Firefox heads for five per cent share

IE looking over its shoulder...

NEWS

The popularity of alternative web browser Firefox continues to rise at the expense of Microsoft's Internet Explorer, according to a new study.

From the beginning of December through mid-January, 4.78 per cent of internet surfers studied by online measurement company WebSideStory used the Mozilla Foundation's Firefox browser, a gain of 0.88 percentage points. At the same time, IE usage declined 0.7 per cent to 92.7 per cent, the firm reported. WebSideStory said IE use has declined from 96.7 per cent since June.

The study measured market share by embedding sensors on major websites such as those of the Walt Disney Internet Group, Best Buy, Sony and Liz Claiborne. Previous studies from WebSideStory tested all operating systems, but the company said its Windows-only numbers are more accurate because new configurations in Apple's Safari browser inadvertently skewed results. WebSideStory retrieves data from 30 million internet users a day passing through its monitored sites. The company then takes a snapshot of two days and compares the growth.

Mozilla, an open-source software foundation formed by Netscape, launched Firefox 1.0 in November, after recording more than eight million downloads of its test version. As downloads continued to surge, measurement firms such as WebSideStory and Dutch market researcher OneStat.com began releasing data tracking Firefox gains and IE declines. In December, OneStat reported that IE's market share had slipped to 88.9 per cent, a figure Microsoft disputed.

Even though Microsoft maintains the dominance it has enjoyed since defeating Netscape Communications' browser in the mid-1990s, Firefox's snowballing popularity is raising eyebrows.

Much of Firefox's success rides on it simply not being IE. Firefox fans have praised the new browser's automatic pop-up blocking and tabbed browsing features, but security has been one of the big points. Viruses and spyware are often aimed at IE because of its near-total market dominance.

However, Firefox's popularity may eventually attract the attention of malicious code writers trying to exploit security holes. The recent discovery of a potentially damaging software flaw suggested the potential for Firefox attacks.

Since beginning its measurements last summer, WebSideStory has been cautious to draw any broad conclusions about Firefox's popularity. This time around, the company said many people are not only downloading Firefox, they're sticking with it and using it.

Geoff Johnston, an analyst at WebSideStory, said: "We are finding that in many cases there's room for two browsers on the desktop, and in other cases people are completely switched over."

A Microsoft spokesman did not immediately comment for this story.

Jim Hu writes for CNET News.com.

Comments

There are 7 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Fank

    I use Thunderbird instead of Outlook Express and Firefox and I am perfectly happy. Whenever I can it is goodbye Microsoft

    • 24 January 2005 14:41
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  2. 2. Roy Judd

    Firefox is superb! It's easy to use, and easy to configure. Themes make it a doddle to customise and, best of all, it appears to be considerably faster than Internet Explorer. I’ve nothing against IE, but Firefox is simply better software, and that’s empowering. It’s also a cross-platform browser, offering flavours for both Linux and Mac systems. Finally, I appreciate the security enhancements that Firefox currently provides, and while it has that edge, IE stands little chance of a resurgence on my system.

    • 24 January 2005 22:01
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  3. 3. the piethief

    The only thing holding it back is lazy web 'desginers'.
    Alot of web designers today still 'optimize' their website for a particular browser, in a particular resolution, on a particular OS etc..
    Excuses aside this is because they are lazy, i.e. its percieved to be quicker to make a site this way.
    The only effective way to make a site work on multiple browsers and Operating systems is to write them to W3C standards. As market share of decent applications like Firefox persists more and more companies with mandate that their websites to maintain the customer experience.

    Lazy web masters you have been warned. Put your beach balls and skate boards away and start reading at www.w3c.org

    • 25 January 2005 11:39
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  4. 4. NB

    The only thing holding me back from a permanent conversion to Firefox is my preference for the IE implementation of bookmarks/favourites. I want to see my bookmarks displayed on screen permanently, and not have to mouse over a long list and wait for it to scroll. yawn....

    • 25 January 2005 13:21
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  5. 5. Jamie

    Note to NB (author of previous post)

    Try pressing Ctrl-B

    • 25 January 2005 14:29
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  6. 6. Steve

    To NB;

    You LIKE!? the IE favorites?... you're kidding right?... what a joke!

    Favaorites are impossible to organize, and search through... they don't support bookmarklets larger than 508 characters, they don't support RSS, and they can't do XUL...

    And the best, is the "this link contains... blah blah, that might be unsafe... are you sure you want to add this link..." alerts...

    If IE followed the spec on JavaScript, instead of implementing JScript, they wouldn't need this warning...

    Then again, it doesn't matter much, because of the lousy bookmarklet support.

    • 25 January 2005 14:34
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  7. 7. anonymous

    Jamie .. I just pressed CTRL-B ! wow now I like Firefox even better.

    • 25 January 2005 22:50
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