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Latest coverage for Mozilla

Mozilla develops Firefox and related internet technologies, with vulnerability disclosures and security updates relevant to browser security and safety.

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Background for this topic.

Mozilla is an open-source software organization best known for developing Firefox and related internet technologies. Its security relevance centers on software that parses untrusted web content: browsers expose users to malicious sites, crafted documents, extensions, and vulnerable dependencies, so flaws in rendering, JavaScript, networking, or privilege boundaries can have serious consequences.

Mozilla publishes security advisories for Firefox and maintains release channels including Extended Support Release (ESR), providing data for vulnerability and patch management. High-severity bugs may enable code execution, sandbox escape, credential theft, or privacy exposure, although severity alone does not prove exploitation. Practitioners should track advisories and affected versions, prioritize updates, restrict untrusted extensions, and apply enterprise policies where appropriate. Firefox privacy controls, including tracking protection and anti-fingerprinting features, reduce some collection and profiling but do not replace endpoint hardening or secure identity practices.

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'There is no evidence to suggest that TrustCor violated conduct, policy, or procedure' says biz Mozilla and Microsoft have taken action against a certificate authority accused of having close ties to a US military contractor that allegedly paid software developers to embed data-harvesting malware in mobile apps.…

A Barcelona-based surveillanceware vendor named Variston IT is said to have surreptitiously planted spyware on targeted devices by exploiting several zero-day flaws in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, and Windows, some of which date back to December 2018

A Barcelona-based surveillanceware vendor named Variston IT is said to have surreptitiously planted spyware on targeted devices by exploiting several zero-day flaws in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, and Windows, some of which date back to December 2018