The web browser we all love to hate apparently has a pretty wide-reaching design flaw.

Microsoft confirms every single version of Internet Explorer in use today has a vulnerability to what's known as "use after free" attacks. That would allow attackers to execute code remotely on a user's computer.

Microsoft explains an attacker could access "an object in memory that has been deleted or has not been properly allocated. The vulnerability may corrupt memory in a way that could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code."

Gizmodo says Microsoft will likely launch a security patch soon to take care of the issue. But this news has some people wondering: who even uses Internet Explorer anymore?

The answer: quite a few people. Sure, it's fallen from its mid-2000s glory days, but according to security firm Fire Eye, Internet Explorer still holds 26 percent of the browser market share. (Via Wikimedia Commons)

Microsoft advises Internet Explorer users to keep the browser updated, so any necessary security patches can take effect.

About the Author

Keep Reading

Cox Enterprises CEO Alex Taylor and AJC Publisher Andrew Morse were joined by AJC editors and Atlanta business react during the ribbon-cutting ceremony at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in Midtown on Friday, January 24, 2025.
(Miguel Martinez/AJC)

Credit: Miguel Martinez-Jimenez

Featured

Austin Walters died from an overdose in 2021 after taking a Xanax pill laced with fentanyl, his father said. A new law named after Austin and aimed at preventing deaths from fentanyl has resulted in its first convictions in Georgia, prosecutors said. (Family photo)

Credit: Family photo