Mozilla bakes Facebook features into Firefox 17
Mozilla Tuesday released Firefox 17, which debuts technology that lets developers integrate social networks -- for now, Facebook -- with the browser.
Gregg Keizer | Thursday, November 22 2012Mozilla Tuesday released Firefox 17, which debuts technology that lets developers integrate social networks - for now, Facebook - with the browser.
The company also patched 29 security vulnerabilities, two-thirds of them marked "critical", Mozilla's highest threat ranking.
The main thrust of Mozilla's trumpeting of Firefox 17, however, was what it called "Social API", an application programming interface (API) that allows developers to bake connections to social media services into the browser.
The first result of the API, Facebook Messenger for Firefox, displays a sidebar that shows Facebook chat sessions and updates, including new comments, without requiring the user to steer to Facebook's website. Additional tools range from message notifications to friend requests, accessible through new icons in the browser's toolbar.
Firefox 17 users can enable Messenger at this Facebook page, and the social networking giant has posted a short FAQ on the integration with Firefox.
Firefox 17 also debuts a new security feature that automatically blocks outdated versions of the most popular Web browser plug-ins - Adobe's Flash Player and Reader, Microsoft's Silverlight, and Oracle's Java - from executing content.
Dubbed "click-to-play", the added protection bars content from running in plug-ins Mozilla determines are unsafe or seriously out of date. (The company posts a list here.) Users can override the block, or before doing that, investigate by clicking a new icon that appears on the left edge of the browser's address bar.
Click-to-play is only the latest in a series of steps Mozilla has taken this year to stymie attacks, including blocking outdated Java plug-ins on Macs last spring when the Flashback malware infected several hundred thousand machines, and wrapping up work on silent updates to emulate Google's long practice of removing updates from users' responsibility.
Along with the new additions, Mozilla also subtracted: it pulled the plug on support for OS X Leopard, Apple's 2007 operating system.
The move had been in the works for almost a year, with the final decision coming in August. Firefox 16, which shipped 9 October, was the last version able to run on Leopard.
According to web metrics firm Net applications, only about 9% of all Macs still run Leopard; nearly two-thirds run either its successor, Snow Leopard, or that edition's follow-on, Lion. Most of the rest are powered by 2012's Mountain Lion.
The open-source developer also patched 29 vulnerabilities, 19 of them critical, with nine of the remaining labeled "high" and one pegged "moderate".
Nearly a third were reported by Abhishek Arya, who goes by the nickname "Inferno," of the Chrome security team, Mozilla said in an accompanying advisory. He was also credited with reporting five more vulnerabilities that were "introduced during Firefox development that were fixed before general release."
Another four were submitted by "miaubiz," a long-time contributor to Google's bug-bounty program.
By Net Applications' estimates, Firefox accounted for 20% of the browsers that went online last month. Irish measurement firm StatCounter, however, pegged Firefox's global share for October at a slightly higher 22.3%.
Windows, Mac and Linux editions of Firefox 17 can be downloaded manually from Mozilla's site. Installed copies will be upgraded automatically.
The next version of Firefox is scheduled to ship the week of 7 January, 2013, a slight delay from the usual six-week cadence to account for the end-of-year holidays.
Windows vs. iOS vs. Android:How to choose the best tablet for you
101 great websites:
You haven't heard of yet
DIY desktops:
We ask the pros for building tips
Hot Products || PC World editors iPhone 4S launch pics and unboxing
The iPhone 4S launched at midnight through both Vodafone and Telecom. ... READ MORE
Tux Love || Geoff Palmer Google : Starting to be evil?
Google recently deleted AdBlock Plus from its Android Play Store. This is ... READ MORE
Tech Guy || Juha Saarinen Small balls of solder
The idea that desktops might change forever is enough to send geeks into a ... READ MORE
In a Nutshell || Zara Baxter Logging, not login
At an event in Singapore yesterday, Seamus Byrne, the editor of CNet ... READ MORE
Harley O'Gyver || Harley Ogier Pay for internet by-device? Not on my watch.
So as those of you who follow my twitterstream will know, I'm currently in ... READ MORE
The Arcade || PC World editors New Year, new games
You'er going to laugh. Or at the very least, you're going to scoff and ... READ MORE
Dumb Terminal Live! || PC World editors New Zealand memes: We think we're real funny
We New Zealanders love the internet, and we have a pretty good sense of ... READ MORE




