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Ow. That's really, really bad.

Opera is already a pretty small actor so stuff like this probably hurts them more than the bigger guys. This incident will probably show in the bottom-line later on.

Hope they get their things sorted out, and I really hope they learn enough to avoid having anything like this happening in the future. Things like this are never OK if there is a second time around.



Opera is still big on mobile, there's still nothing quite like Opera Mini, they should be careful at defending this.


What do you mean nothing quite like it? It may be the very best at supporting more platforms and raw speed, but Amazon Silk [0] and Chrome Mobile [1] are hot on their heals. There are a lot of advantages (eg. how CSS and JS aren't hamstrung) to the later two, and not having to traverse to SWE networks has to be advantageous -- anecdotal.

[0] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Silk [1] https://developers.google.com/chrome/mobile/docs/data-compre...


Opera Mini supports a shitload of platforms, offering a bandwidth-saving, smooth (well..), fast browsing experience. What other browser offers this?

I'm not much of a Opera fan, but we need to give credit where credit is due.


I don't mean to discredit Opera Mini, and I did give it credit for platform compatibility and maybe raw speed. There are numerous reasons the Chrome solution is better for modern, web apps. I can't say for sure about speed, but anecdotal evidence and an educated guess would have me believe talking through a more local proxy and with SPDY it outweighing Mini's "binary" protocol.

Of course, with the web moving towards HTTPS, technologies like SPDY are forward thinking and proxies get shelved.


Of course, you are right, but for now most of the phones on the planet do not support "modern" browsers or have access to high speed internet.

As the other commenter outlined, for these kind of devices Opera is a keyhole to the internet.

And you will notice that even on modern hardware with good access to the internet, Opera works smoother/faster than other browsers (it's at least the case on my android tablet).


Yeah, it works on my terrible featurephone, and delivers a really extraordinarily good web experience all things considered. It's like a keyhole to the internet, except it renders everything more or less perfectly, unlike every other featurephone browser ever.


This is really bad, but it depends who the attacker is, I wouldnt hold it against them if it was a government (or government sponsored entity).


A government (or government sponsored entity) probably wouldn't be so brazen to start using the stolen certificate to distribute malware on Opera's site.

I would imagine that keeping this a secret would be worth a lot more to the right people.


Perhaps this has happened to many other software firms, and the malware, is all undetected, perhaps they just screwed up their tracks this time.




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