Freaky Flash 6 Fishy Features 309
donpardo writes "I upgraded to Flash 6 last week (to patch a security hole). When I right clicked on a Flash ad at abcnews.com, and pulled down to Settings I got a tabbed dialogue box asking if I wanted to give them access to my cam and microphone. Clicking through on the tabs revealed that the microphone and the camera had already been detected and that the microphone was active. I doubt the camera or the microphone were sending information out but this still seems invasive. Here are Macromedia's statements about the mic and the camera. In addition there is a setting to ask how much information the site can store on your computer. The default value is 100K. According to the information statement "Data can be anything from your user name to your current score in an interactive game to a list of stocks in your portfolio ... The data is not public, but the privacy of this data depends on the policies of the web site where the movie is hosted."" I thought the first sentence of this submission was telling ...
Thats very scary (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Thats very scary (Score:2, Insightful)
This makes one decision easier (Score:3, Interesting)
how about SVG? (Score:4, Informative)
How can Flash be removed? (Score:3, Insightful)
How can Flash be removed from 1) Windows, and 2) Linux?
Reasons not to run Flash:
Flash presents unknown security risks. Sometimes Flash and other Macromedia products have been the point of entry of trojans and viruses, as mentioned in this documentation of a very serious bug, Macromedia Flash Activex Buffer overflow [eeye.com].
Flash on a website advertises Flash. There must always be some notice that says "Download Flash if you don't have it", and a link to Macromedia, so that web site viewers can get the latest version. This forced added content distracts from the intended content.
Flash is nearly always used to provide images that are irrelevant to the content. Except for those who care about bright, shiny things more than content, Flash gets in the way. Flash authors are seldom qualified to provide moving picture content, and, even if they were, Flash is a very limited cinematic tool.
Flash often causes long load times. Long load times communicate that the website viewer's time is less important than the website creator's love of movement. Flash often causes Website viewers to wait for "Loading..." messages.
For website viewers who do not want to run Flash and other Macromedia software, or cannot, web sites using it are broken.
By using Flash, authors of Flash content may cause the URL of their customers to be transmitted to Macromedia. If some disloyal Macromedia employee, or Macromedia itself, thought of some profitable reason to approach those customers directly, Flash content authors could lose business.
Flash content is proprietary content. It is the money-making scheme of one company. This tends to undermine web standards like HTML. The Internet is a public utility for all of us to use. Proprietary methods go against that spirit.
Re:How can Flash be removed? (Score:3, Informative)
These instructions are known to work with Internet Explorer 6.0 on Windows 2000. They may require modifications on other versions of IE or Windows.
If you stop now, Flash ads will not appear, but IE will pop up a dialog box every time you view a page containing a Flash ad. You can prevent this from happening 99% of the time by continuing to the next step.
notepad %systemroot%\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
A Notepad window should appear with a file in which most of the lines begin with "#".
0.0.0.0 download.macromedia.com activex.microsoft.com active.macromedia.com
This last step will prevent your computer from ever accessing the Internet addresses where the Flash plugin is normally found. If you later find that you need to access one of those addresses, just remove it from the hosts file.
How can Flash be removed? (Score:2)
Thanks.
I've been following Macromedia since they started. This Slashdot story was the last straw for me. If something goes wrong with my customer's computers, it will be me who is blamed. Deleting Flash is a sensible precaution on a business network.
... How can timid viewers be reassured? (Score:3, Interesting)
Can we discuss this?
Reasons not to run Flash:
Flash presents unknown security risks. Sometimes Flash and other Macromedia products have been the point of entry of trojans and viruses, as mentioned in this documentation of a very serious bug, Macromedia Flash Activex Buffer overflow [eeye.com].
So, ok, _ONE_ security notice. No known exploits of this hole. Company acknowledgement and fix in less than a day.
What other risks? WHat other holes or past vulnerables? Any known exploits? Name them. I think the case can be made that Macromedia is more diligent with security than many in this business, and more worthy of trust.
Maybe the problem is with using a browser that requires Activex?
Flash on a website advertises Flash. There must always be some notice that says "Download Flash if you don't have it", and a link to Macromedia, so that web site viewers can get the latest version. This forced added content distracts from the intended content.
The Flash plug-in is just about default on most browser installs, so few see that download message. The plug-in's truly free, and not nagware like QuickTime or Real. And most people aren't developers, so not a very targeted campaign, is it? The real ad value is that the plugin works well for the majority of users.
