Microsoft has denied that a spoofing technique available on its Internet Explorer browser is a security vulnerability. The software giant accepted the possibility that spoofing could occur on version six of IE, but rejected claims that this was a security flaw.< . . .
Microsoft has denied that a spoofing technique available on its Internet Explorer browser is a security vulnerability. The software giant accepted the possibility that spoofing could occur on version six of IE, but rejected claims that this was a security flaw.

In a prepared email statement from the company, a spokesperson said: "Microsoft is aware of a security issue reported last week that could allow spoofing the URL a user sees in Internet Explorer's status bar. Users could see a URL in the status bar when the mouse hovers over the link on a webpage, but clicking the link would take the user to a different URL. Our investigation has indicated that this is not a security vulnerability."

Last week, a researcher in Germany, Benjamin Tobias Franz, posted warnings on bulletin board Web site Bugtraq, stating that Internet Explorer could spoof links if users put two URLs and a table inside an HTML href tag.


The result, Franz claimed, was that malformed links to URLs, could take users to an entirely different Web site without their knowledge.

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