Anyone saying that Microsoft is going to turn off a firewall so that it can get around it isn’t thinking. Microsoft “owns” the entire OS. So, if they really had some nefarious plan and wanted to secretly spy on you to make their advertising revenue grow (yea, MSN is certainly the ...
SSL certificates are issued by a Certificate Authority (CA). Before a CA can issue an SSL to an individual business owner or an organization, they have to prove that the entity requesting the SSL certificate legally owns and operates its website’s domain. This process is known as SSL certi...
using your web browser. In Firefox, you have to hit Ctrl+U to open it up. For other browsers, it can be found under View > Source or View > Page Source. This option might also be on the right
On the other side, most end users do not like advertisement very much when they browse websites, that is why plug-ins like adblock are so popular. As declared in Chrome Store, the adblock plug-in owns 40 million users. However, adnetwork providers are not so keen about this idea as th...
Second, there is often confusion over who “owns” a pointer, that is, inconsistency between functions that allocate and return dynamic memory that the caller must free (like strdup or asprintf or OpenSSL’s ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8 which copies a string data structure to an array of char in ...
t render at all for the user in Firefox. I finally ended up deleting the page and tried to recreate it with the affected user’s session using Firefox. That’s when I was given a much better clue. TheContent Editor Web Parton the page returned: “A Web Part or Web Form Control on ...
In 1996 when the Internet was becoming a commercial- ly viable entity, Netscape was the Web Browser of choice. Though late to the game, Microsoft soon dominated the market with their freely available and built-in Internet Explorer. Netscape has become a fond remembrance. Firefox, Google Chrome...
Looks likeallthe browsers are starting to get out of the way of the web and include less crap. There's interesting "pairings" in the interfaces, like the back button in IE9 and FF4.1, the colored button in Firefox and Opera, the settings gear in IE9 and Safari, and the refresh butto...
The second thing you can do is view the code of the websiteand see if the profile is hidden somewhere within it. You’ll want to view the source code of the site, using your web browser. In Firefox, you have to hit Ctrl+U to open it up. For other browsers, it can be found un...