Flash is nearly always used to provide images that are irrelevant to the content. Except for those who care about bright, shiny things more than content, Flash gets in the way. Flash authors are seldom qualified to provide moving picture content, and, even if they were, Flash is a very limited cinematic tool.
Those comments are more often applied to television.
So should Flash have a taste filter to prohibit the creation of tacky content?
Flash is just a tool, not an artistic movement.
Flash often causes long load times. Long load times communicate that the website viewer's time is less important than the website creator's love of movement. Flash often causes Website viewers to wait for "Loading..." messages.
Flash is currently one of the most eficient and reliable formats for delivering dynamic interactive content. It's success comes from the fact that there's not really any other interactive animated format that competes with it yet.
Download time is a contract between author and viewer; if the content is good, they'll accept the delay. With broadband, the majority of Flash pieces download in a few seconds.
For website viewers who do not want to run Flash and other Macromedia software, or cannot, web sites using it are broken.
Sites are broken because the author didn't care enough to put in detection for the plug-in, and didn't include alternate non-Flash content. By the way, the Flash plugin (presence and version) is VERY easy to detect via javascript or other means (unlike Quicktime)
By using Flash, authors of Flash content may cause the URL of their customers to be transmitted to Macromedia. If some disloyal Macromedia employee, or Macromedia itself, thought of some profitable reason to approach those customers directly, Flash content authors could lose business.
Uh huh.... right. Big software company secretly wants to run tiny boutique webshop in converted factory loft making way kewl Flash pieces.
Flash content is proprietary content.
No more or less than ANY content.
It is the money-making scheme of one company. This tends to undermine web standards like HTML. The Internet is a public utility for all of us to use. Proprietary methods go against that spirit.
The Flash movie format SWF is an open format. Write your own authoring tool. Others have.
Re:... How can timid viewers be reassured? (Score:2)
Don't have business associations that test limits. (Score:3, Interesting)
"So, ok, _ONE_ security notice. No known exploits of this hole. Company acknowledgement and fix in less than a day."
Flash has caused several very serious security breaches, and the company acknowledges this. A computer under my supervision was totally owned by someone exploiting a bug in a Macromedia product.
"The Flash plug-in is just about default on most browser installs, so few see that download message."
You forgot something very important. Sometimes there has been more than one upgrade to Flash within a month. If a web site uses a later version of Flash than is installed, you see the message.
"Sites are broken because the author didn't care enough to put in detection for the plug-in, and didn't include alternate non-Flash content. By the way, the Flash plugin (presence and version) is VERY easy to detect via javascript or other means (unlike Quicktime)"
Your answer to this extremely serious problem can be shortened to "Sites are broken..." It is VERY bad advertising if a user gets an error message instead of a web page. That happens a lot with Flash sites, for many reasons. For example, the user may have Javascript disabled, or it may be an imperfect implementation of Javascript, such as with version 5 of Opera.
"Uh huh.... right. Big software company secretly wants to run tiny boutique webshop in converted factory loft making way kewl Flash pieces."
Your answer is an attempt to influence by innuendo, not logic. Several years ago I was getting about 40 pieces of spam a day. Many seemed to have a connection with AOL. It just happened that someone from AOL called, trying to sell me something. I complained about the spam. Immediately it stopped. Was AOL doing the spamming? Maybe not; maybe it was someone who worked for the company who was making some money on the side. Would someone wanting to make money try to breach your computer security? Here is a small list of attempts to do so: The Spyware Infested Software List [fcenter.ru]
The fact remains, when you use Flash, you are giving your customer list to Macromedia, and to whomever has access to Macromedia computers.
"Download time is a contract between author and viewer; if the content is good, they'll accept the delay. With broadband, the majority of Flash pieces download in a few seconds."
The viewer is not aware of any contract. The viewer is aware that he or she must wait. Again, this is extremely bad advertising.
This Slashdot story continues an impression of Macromedia. The company is like Microsoft in that they tend to push the limits of what people will accept so that they can make more money. Would you have a friend who continued to test your limits? No? Then don't have a business association that tests people's limits.
Re:Don't have business associations that test limi (Score:2, Insightful)
what security breaches?
You forgot something very important. Sometimes there has been more than one upgrade to Flash within a month. If a web site uses a later version of Flash than is installed, you see the message.
afaik, there are flash versions 3 thru 6, with about 2 years between the version steps. there is no flash 5.2.
The fact remains, when you use Flash, you are giving your customer list to Macromedia, and to whomever has access to Macromedia computers.
you are providing them with the urls of companies that have an swf on their site. this could have been any authoring tool that generates swf. but you're right, they probably do this so they don't have to search the web for swfs.
