utility to keep its users up-to-date with iTunes and QuickTime, or any other Apple software they may have installed. The problem for Lilly is that even if you don't have Safari installed, Apple pushes the update to users and checks the "install" box by default.

"By and large, all software makers are trying to get users to trust us on updates, and so the likely behavior here is for users to just click 'Install 2 items,' which means that they've now installed a completely new piece of software, quite possibly completely unintentionally," said Lilly.

Lilly's concerns go much deeper than offering a new piece of software that users didn't ask for, he is concerned about the trust relationship that company's build with their customers and the security of users on the Web.

"Apple has made it incredibly easy -- the default, even -- for users to install ride along software that they didn't ask for, and maybe didn't want," said Lilly. "This is wrong, and borders on malware distribution practices."

Lilly said the practice Apple took with the Safari update "ultimately undermines the safety of users on the web by eroding that relationship. It's a bad practice and should stop."

Community Comments
Recommend this story?

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Browsers News
More

Latest Expert Blogs

All Blogs
Featured Resources

Premier Content From Our Sponsors

Featured Whitepapers

White papers, case studies and product info from top brands

  • An Introduction to Networked Storage This paper provides an introduction to the basics of networked storage and its relevance to smaller business operations where storage specialists are typically not found. It discusses the origins and development of the latest advances in storage tec...
  • VMware Solutions for Small to Medium Businesses Small and medium businesses (SMBs) are always looking for new ways to optimize their existing IT investments. VMware equips SMBs with technology that allows them to cost effectively optimize the use of their existing IT assets and resources as wel...
Featured Webcasts

Watch webcast presentations and videos from industry thought leaders on today's most important business and technology topics. For free.