Pick a popular online service with a public API and write some scripts that integrate with them. Learn by doing.
Pick a popular online service with a public API and write some scripts that integrate with them. Learn by doing.
In my (non-expert) opinion, there are a few reasons
Incorrect. The app was baked into the Pixel firmware from Google, not a manufacturer specific OEM.
So long as you have robust data sanitization on the backend to prevent XSS and HTML injection attacks…
If you can get away with just using Markdown, you should definitely use that instead of full HTML.
It’s perfectly normal for your computer to have daemons.
You should definitely set up a DMARC record to prevent other people from using your email domain to send spam. If you don’t have DMARC configured, other email servers will give any senders the benefit of the doubt and accept mail that claims to be from your domain.
You can just set the DMARC record to reject 100% of unverified mail and call it a day. Since you aren’t sending anything it won’t affect you.
The ideal solution is to have one identity provider and then use Single Sign-On (SSO) to authenticate your users to all of their other apps. All of the big identity providers (Microsoft, Google, Okta, etc) support security keys.
I recognize that it might not be feasible to use SSO for all of your apps as a small business; a lot of SaaS platforms unfortunately charge extra for SSO. That being said my advice would be use SSO whenever possible for your apps and include SSO availability in your decision-making process for purchasing new software.
For those apps that do not support SSO, my advice would be to either compensate employees for using their personal devices for work or give them corporate devices that are only used for work things.
According to all known laws of aviation, there is no way that Dumbo should be able to fly. Its ears are too small to get its fat little body off the ground. Dumbo, of course, flies anyway. Because Dumbo doesn’t care what you think is impossible.
“Embargo” sure is a funny way to say “launching pirate raids and missiles”.
It’s actually coldest right after sunrise (some sources say a few minutes, some say up to an hour). But the general idea is when the first rays of light hit the surface at sunrise, there isn’t enough energy coming in to offset the amount of energy radiating away from the planet. So for a little bit after the sun rises, it’s still cooling down.
And then, because you were never in a classroom and never took a class on security, you probably have no idea what a buffer overflow attack is or how to use tools like valgrind to check for them.
Then you put your C code on the internet and get your server pwned inside of an hour.
Slightly hyperbolic? Yes definitely. But there is a reason we don’t teach C to beginners anymore. Generally you want them to understand the mindset of coding before throwing them in the deep end. And I would bet nothing has caused more people to quit programming then
Segmentation fault: core dumped