The viewer is not aware of any contract. The viewer is aware that he or she must wait. Again, this is extremely bad advertising.
the viewer doesn't have to do anything. either he or she waits, or decides that it wouldn't be worth it. swfs are small. you can make big swfs, and you can make swfs that really suck. you also can make pretty shitty html sites. if you have that sort of talent.
The company is like Microsoft in that they tend to push the limits of what people will accept so that they can make more money.
they opened up the standart. i don't know what you mean by pushing the limits of what people will accept. but as a company, macromedia wants to make money. just like any other company.
Macromedia: Using your computer without permission (Score:2)
Thanks for your reply.
"i don't know what you mean by pushing the limits of what people will accept."
I consider this Slashdot story is an example of pushing the limits. They are taking more control of the user's computer without making it clear in advance what they are doing. That's abusive, in my opinion. Your computer is your property. You wouldn't feel good about someone using your car without permission. You shouldn't feel comfortable having someone use your computer without permission.
You are making good points. (Score:2)
What you are saying strikes me as sensible. However, if Macromedia can make this change without warning users, it can make other changes.
I corresponded with someone at Macromedia about problems of this nature. It is possible that the company just appears to be sneaky, and in fact they are only ignorant of proper marketing.
This Slashdot story, "Freaky Flash 6 Fishy Features", has certainly done the company a huge amount of damage. The story was motivated by the surprise at what Macromedia has done. That is terrible marketing. For a full realization of the depth of the damage, reflect upon the fact that Slashdot readers are a significant percentage of all the people who make technical policy about computer use at their companies. That is terrible marketing; it's so bad that it makes me wonder about the ability of the company managers to make any decision.
Also, look at this quote (2nd paragraph) [macromedia.com], from the Macromedia web site: "The data is not public, but the privacy of this data depends on the policies of the web site where the movie is hosted."
Translation: "We have arranged a situation in which the privacy of your computer is out of your control and is dependent on someone else." That is becoming very close to the exact purpose of spyware and malware.
Translation 2: "We are moving toward a way of making money in which we make it possible for web sites to control a user's computer, without the user's understanding or knowledgeable permission."
What is also VERY scary about this is that Macromedia has made programming mistakes in the past, and will no doubt make mistakes again. When you use Flash, you are allowing non-standard ways of communicating which have not been reviewed by a standards committee (such as with the upgrade and install process). As this shows, and the Slashdot story implies, Macromedia is willing to make your computer less secure as a result of their money-making schemes. This gives the strong impression that the user's security is not their priority.
I agree with the Open BSD team: Security is a primary concern. I don't like the direction Macromedia wants to take us, and I don't like their ideas of what is acceptable behavior. But Macromedia is worse than sneaky, the company has bad judgement, and that is even more frightening.
Sounds like American Pie (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sounds like American Pie (Score:2, Funny)
Ominous (Score:2, Redundant)
I'm getting sick of this.
/Janne
Re:Ominous (Score:2, Informative)
And you have the option to disable it on a per-site basis. Seems pretty aboveboard to me...
Re:Ominous (Score:2, Insightful)
There's probably an ultrasecret club with $1000 membership dues that gets access to the stealth webcams.
Is there no shame (Score:3, Flamebait)
What I cannot fathom, is how could anyone purposely write a program to spy into my room, listening to me or watching what I am doing? Doesn't anyone have a conscious anymore? Come on. This is my house, my life, stay the f@#k out!
Re:Is there no shame (Score:3)
Is there potential for someone to make money from it?
Yes.
Seems pretty straight forward to me...
Hm. (Score:2)
- A.P. (is the sky still falling, slashdot?)
Re:Hm. (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, I'll say! I do most of my surfing in the nude!
I wouldn't wanna get hit with lawsuits from indavertantly traumatizing people!
(ahem!)
Check again... (Score:5, Informative)
Still, could be fun...
Re:Check again... (Score:2, Interesting)
Jesus (Score:5, Funny)
Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
"I have to turn my camera off for Flash! Invasion of privacy! Invasion of privacy! Cookies are evil! The sun is disappearing, the dragons are coming! The dragons are coming!
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:5, Informative)
mike chambers
mesh@macromedia.com
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:3, Informative)
The problem is, it can't be proven. That's why things like open standards and open source exist.
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
No, that's why physical switches and pullable cable pugs exist.
It beats me why anyone would trust software to turn off the cam/mic. If none of the zillions of virii or freeware downloads on your computer is spying on you, I bet your kids are.
