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After the release of its web browser for Windows, Apple
today announced the Safari was downloaded over 1 million time in the first 48
hours. The first public beta of the browser was made available on Monday and
Apple claims Safari it’s the safest browser.
Safari 3 for Windows requires Windows XP or Windows Vista, a
minimum of 256 MB of memory and a system with at least a 500 MHz Intel Pentium
processor.
Safari had about 5 percent of the market share for Internet
browsers with more than 18 million users when it was previously available only
for Macintosh computers, according to Apple.
Though shortly after the release some securities problems
were discovered and Apple issued an update. The weaknesses found could allow
attackers to run malicious code and take control of target PCs.
David Maynor of Errata Security posted notice of a bug about
two hours after Apple made Safari 3 available for Windows. He later discovered
other six bugs. Four could be exploited to crash the browser and/or PC in a
denial of service; the other two were remote execution vulnerabilities.
“Apple issued an update to the Safari for Windows public
beta today to fix the security vulnerabilities that were reported earlier this
week. Safari updates are delivered to beta testers through Apple’s Software
Update Application,” an Apple spokesman told Macworld.
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