Preston Gralla over at O'Reilly muses upon the recent security warnings hanging over Firefox's head, stating "...this news doesn't bode well for the browser. Its increasing popularity will mean that it will be subject to more frequent attacks. Worse, though, is that as of this writing, the fixes aren't publicly available. People have rightly accused Microsoft of not posting security patches quickly enough. But up until now, Firefox developers have always been quick to react with security fixes."
Well, all software has flaws. The question is whether the given set of flaws is offset by the value that the piece of software brings to you and your organization in return- the classic risk/benefit analysis. I use IE to test web pages, but not for much else. At my employer's office I use Firefox for its standards-compliance and friendliness to developers. Oh, and I don't need any toolbars installed to prevent popups and spyware (yet) although there are plugins available to ensure that never becomes necessary.
The other advantage in my case is that I can use Firefox at work on Win2k, and at home on OS X for consistency, and it's something I can recommend to friends, family and coworkers who want something better than IE. To put things in the most basic terms, stripped of ideology, I can offer PC users several quality options to pursue when they are complaining to me about IE or about certain facets of web browsing, and the Law of Requisite Variety explains the more options we have, the more empowered we are.
Having said that, the Tiger enhancements to Safari on OS X are pretty compelling- RSS on the toolbar, and the way Safari displays RSS feeds is very pleasing and userfriendly. I haven't gotten to play with Tiger as much as I had hoped, but Safari 2 and Dashboard are quite a nice addition to this OS. I suspect the RSS functionality could be easily replicated in IE and in Firefox by applying some clever scripting and CSS....
Getting back to Firefox- I understand that bug fixes are already checked in to the CVS repository. If IE had been at this stage, we wouldn't have a clue, but with Firefox being open source, anyone brave enough is able to download and build.

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