Source |
CSO |
Identifiant |
747615 |
Date de publication |
2018-07-16 08:45:00 (vue: 2018-07-22 02:01:50) |
Titre |
IDG Contributor Network: HTML5: a devil in disguise |
Texte |
In today's digital age, online users have become much more demanding about the quality of the websites or applications they are using. They have come to expect an optimized user experience as a basic requirement and HTML5 has played a key role in enabling developers to improve user experience, without the security risks associated with plugins like Flash. Indeed, after the series of reported Adobe Flash vulnerabilities in recent years, browser vendors, publishers and developers have turned to HTML5, which seemed to promise greater security and more advanced features. As a result, the percentage of websites that use HTML5 has grown to 70 percent.However, despite HTML5 being universally supported on various devices as well as web and mobile platforms, it has a security issue of its own. Over the last couple of months, The Media Trust Digital & Security Operations team discovered numerous malware incidents that calls into question HTML5's security reputation. |
Notes |
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Envoyé |
Oui |
Condensat |
about adobe advanced after age applications are article associated basic become being browser calls click come contributor couple demanding despite developers devices devil digital discovered disguise enabling expect experience features flash full greater grown has have here however html5 html5: idg improve incidents indeed issue its key last like malware media mobile months more much network: numerous online operations optimized over own percent percentage platforms played please plugins promise publishers quality question read recent reported reputation requirement result risks role security seemed series supported team today trust turned universally use user users using various vendors vulnerabilities web websites well which without years |
Tags |
Malware
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