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:2, Interesting)
There should be a configuration walk through on install. If companies would do this, they could at least gain respect for the discloser, and educate the user to the feature set of the product. And there is always the default / advanced installation for those who just blindly want to accept it or custom configure it.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:2)
Computer Awareness? (Score:2)
Though I also think it's reasonable to at least muse the posibility that this was all just setup by the X10 camera people to setup a world wide voyeur web =]
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Then there is the deal with the huge amount of people that just don't know about these things and why should they? Wasn't the idea of the PC these days that you don't have to be a geek to operate them?
Personally I spend a good deal of time in front of computers so I am aware of these things, but there's plenty of people who don't really care about the details of how it works and why? Because it is just a tool that they use in a busy day, just like they don't have to know how their car works.
And it is not just a question about incasion of privacy. all those fancy features in different programs, including Flash, has often proved to include security holes. And forget about uninstalling it. After have visited the first 100 sites that prompts you to install the player, it gets really annoying.
If these companies and people truly cared about people's security and privacy, they would all go the opt-in way instead, but what would happen was that only 2% would enable the features because the %98 are not computer people who are aware of these things. So the marketing/power/value of the product/features(flash player) would be a lot smaller.
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:3, Informative)
Plus, might I add, Mac OS X does it the better way: FTP, HTTP and SSH services are turned off by default. Nothing than can potentially allow someone in to your computer should be turned on by default. Nothing. And that's exactly what Flash 6 is doing: allowing access by default to your system. Netscape, while having access to cookies on by default at least also warns you by default (at least on Solaris, which is the default install I see every week - I have had them severely limited on my other machines for so long, I don't remember, because newer versions of Netscape also preserve preferences). This doesn't seem to even come with a small disclaimer. Perhaps buried in the EULA somewhere. But to me, this should be prominently displayed every time it is run, unless you tell it otherwise, or simply off by default.
Want it done right? Use a Mac. Or spend your life fixing holes in Windows. Or get savvy enough to use one of the less user friendly *n?xes.
Oh, and check all the preferences on everything you install all the time now, as well, it seems (although I don't remember AppleWorks calling the mothership when I install it). Bastard marketroids.
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:2)
Flash is advertised as a 'media player' it plays flash movies, music (mp3s, etc.), and that's it.
If it was advertised as a camera sharing / spy tool then fine, as long as you know that before you download it. The programs don't usually tell you things like that before you download it. Open source programs ( mozilla comes to mind) have a release notes section that tells you IN PLAIN ENGLISH ( or hopefully your native tounge ) what the update to the program does to your computer that is different from the past version.
This has nothing to do with MAC vs WINDOWS vs UNIX, it has everything to do with 'free' software that is really 'free to download but with so many strings attached that you probably don't actually want to use it.'
I spit on you, corp. america.
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:2)
right......
And when did you last review the source code for this version of Flash player?
We all know that "power corrupts" applies to programs as well as to people (think Kazaa, Windows XP, RealPlayer) so I'd say that even allowing a website plug-in access to that kind of information is unthinkably stupid (on the part of Macromedia's consumers, not on Macromedia themselves)
"Thankyou for visiting irs.gov. For your security, and to prevent crime, we have logged your name, IP address, and a photo of whatever you're currently wearing."
Re:Internet Awareness Anyone? (Score:2)
Flash has been taking on more and more functionality. It used to be a plugin for animations and some user interaction. Now it interacts with hardware that has definate possiblities of abuse. One has to be sure that Macromedia will completely honor the end users' options AND has implemented these controls in a secure manner. This seems unlikely considering the increased influence of the advertisers in technology and the complete lack of understanding of security issues by the vast majority of developers.
It also seems that Flash can also be used to track users, despite the popularity of controlling the usual method - cookies. I would be interested to see if it is possible to disable these methods in a simular manner as cookies can now be controlled. My guess is that it is not and that this is a key feature sold to developers of ad banners.
The situation brings to mind other applications that have an apparent functionality bundled with hidden functionality; Kazaa and Comet Cursor to name two.
I handle infosec issues professionaly. It is sometimes amazing how often users and IT professionals shrug off infosec issues as some kind of "black helicopter" theory. They simply underestimate the potential for abuse many technologies present.
Cookies are a great example. Double-click was the king of using ID-tracking cookies in online advertisements. People used to scoff at those who were concerned with this practice. After all, these cookies were anonymous! Double-click stated so. And they promised they would remain so. Then Double-click bought the largest mail order database in the United States. And they began a program that would link these anonymouse IDs (and all the collected browsing data associated with them) with real identities contained within their new database. This program was put on hold due to public backlash. Expect it to resurface once Double-click has managed to lobby the appropriate laws to ensure this behavior is legal.
