Tougher Security Planned for Internet Explorer 8
        
        
        
			- By Jabulani Leffall
 - 07/07/08
 
		
        
In the wake of a report suggesting that Microsoft's Internet Explorer was the least secure of all leading  Web browsers, Redmond Wednesday touted the security features expected to appear in IE 8. The  company is promising nothing less than "comprehensive protection"  with IE 8's new features.
IE 8's upcoming bells and whistles were described by Eric  Lawrence, Microsoft's security program manager for IE, in a blog post. The browser is  currently available to the public only in beta test form.
New security functions in IE 8 include the blocking of code that  exploits cross-site-scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities, plus local browser defense  functions and upload controls for streamed data. IE 8 will also include  translation functions to help users stay safe as they input and output data on  social networking sites.
The flagship feature will be the deflection of XXS  vulnerabilities. Such exploits typically take advantage of holes in Web  applications to siphon out search or surf history by swiping info on  cookies and other data. Such stolen info can then be used to visit sites where  passwords may have been saved at logon interfaces. It can also be used to  vandalize, change or delete critical data on a workstation or network.
In the blog,  Microsoft's Lawrence  wrote that "Preventing XSS on the server-side is much easier that catching  it at the browser…[you] simply never trust user input. Most web platform  technologies offer one or more sanitization technologies -- developers using  ASP.NET should consider using the Microsoft Anti-Cross Site Scripting Library."
Local browser  defense functions in IE 8 will be able to contain threats to an application  running on an individual workstation. It will stop hackers on a local machine  before they branch out onto the network. This fix is crucial, considering the  rise in attacks that can give a hacker network access through just one PC in an enterprise  environment.
A SmartScreen  Filter feature in IE 8 will serve as an upload control, tagging suspicious  activity on sites known for attacks. It will display a big warning over a red  background before the page even loads. The user will have the option to either "disregard"  or "continue" visiting the site.
One of the  more basic yet prominent features in IE 8 will be domain  highlighting. The browser will automatically highlight what it considers to be the owning domain of the site visited,  with the highlight appearing in the browser's address bar. Redmond contends this function will help prevent  attacks where the interfaces and graphic presentation of trusted Web Sites are co-opted for fake sites. 
As Redmond points out, the domain  highlighting function "helps users identify the real site they're on when  a website attempts to deceive them." 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Jabulani Leffall is a business consultant and an award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in the Financial Times of London, Investor's Business Daily, The Economist and CFO Magazine, among others. He consulted for Deloitte & Touche LLP and was a business and world affairs commentator on ABC and CNN.