Government refuses to upgrade from IE6

by Pete Mason on 2 August 2010, 11:08

Tags: Internet Explorer, Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), UK Government

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Internet Explorer 6 was released almost nine years ago, back when Windows XP was still a fresh, young OS. However, like the operating system, many companies are still clinging to the ancient browser, despite numerous security concerns. Unfortunately the British Government can safely be added to its list of supporters, as a recent statement confirmed that public offices will not be upgrading any time soon.

There's a hole in my browser, dear Liza

The comments came in response to an online petition urging the UK Government to begin moving internal systems away from IE6.  By the time it closed on June 6, the appeal managed to gather a total of 6,223 signatures. The original submission asked the Prime Minister to encourage public offices, as well as the general public, to upgrade from the outdated browser. According to the request, Germany and France have already begun taking these steps and the support of the British Government would aid global efforts to move away from IE6.

The response, though, wasn't particularly encouraging. An upgrade, even to the latest version of Internet Explorer, was claimed to be "a very large operation" that would "take months at significant potential cost to the taxpayer". As a result, it is currently deemed "more cost effective in many cases to continue to use IE6 and rely on other measures, such as firewalls and malware scanning software, to further protect public sector internet users".

Then patch it, dear David

To be honest, as disappointed as we are by this statement, we're not especially surprised. There are a huge number of computer systems across the public sector, and it would legitimately take a long time for all of those systems to be tested and patched up. Having said that, plugging a leak is rarely cheaper that fixing the problem in the long run - and Internet Explorer 6 is quite a leak. 

Government computers undoubtedly hold a wealth of potentially sensitive information, and it is a little disconcerting to know that they are running such dated and potentially unsafe software. While no-one expects every update to be rolled out instantly, IE6 is practically from another era in technology life-cycles, in terms of both security and functionality. 

Regardless, updates and support for IE6 will continue into 2014, when extended support for Windows XP SP3 finally ends. This should give the Government a few years worth of patches to get its act together. Let's just hope we're not still having this conversation in four years time.

 



HEXUS Forums :: 17 Comments

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Of course we'll have this conversation in 4 years time. If the government hasn't moved to proper standards compliant intra/extranet by now they definitely wont while they're trying to combat Gordy's legacy.
The pathetic whining about it's going to take ages doesn't justify why the upgrades aren't being done.
IE 8 can be deployed via SCCM overnight to all machines and next morning, everyone's on new IE. I can't see what the problem is ?
OilSheikh
The pathetic whining about it's going to take ages doesn't justify why the upgrades aren't being done.
IE 8 can be deployed via SCCM overnight to all machines and next morning, everyone's on new IE. I can't see what the problem is ?

unfortunately alot of the software that the public secotr uses, is via the intranet, or web based systems, and alot of these were written for ie6, along with the bugs and glitches that IE6 contains… so upgrading them to modern browsers makes these software packages obsolete and they'd have to invest lots of money to patch, or re-write the software.

so this is where the expense comes in :(
I work for a large international chemical company, we havent shifted from IE6 yet either.
mmh
unfortunately alot of the software that the public secotr uses, is via the intranet, or web based systems, and alot of these were written for ie6, along with the bugs and glitches that IE6 contains… so upgrading them to modern browsers makes these software packages obsolete and they'd have to invest lots of money to patch, or re-write the software.

so this is where the expense comes in :(

You're correct - that's the usual excuse trotted out. Of course, a cynic would argue that (a) they were a stupid bunch for allowing IE6 only extensions anyway, and (b) that they would need to upgrade anyway at some point, so where's the harm in doing it before they absolutely have to?

But I guess that HMG aren't the only folks to do this. Are there any web developers out there in Hexus-land (I'm in ‘platforms’ not ‘applications’) who'd care to comment how difficult de-IE6-ing really is? (I'm curious) Aren't there any tools available to assist?

BTW, weren't FR and DE governments not only saying “no IE6” but also saying that they preferred something other than IE?

Bob