They may not fit your definition... but the "dragons" ARE out there.
"Local Storage" (Score:2, Insightful)
It says: "This data may be accessed by the Flash movie that is running or by another Flash movie on the same web site."
My impression is that the data it collects is not data sitting on your hard drive, it is data that relates to the flash application you are using.
-Zordok
Re:"Local Storage" (Score:2)
Yes, the data it collects "relates to the flash application you are using," but the data does sit on your hard drive. It's an "AND" proposition, not an "OR" proposition. Plus, there's nothing but their word that other Flash sites -- or Macromedia themselves -- won't access the information. So it's not domain-limited cookies, it's Macromedia-specific super cookies.
These features existed before (Score:2)
I remember wondering what on earth a website would do with data from my microphone. Count the number of obscenities I muttered as I waited for the stupid flash-enabled splash screen to go away?
Re:These features existed before (Score:5, Informative)
They got a custom video codec built by Sorenson built to do this. That's what Apple is suing Sorenson over.
The thing is that it's a full video code and weighs in around 75k. Pretty impressive really. Audio is MP3 encoded.
Re:These features existed before (Score:2)
I remember wondering what on earth a website would do with data from my microphone. Count the number of obscenities I muttered as I waited for the stupid flash-enabled splash screen to go away?
I'm just guessing in the dark here (hey, this is ./ after all), but I imagine their intended purpose for this is to allow authors of flash apps a means to write applications which allow you to send video/audio greetings, take snapshots of yourself for profiles, record a voice greeting for a remote voicemail system, etc, etc. At least, the optimist in me wants to think these are the noble intentions they have (yeah, I'm probably wrong but in my fantasy world beer is free, pizza has no calories, and corporations are good - you'd like it here).
Shayne
Man, you panic so easily! (Score:2, Insightful)
This info is only available to other Flash movies from THE SAME SITE, similar to the protection provided for cookies.
It's simply a way to provide persistance from session to session at the same web site. I still wouldn't trust it with my credit card numbers, but Macromedia isn't Hitler reincarnated.
Calm down. This has only been a test.
q:]
MadCow.
OT: ya know.... (Score:2)
even Hitler reincarnated isn't Hitler reincarnated
wow... (Score:2)
Privacy is dead (Score:2, Troll)
What can they do? (Score:2)
In 100Kb, you've said "Damn, it's another bl**dy flash site". No more room for video, unless they get lucky, and get a 1-frame shot of your appalled face to go with it.
Now don't get me wrong, this is an invasion of privacy, especially if they have full control of a machine (say, Windows). I could think of a few things I'd grab, though, if I was feeling malicious. And I'm a pretty honest guy.
Re:What can they do? (Score:2)
But if the use requires permission, that's a good thing - though there is still a gap between allowing and understanding.
Oh, and I'm not crying - I've not flashed for ages. It's the old "They came for the .... but I was not a ...., so I did not defend them - then they came for me, and there was no-one left to defend me" approach. Don't worry about me, I get paranoid that PINE now parses HTML!
It's not all that bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Storing information on your computer is an old practice (cookies), and contrary to popular belief, isn't all that bad.
How many of you stay logged in on slashdot when come back to the site? That wouldn't be possible without "maintaining state" between visits.
Personally I commend Macromedia for giving developers access to such important features (stored variables) and trying to get others into the mainstream (integrating video and mic).
If you think this is an underhanded deed, then why don't you check your cookie files, you'll see quite a few, 90% are there solely to help you (10% could be tracking information, which in the end, just gives the user more relevant information).
Re:It's not all that bad (Score:2)
Really? 100% of the cookies that I allow are there to help, but at least 60% of my banned cookie site list is from advertisers, who I doubt are are putting cookies there to help me.
Re:It's not all that bad (Score:2)
Re:It's not all that bad (Score:2)
However, it is not neccessary to allow THIRD PARTIES (aka the websites themselves) to save state on YOUR computer, to do this.
That's what mozilla 'password manager' is for.
For any additional state, the website should invest in some decent web server software, that is capable of saving user-linked state on the SERVER, without crashing/caving under the load of all those .ASP scripts.
Once the user has identified themselves via the standard HTTP auth type mechanisms, it should then be up to the server to say, "okay, I remember you; here's where you should be now".
Re:It's not all that bad (Score:2)
Camera and Mike Setting : Flash server (Score:3, Informative)
http://radio.weblogs.com/0106797/2002/04/30.html#
they are going to be used in a forthcoming flash communications server that will allow you to stream audio and video.
whats the big deal?
