About
Randy Krum
President of InfoNewt.
Data Visualization and Infographic Design

Infographic Design

Infographics Design | Presentations
Consulting | Data Visualizations

DFW DataViz Meetup

Join the DFW Data Visualization and Infographics Meetup Group if you're in the Dallas/Fort Worth area!

Search the Cool Infographics site

Custom Search

Subscriptions:

 

Feedburner

The Cool Infographics® Gallery:

How to add the
Cool Infographics button to your:

Cool Infographics iOS icon

- iPhone
- iPad
- iPod Touch

 

Read on Flipboard for iPad and iPhone

Featured in the Tech & Science category

Flipboard icon

Twitter Feed
From the Bookstore

Caffeine Poster

The Caffeine Poster infographic

« Map of Online Communities | Main | Who Owns the West? »
Monday
Jul212008

When are you at risk online?

From the Mozilla website, and obviously a part of their sales pitch.  I picked up that the calendar arrangement of the squares is in fact correct for 2006.  Its getting the small things right that help make good infographics.

An independent study shows that, in 2006, IE users were vulnerable to online threats 78% of the time. Firefox users? Only 2%.

“At risk” defined as publicly available exploits with no patch. Source: “Internet Explorer users Unsafe for 284 Days in 2006” Brian Krebs, Washington Post, 1/4/2007

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (5)

Being a Firefox user myself, I'm not surprised at all, in fact I've uninstalled my IE back home... It would be interesting though to have the data for both the current version of the IE, patched and what have you, against Firefox and Safari. Also, I'd love to have that visualized for the old IE6. That one was pretty robust wasn't it?

Whew! I'm glad I waited until January 10, 1996 before I installed Firefox!

July 21, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

... I mean 2006. Darnit, I bungled my joke.

July 21, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

Nice idea! :-) It's impressive to adapt visualisation to the background information/scenario.

July 22, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterYihui Xie

Pretty lame...
Of course the hackers use their energy on the browser with the most users (potential victims).
As the number of firefox users rise, the more time criminals will use on finding exploits.
The only reason it was so safe is because there was so few users, that nobody could be bothered with it.
It's a only a question of time...
trust me...

August 2, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous
Editor Permission Required
While we are migrating to a new site design, you must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.