News
Firefox add-on Greasemonkey slips up
The Mozilla Foundation is making available an update for a critical security flaw in Greasemonkey, an extension to the Firefox browser.
Greasemonkey is a popular add-on used to customise the design and behaviour of Web pages. The flaw could let attackers read any file on a user's local hard drive and list the contents of local directories. The update, Greasemonkey 0.3.5, was released on Monday, according to the download page on the Mozilla Foundation's Web site. The Mozilla Foundation coordinates Firefox development and marketing.
The flaw affects versions of Greasemonkey prior to 0.3.5, including early 0.4 alphas, according to a posting on Mozdev.org, a site where developers post applications and add-ons.
People who switch to version 0.3.5, however, will find it lacks the so-called GM* APIs, which are designed to make Greasemonkey more powerful than HTML, according to Greaseblog, a blog devoted to the extension. As a result, scripts that rely on these APIs will fail with the 0.3.5 version. "Greasemonkey 0.3.5 is a 'neutered' version of Greasemonkey," said a developer in a post to the blog.
Still, according to the same post, people should only use 0.3.5 at this point. "I strongly recommend that everyone either install Greasemonkey 0.3.5, or else disable or uninstall Greasemonkey completely," wrote the developer, who is currently working on a fix.
No reports of the flaw being exploited have surfaced, according to his post.
Several security flaws have been discovered in Firefox recently, and the Mozilla Foundation released a security update for the browser earlier this month.
Additionally, a promotional site for the Firefox browser was hacked last week. The attack on SpreadFirefox.com was an embarrassment to the Mozilla Foundation, which uses security as a main selling point for the browser.
More about Software
- Obama in sex video shocker? Oh wait, it's just spam September 11, 2008
- No black holes from Large Hadron Collider, say scientists September 10, 2008
- Michael Moore to premiere film online September 05, 2008
- Images: Touring Google's Chrome browser September 05, 2008
- Extensions promised for Chrome September 04, 2008

- OpenOfficeMouse has frankly preposterous 18 buttons, joystick
- EMI Abbey Road Live: Instant gig recording
- Sony BDP-S760 Blu-ray player: Super bit-mapping reality enhancer
- Nokia Booklet 3G hits US: Hands-on verdict
- Lady GaGa Monster Heartbeats: They're plastic but they still have fun
- The 6 worst video game samples in rap music

- Google Voice heading for Europe?
- Twitter retweets rolled out to beta tweeters
- Beatles on a stick: Crave alternative headline competition results!
- Ordnance Survey and GeoVation map the future with mashup competition
- What does Google Suggest suggest about the state of humanity?
- The 10 dumbest Firefox add-ons ever
- Best iPhone Apps of 2009: CNET UK's Home Screen Awards
- MSN Music relaunches with free streaming
- Is it okay to call someone boring on Twitter?
- IT execs: 'UK will never create a tech giant'
- Firefox 3.6 beta tested in-depth
- Spotify's Daniel Ek to headline SXSW: Spotify coming to America?
- Windows 7 is a good name, trust us
- Interview: Lala co-founder Bill Nguyen on Google and the future of music
- Nokia exec: 'Apple taught the industry a painful lesson'