Well, there is worse (Score:2, Funny)
What about dialup? (Score:2, Insightful)
Chill out and think - these features are *good*. (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.macromedia.com/desdev/mx/flash/wh
Everything is set to deny by default. The plugin can see your mic and camera because its on your computer! It can't send that information unless you give it permission to. Again, read the security white paper.
The new camera and mic abilities of Flash allow you to do some really powerful things that you simply can't do any other way. In fact there was a story about someone trying to build custom web conferencing software last week and I told them to wait a couple months for the server that uses these features of the Flash plugin... I was modded up to 4!
This kind of thing is going to push the web to new places. Technology is driven by innovation which later turn into standards, not the other way around.
Actually, I have some great ideas (Score:2, Informative)
What's the big deal? (Score:5, Funny)
Oh Great...A New Wave Of Spam (Score:3, Funny)
From: xxxx
Subj: Come see My Hot WebCam!
From: xxxx
Subj: We're waiting for you!
From: xxxx
Subj: Flash Installed, See Bubba pick at his ass-crack
Is this opt-in policy a good idea? (Score:3, Interesting)
What happens if I do nothing?
The Macromedia Flash Player automatically detects any default microphone or other audio recorder on your computer, and sets microphone sensitivity to a medium value.
....
What happens if I do nothing?
The Flash Player automatically detects any video cameras on your computer and displays the name of the default camera it will use. If you do not select another camera from the pop-up menu, the Flash Player uses the default camera. To see a live display of the image being detected by the default camera, click the video preview area.
Now this is scary.
But picture this-- a virus that takes your picture, records you for a minute, compresses into
I think Back Orifice [bo2k.com] already has this in as a plugin, but man, a viral version of this... What's the best way to disable a laptop mic?
W
Re:Is this opt-in policy a good idea? (Score:2)
Re:Is this opt-in policy a good idea? (Score:2)
How many web cams have physical "turn off" switches?
W
Re:Is this opt-in policy a good idea? (Score:3, Funny)
Why not make it interesting? Modify that virus so that it detects when the user is surfing lots of pr0n sites, waits 5 minutes, then captures a short video clip from the user's webcam and emails that snippet to everyone in the user's address book...
(evil grin)
That wouldn't be a problem for geeks (Score:2)
Because on average, 5 minutes is more than enough for majority geeks.
Ever since they removed... (Score:3, Interesting)
Since most flash is used for forced advertising and not for content, my main machine is flash and IE disabled by choice. At the rare site with actual flash content, my standby machine still has it, but it's rare I fire up that antique.
Re:Ever since they removed... (Score:2)
Uninstalling Flash (Score:3, Insightful)
You can find information on how to uninstall Flash here: http://www.macromedia.com/support/flash/ts/documen ts/remove_player.htm [macromedia.com]
Re:Uninstalling Flash (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Thanks! (Score:2)
Re:Uninstalling Flash (Score:2)
Why not eliminate those ActiveX problems altogether and use a browser other than IE [mozilla.org]?
Re:Uninstalling Flash (Score:2)
If you have WebTV running flash (Score:2)
To claim your privacy... (Score:3)
We need your life history to make sure it you.
Flash Slogan... (Score:2)
All the functionality of Back Orifice, now with animations!
[1] [nwinternet.com]
[2] [cultdeadcow.com]
Don't trust software with your cams/mics (Score:2)
Video conference and tech support (Score:2, Interesting)
Obviously there is room to abuse as in any tech. As long as the features are turned off by default and always, always give you the choice of whether to use them or not, I don't see any problems.
In the meanwhile if you don't like flash, pick a browser and plugin set that you can live with.
IE isn't the only one out there. Mozilla works very well for me.
don't let clewbies off the hook (Score:2)
I advocate tough love. If this behavior continues, one of the following three things will happen.
All of these are acceptable in my opinion, so I'm not going to sweat it.
Re:don't let clewbies off the hook (Score:2)
a) Adobe will get advertising money
b) and their products' (and competing products') prices will drop, benefitting everyone, those in and out of the know alike
I don't see how b) follows from a). I think a more likely statement would be 'and Macromedia's stock price goes up, and their shareholders make a killing.'
Sandboxed? (Score:3, Insightful)
What happened?
