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posted by CoolHand on Wednesday December 16 2015, @08:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the the-more-things-change-the-more-they-stay-the-same dept.

While both Betteridge's Law and common sense say, "No," Zack Whittaker at ZDNet takes a closer look:

An analysis of the last five-months' worth of monthly software updates shows that Edge had 25 vulnerabilities shared with versions of Internet Explorer, which had a total of 100 vulnerabilities.

Earlier this month on its scheduled Patch Tuesday update offering, Microsoft released MS15-124, a cumulative update for Internet Explorer, and MS15-125, a near-identical patch for Edge. Of the 15 flaws patched in Internet Explorer, 11 of those were also patched in Edge.

According to a Microsoft blog post earlier this year, the software giant's newest browser, an exclusive for Windows 10, is said to have been designed to "defend users from increasingly sophisticated and prevalent attacks."

In doing that, Edge scrapped older, insecure, or flawed plugins or frameworks, like ActiveX or Browser Helper Objects. That already helped to cut a number of possible drive-by attacks traditionally used by attackers. EdgeHTML, which powers Edge's rendering engine, is a fork of Trident, which still powers Internet Explorer.

[...] Older versions of Internet Explorer will be retired by mid-January, giving millions of users about a month to upgrade to Internet Explorer 11, or to Edge on Windows 10.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 16 2015, @09:05PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 16 2015, @09:05PM (#277301)

    WinXP is no longer supported, and I don't think vista is either
    Win7 has become Win10 because of the upgrade nagging, so has win8 and win8.1.
    Essentially, there is only Win10 which has access to Edge, what is your point?

  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by WillR on Wednesday December 16 2015, @09:27PM

    by WillR (2012) on Wednesday December 16 2015, @09:27PM (#277311)

    Win7 has become Win10 because of the upgrade nagging, so has win8 and win8.1.

    Only at home, unless your company's IT department is really clueless.

    7 is the new XP, we're going to be stuck with it for a loooooooooooong time yet.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 17 2015, @03:22AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 17 2015, @03:22AM (#277472)

    The PoS version of XP is supported until 2019. It's binary compatible with the "normal" XP, people just install the patches manually.