Firefox OS Security: Part 2 – User Experience and Security Updates

When presenting Firefox OS to people, security is a big topic. Can an operating system built on web technologies be secure? What has Mozilla built in to avoid drive-by downloads and malware? How can a browser-based app be secure without making the UX suffer by asking the user to react to a lot of “do you want to allow this?”. In this, the second of a two part video series Christian Heilmann (@codepo8), principal evangelist of Mozilla, talks to Michael Coates (@_mwc), chair of @OWASP Board about the user experience when it comes to installing and using apps and the security update model for Firefox OS.

You can watch the video on YouTube.

Firefox OS was built on top of the technologies that power the Web. Following Mozilla’s security practices and knowledge from over 10 years of securing Firefox, Firefox OS is engineered as a multi-tiered system that protects users while delivering the power of the mobile web. The design ensures users are in control of their data and developers have APIs and technologies at their disposal to unlock the power of the Web.

Additional links for more information:

About Chris Heilmann

Evangelist for HTML5 and open web. Let's fix this!

More articles by Chris Heilmann…


6 comments

  1. kris

    Do Mozilla or someone have plan to soon publish a book on Firefox OS.

    November 22nd, 2013 at 21:08

    1. Ivan Dejanovic

      There is one book already that I know of by Andre Garzia. I believe it was promoted on Mozilla Hacks.

      November 23rd, 2013 at 00:58

    2. Fawad Hassan

      Here’s link for the book
      https://leanpub.com/quickguidefirefoxosdevelopment/read

      December 21st, 2013 at 01:14

  2. sube sungh sujan

    i have a problem on use the Facebook on Firefox last 4 days. please help me.

    December 2nd, 2013 at 07:41

    1. Robert Nyman [Editor]

      Please try the Firefox Support or the Facebook Support.

      December 2nd, 2013 at 07:50

  3. ffcomment

    Negatives:

    Small screen.
    Non-capacitive display?
    Small market share.
    I should be able to shut the display off just by pushing the power button.
    I should be able to simply set timezone without having to set city.
    Why should I have to set the date and time myself?
    Don’t be afraid of color. (See the tiles on Windows Phone.)
    On-screen buttons take up precious screen real estate.
    Moving icons from one home screen to another not immediately obvious or possible.
    No select/select all/copy/paste?
    Filthy camera (but it works).
    No natural language processing.
    Status/notification bar should be hidden when watching full-screen videos in browser.

    December 3rd, 2013 at 15:32

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