Thousands of dotcommers made enormous flash intro animations to their sites (about half of them forgetting to make a "skip intro" link), which rapidly irritated many many visitors to said sites (a study on the irritation factor of flash intros and banners would be *very* interessting). At the same time as the dotcom scene started crashing around everyone's ears, desperate internet marketing whizzes decided that flash would be a brilliant vehicle for advertising, pushed along by an equally desperate Macromedia, whose products were no longer selling like hot cakes. The results of those ideas can be seen on almost every portal on the web (ZDNet is my favourite with slashdot also not doing too badly), and visitors reactions are known to everybody it seems except for the mindless marketing people who push it. In this way it is very similar to spam.
Macromedia spent a fortune on making Flash a tool that would liven up the web and make colourful, interactive, animated, dynamic sites possible especially in conjunction with macromedia's backend flash application server, generator. Apart from a host of sites early on this trend has died out almost completely, because what macromedia didn't realise is that just like web designers/coders have to cope with different browsers, they also have to cope with users who haven't and won't use the plugin, and therefore go for the lowest common denominator in websites:html with one or two pics etc. Flash didn't save a single dotbomb from going under.
Now, just like any other large company (ahem), they need to add "features" in order to carry on making money with their product. Flash 6(MX) now has built in video, microphone and cookies. I very much doubt this is suddenly going to improve the content of all the Flash we've been getting, although it may kill one or two other companies' media players(Quicktime, WMP, Real) but, in moving out of the traditional small player that they've had, it will fast become larger, and someone is sooner or later going to find some hole in their player (actionscript getting access to the drive while ostensibly looking for cookies? Exploiting a hardware driver(keylogger)?). For all my irritation with Sun's Applet saga and java on windows, Sun worked very hard to make the language and VM design secure (and the fact that of the few exploits with browser JVM's being mostly in MS' JVM does show this). Macromedia doesn't AFAIK have that much experience in security wrt clientside technologies and time will tell what will happen with this player.
I used to be a Director programmer and with Director you could pretty much do anything on the client machine with no checks and shockwave, director's browser plugin went in the same direction as flash is going: first a straight player and then with laetr versions you could download all sort's of xtras onto the client machine. I once, as a security test, wrote a screensaver with shockwave, that everybody in the company loved (it even won an award for design). What no one realised until we tald them, was that the screensaver had been merrily scanning people's drives in the background and uploading filelists to us.
Remoting apps... (Score:3, Interesting)
You see, they had this wonderful insight:
Of course, protocols for network transparent graphics, sound et cetera already exist, but they have that nasty four letter word in them (open).
Sarcasm aside, I am sure the intent of this is to allow Flash 6 to provide Video conferencing type applications - just click on the link and there you go.
I saw a most interesting article in InfoHurl about this - the funny thing was they showed apps being remoted to Windows, Mac-OS, and Linux. Yeah, I'll believe MacroMedia will be supporting Linux with a good Flash 6 player about the same time as BillG tongue-kisses RMS - the current Flash 5 player is MUCH slower than the Windows player on the same hardware (while strangely NOT taking all available CPU!), fails to sync video and audio, and generally is unstable (Heaven forfend somebody ELSE might want to access
Welcome to zombocom (Score:3, Funny)
http://www.zombo.com/ [zombo.com]
How's that for a nice flash intro?
From the source (Score:4, Informative)
1. The default the the camera and mic is to DISALLOW a site to access them.
2. The camera and mic objects are there for something MM has coming down the tubes for a communication server via the Flash player, and the player will PROMPT users before ever granting a site access to their mics and cameras...I've got the beta of the server for testing purposes and it asks me every time (since I never check the little box asking me if I want the player to remember my setting)
3. As many people have pointed out, the Local Storage settings are essentially cookies for Flash. They work in pretty much the same fashion (can only be accessed by the domain that created them, etc.) as cookies, but are only consumable by Flash.
Personally, I wish some of the folks here would give the "Flash is evil" stuff a rest and see more people looking at the GOOD things that can be done with Flash rather than just the worthless drivel that a lot of people have produced, but that's the opinion of someone who works for MM, so I don't have much of a prayer there.
This could be VERY bad (Score:3, Insightful)
level is important. What right do they have to change my settings?!
Another reason for me to avoid Flash (Score:2, Insightful)
I guess my biggest beef with Flash is that people make IT the content as opposed to using it to accent the content. Ever been to a site where you can't bookmark shit and none of the browser navigation does shit because hitting back only restarts the whole thing? That is the kind of stuff that drives me nuts...
Just my $.02...
--Jon
I thought this was Slashdot til I read the replies (Score:2)
News for Luddites. FUD that matters.
