Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

New web privacy system, the key to safe browsing

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 06 Oct, 2014 05:37 AM
    Researchers have built a new system that protects internet users' privacy while increasing the flexibility for web developers to build web applications that combine data from different web sites, dramatically improving the safety of surfing the web.
     
    The system called "Confinement with Origin Web Labels" (COWL) works with Mozilla's Firefox and Google's Chrome web browsers and prevents malicious codes in websites from leaking sensitive information to unauthorised parties.
     
    Currently, web users' privacy can be compromised by a malicious JavaScript code hidden in seemingly legitimate websites.
     
    The website's operator may have incorporated a code obtained elsewhere into his or her website without realising that the code contains bugs or is malicious.
     
    "Such codes can access sensitive data within the same or other browser tabs, allowing unauthorised parties to obtain or modify data without the user's knowledge," explained study co-author professor Brad Karp from the University College London.
     
    "COWL achieves both privacy for the user and flexibility for the web application developer. Achieving both these aims, which are often in opposition in many system designs, is one of the central challenges in computer systems security research," Karp maintained.
     
    Free to download, COWL lets web developers build feature-rich applications that combine data from different websites not requiring users to share their login details directly with third-party web applications.
     
    "This ensures that the user's sensitive data seen by such an application does not leave the browser. Both web developers and users win," added Deian Stefan, PhD student at Stanford University.
     
    The team included researchers from University College London, Stanford Engineering, Google, Chalmers and Mozilla Research.
     
    The team described the system in a paper that is scheduled to be shared this month at the "Proceedings of the 11th USENIX Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation", a premier venue for operating systems research.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    How text messages can help control diabetes

    How text messages can help control diabetes
    The unsolicited text messages that ask you every day to buy a flat or visit a massage parlour must have irritated you a lot, but if efficiently used, the short text messages also have the potential to help control diabetes.

    How text messages can help control diabetes

    Digital addiction a psychiatric disorder: Experts

    Digital addiction a psychiatric disorder: Experts
    Do you find it difficult to leave your smartphone even for a minute or have cravings to check it without any real purpose? Chances are you have become an addict and need professional help.

    Digital addiction a psychiatric disorder: Experts

    Men! New dating app strictly by invitation only

    Men! New dating app strictly by invitation only
    For all the men out there vying for female attention online, the going may get tougher with a new app.

    Men! New dating app strictly by invitation only

    Laser to strike down drones soon a reality

    Laser to strike down drones soon a reality
    It's ben imagined for long by sci-fi novelists and gamers and is now a reality. The US military is developing a laser weapon to shoot down enemy drones or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

    Laser to strike down drones soon a reality

    Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!

    Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!
    You have to be careful before liking a picture on Facebook or sending a tweet while you are wearing this dress. Scientists at New York University have designed a dress that gradually turns transparent as the wearer's online activity increases.

    Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!

    Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study

    Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study
    You must have heard - and might be believing by now - that internet sounded the death knell for newspapers. But that may not be true.

    Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study