In an autumn 2013 poll, security-conscious browser users overwhelmingly voted Firefox as the most secure, but during the annual Pwn2own hacking contest in March 2014, Firefox was exploited four times with zero-day attacks, making it one of the least secure browsers. To complicate matters further, a 2013 comparative analysis of five popular web browsers by NSS Labs found that Internet Explorer outperformed its competitors. Even so, the NSS Labs research showed that no single browser uniformly protected users against the majority of security threats and privacy risks.
If no single browser is bulletproof, the next best thing is to make your favourite browser as secure as possible. Here are five ways you can enhance the security of your browser:
HTTPS Everywhere: The Electronic Frontier Foundation and The Tor Project jointly developed this Firefox, Chrome, and Opera extension. HTTPS is a communications protocol for securing communications over a computer network, vs the standard HTTP protocol, which is more widely used but less secure. (The S in HTTPS stands for secure.) HTTPS Everywhere encrypts communication with many major websites to help secure your browsing experience.
Web of Trust (also known as WOT): This extension for Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, Safari and Opera helps you determine if a website is safe to surf. The extension displays traffic signal icons next to URLs and links. Green means the site is reliable; yellow indicates you should proceed with caution; red translates to steer clear. The ratings are crowd sourced from WOT's global user base and are supported by trusted third-party sources, such as up-to-date directories of malware sites.
LongURL.org: If you're on Twitter or Facebook and you see a shortened link embedded in an interesting post, you might click it without a second thought. But shortened links have been known to mask malicious links. If you're unsure of a shortened link, copy and paste it into the search box at LongURL.org. You'll see where the link would take you, without having to actually click through to the site. LongURL.org is also available as a Firefox browser extension.