security@mozilla.org reports:
	This entry contains 8 vulnerabilities:
	
	- CVE-2024-8381: A potentially exploitable type
	confusion could be triggered when looking up a property
	name on an object being used as the `with` environment.
- CVE-2024-8382: Internal browser event interfaces were
	exposed to web content when privileged EventHandler listener
	callbacks ran for those events. Web content that tried to
	use those interfaces would not be able to use them with
	elevated privileges, but their presence would indicate
	certain browser features had been used, such as when a user
	opened the Dev Tools console.
- CVE-2024-8383: Firefox normally asks for confirmation
	before asking the operating system to find an application to
	handle a scheme that the browser does not support. It did not
	ask before doing so for the Usenet-related schemes news: and
	snews:.  Since most operating systems don't have a
	trusted newsreader installed by default, an unscrupulous
	program that the user downloaded could register itself as a
	handler. The website that served the application download
	could then launch that application at will.
- CVE-2024-8384: The JavaScript garbage collector could
	mis-color cross-compartment objects if OOM conditions were
	detected at the right point between two passes. This could have
	led to memory corruption.
- CVE-2024-8385: A difference in the handling of
	StructFields and ArrayTypes in WASM could be used to trigger
	an exploitable type confusion vulnerability.
- CVE-2024-8386: If a site had been granted the permission
	to open popup windows, it could cause Select elements to
	appear on top of another site to perform a spoofing attack.
- CVE-2024-8387: Memory safety bugs present in Firefox 129,
	Firefox ESR 128.1, and Thunderbird 128.1. Some of these bugs
	showed evidence of memory corruption and we presume that with
	enough effort some of these could have been exploited to run
	arbitrary code.
- CVE-2024-8389: Memory safety bugs present in Firefox 129.
	Some of these bugs showed evidence of memory corruption and we
	presume that with enough effort some of these could have been
	exploited to run arbitrary code.