Mozilla
Corp, creator of the popular Firefox Web browser, said on Thursday it
would follow Google Inc and no longer recognise new certificates of
trust issued by a Chinese Internet agency.
Google’s
Chrome and Mozilla’s Firefox are some of the world’s most widely used
browsers, and the moves could disrupt users accessing a broad range of
Chinese websites.
As
a result of Mozilla’s step, users of Firefox may get a warning when
attempting to visit sites certified after April 1 by the China Internet
Network Information Center (CNNIC), the body that administers China’s
Internet by allocating and certifying IP addresses and Web domain names.
CNNIC
issued a statement on Thursday calling Google’s move “unacceptable and
unintelligible” and asked the Web giant to consider its users’
interests.
Zhang
Jing, a representative of CNNIC’s media relations department, could not
immediately provide comment about Mozilla’s move when reached late
Friday.
Mozilla
and Google have both objected to CNNIC delegating its authority to
issue certificates to an Egyptian company called MCS Holdings, which
mishandled the matter last week.
MCS Holdings attributed a security lapse that took place on a test network to human error.
Internet
authorities around the world issue certificates of trust to websites to
verify their authenticity when visited by a Web browser. Hackers could
in theory impersonate unverified websites and intercept data using a
“man-in-the-middle” attack.
Google and Mozilla have said they would allow CNNIC to reapply so its certificates could be recognized again.
Chrome
is the world’s most popular desktop and tablet browser, with nearly 50
percent share, while Microsoft Corp’s Internet Explorer has nearly 18
percent compared to Firefox at 16.9 percent, according Statcounter.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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