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On July 6, 2016, the European Parliament set into policy the Directive on Security of Network and Information Systems (the NIS Directive). [ 21 ] The directive went into effect in August 2016, and all member states of the European Union were given 21 months to incorporate the directive's regulations into their own national laws. [ 22 ]
Python 2.6 was released to coincide with Python 3.0, and included some features from that release, as well as a "warnings" mode that highlighted the use of features that were removed in Python 3.0. [ 28 ] [ 10 ] Similarly, Python 2.7 coincided with and included features from Python 3.1, [ 29 ] which was released on June 26, 2009.
This is sometimes used to denote a new development phase being released. For example, Minecraft Alpha ran from version 1.0.0 to 1.2.6, and when Beta was released, it reset the major version number and ran from 1.0 to 1.8. Once the game was fully released, the major version number again reset to 1.0.0. [18]
24, 25.0.0 ESR 24.0–24.1.0: No Yes Yes Disabled by default Disabled by default [36] No Yes Yes Yes Not affected Mitigated Vulnerable Vulnerable Not affected Vulnerable Yes [n 18] 25.0.1, 26 ESR 24.1.1–24.8.1: No Yes Yes Disabled by default Disabled by default No Yes Yes Yes Not affected Mitigated Vulnerable Lowest priority [33] [34] Not ...
Release 2.7.1 was released on October 21, 2011 and it targets CPython 2.7. [12] Release 2.7.2.1 was released on March 13, 2012. It enables support for ZIP file format libraries, SQLite, and compiled executables. [13] Release 2.7.4 was released on September 7, 2013. [14] Release 2.7.5 was released on December 6, 2014 and mostly consists of bug ...
A more general directive statement was proposed and rejected in PEP 244 -- The `directive' statement; these all date to 2001. ECMAScript also adopts the use syntax for directives, with the difference that pragmas are declared as string literals (e.g. "use strict";, or "use asm";), rather than a function call.
A workaround for SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0, roughly equivalent to random IVs from TLS 1.1, was widely adopted by many implementations in late 2011. [30] In 2014, the POODLE vulnerability of SSL 3.0 was discovered, which takes advantage of the known vulnerabilities in CBC, and an insecure fallback negotiation used in browsers.
Text of the original directive on the legal protection of computer programs (no longer in force) . Consolidated version of the directive (1993-11-19) no longer in force; Report from the Commission to the Council, the European Parliament and the Economic and Social Committee on the implementation and effects of directive 91/250/EEC on the legal protection of computer programs, (2000-04-10)