Aug
16
The Dutch online IT magazine webwereld.nl reports that hosting providers such as Digitalus and D-hosting are increasingly being confronted with all sorts of problems caused by security vulnerabilities in the content management systems used by their clients.
Joomla, Drupal and Mambo are the three cms's mentioned in the article as the main culprits (or at least, the users of these systems not updating their software). The hosting providers were able to solve part of the issues by changing some PHP settings, but also continuously urge their customers to apply security updates as soon as they become available.
Luckily, the update module, which notifies the user as soon as there's a new version available of a module that is currently in use, will ship with Drupal 6. Hopefully this will ease the pain a bit.
On the other hand, the GPL states that anyone is free to modify or extend the software to their liking, so security issues will always exist and are often beyond the control of the software community itself.
On a side note, the article mentions that 10% to 20% of D-hosting's clients use Joomla. No statistics were given for Drupal though.
Hi Dries, wanted to blog that as well.
I know some smaller (100+ servers) low end (shared) webhosting companies and for them it's a real problem. Some of them made custom scripts to check the installed Joomla versions and warn and then shut off customers that run older version.
Dutch online IT magazine webwereld.nl is good.
First I must disclose that the CMS I am currently using is Xoops which I found it easier to install over Mambo at the time I tried both. Currently besides Joomla I have heard many good things about Typo3. Why didn’t you retain it in your comparison?
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thanks
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