intervista in inglese con Johnathan Nightingale VP del settore Firefox Engineering:
The Engadget Interview: Mozilla Firefox VP Johnathan NightingaleTalk to those high up at Mozilla and they'll tell you that the platform war for third place is a waste of time; that Windows Phone and BlackBerry are as doomed as each other, because developers will never, ever be interested in the "five percent". That's not to say there isn't room for a rebellious alternative, but the way Mozilla sees it, such an option has already been available since the beginning. It's not another proprietary ecosystem, but something that spans all ecosystems: namely, the web itself, in all its open and hackable glory.
In Aurora arriva Content Security Policy per permettere alle pagine web di definire restrizioni sui contenuti
http://mzl.la/13Bp8wN Content Security Policy (usually abbreviated as CSP) is a way for web pages to restrict the sites allowed to include content within the page. It also can restrict whether inline scripts are allowed to run and inline styles/CSS are allowed to be applied to the page. In general, CSP allows web developers greater control over their content, helping mitigate several security problems. One major benefit of CSP is that, by default, it prevents inline scripts from executing. This greatly helps mitigate the threat of XSS (Cross Site Scripting) or other forms of script injection. For a great introduction to CSP, see Mike West’s post “An Introduction to Content Security Policy”.