To everyone worried about security holes that have never been exploited, the added bandwidth of streaming images and (god forbid) sound, and the thought that your microphone will be used to spy on you, here's a hint.
INSTALL LYNX YOU LUDDITES!
Thank you.
Flash slow to load...not cinematic enough (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What business does a player (Score:3, Insightful)
Honestly, if you're this paranoid you should be more concerned that your OS has control of your camera and microphone, since your OS was written by Microsoft!
graspee
Re:What business does a player (Score:4, Interesting)
I was hacking some code to interface with one of the Logitech cams, and there was a bit in the "take picture" command that seemed to serve no purpose. I couldn't find out why it was there, since flipping it did nothing.
As the sun set, I began to notice what it was for. With the bit ON, it would notify the user that it took a picture with the blink of an LED. With it off, it wouldn't. The dark room made this much more evident.
Just think of the possible uses for this one. If the FBI knows your IP, they can try to infect you with a virus that snaps a mugshot of you for them. When you are registering software, the installer can get a picture of the user and compare it against the DB of previous installations with that serial number. Your boss can see what you're doing without even opening the door.
Scary, huh? It's made me always turn my cam towards the wall when I'm not using it.
Re:What business does a player (Score:2)
it's called Sub7, it advertising it's infections in an IRC channel and then anyone with a sub7 client can take webcams pics, desktop screenies, read files, run apps whatever
Re:What business does a player (Score:2)
Scary, huh? It's made me always turn my cam towards the wall when I'm not using it.
Interesting solution...
Me, I just deleted my FAT32 partition and switched completely to Linux. Yeah, the FBI *could* try to slip some malicious code into the driver, but since it would found, they'd never do it - after all, they couldn't possibly deny it.
Re:What business does a player (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean, how could it serve a legitimate purpose if you were using your webcam for, say, security purposes - to watch your empty office or house while you were away, or you just didn't want the LED to blink when it took a picture for say - your robot vision app? Won't someone PLEASE get these hardware engineers to stop including useful features in their devices?
The intel webcams have always had this nice little shutter on the front that you can close. A very nice feature.
Uselessness of WIndows based firewalls (Score:2)
Re:Uselessness of WIndows based firewalls (Score:2)
You should have checked it out before you went all testosterone with your sweeping manly generalizations.
graspee
Re:Uselessness of WIndows based firewalls (Score:2)
See the current measures/countermeasures going on with AdAware for a preview of where things will go when there is actual $MONEY$ to be made writing malware as opposed to what pimply 15 year old script kiddies have been doing the last twenty years. The spyware authors have the exact same system level access as your firewall and equal knowledge of how the system works so how the hell can you trust it unless you also trust ALL other software running in ring0?
And remember that M$ itself will eventually be 'leveraging the platform' for revenue gains as sales continue to decline in a saturating market. Do you trust your firewall to be able to protect you against the underlying OS (or their 'select' partners) spying on you?
I define an effective firewall as a trusted system running only a well known set of trusted software under the administration of trusted personel. No program running on an untrusted computer with an insecure and untrusted OS, running an unknown and almost unknowable quantity of suspect programs with elevated privledges can possibly be called a 'firewall'. Any company marketing such a product without some extreme disclaimers is engaged in the sale of "Snake Oil" and is inherently untrustworthy. Period, end of story.
Re:Uselessness of WIndows based firewalls (Score:2)
graspee
Re:I finally upgraded from Flash (Score:2)
Enjoy.
Webcams with real on/off switches (Score:2)
Anything else is asking for trouble someday. If not today's spyware, who knows what somebody will come up with next year. But if you have to reach up and flip the camera on you are in control.
Re:a bit alarmist, no? (Score:3, Insightful)
You're a bit naive.
So you're saying that no one would want to see a CEO's webcam that has confidential papers in view of the picture? Papers that could give a competitor an advantage? (or anyone--such information could make a person very rich in the stock market) ...or how about a credit card in view of the cam. Maybe those items would be hard to read, but someone could get lucky, and the mic wouldn't even have this sort of problem if any of this info is spoken aloud. In fact the mic could probably catch information that is even more sensitive...
Maybe they don't really want to look at your webcam pics, but use them to embarass you. Ever use your computer in your underwear? Ever change in front of your webcam? Ever pick your nose? Those events could be posted all over the internet.
So it is off by default. That doesn't guarantee that the plugin doesn't have a bug somewhere that'll allow a webmaster to get access to the webcam or mic anyway. It's another possible way some wacko can access your system. Granted that the most used browsers have known security holes that are much worse, so to some degree you have a point, but it is still a concern.