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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.
Requests a web application to disable their tracking of a user. This is Mozilla's version of the X-Do-Not-Track header field (since Firefox 4.0 Beta 11). Safari and IE9 also have support for this field. [25] On March 7, 2011, a draft proposal was submitted to IETF. [26] The W3C Tracking Protection Working Group is producing a specification. [27]
Angular is a complete rewrite from the same team that built AngularJS. The Angular ecosystem consists of a diverse group of over 1.7 million developers, library authors, and content creators. [5] According to the Stack Overflow Developer Survey, Angular is one of the most commonly used web frameworks. [6]
ESR 128.7: 135 Browser or OS API Version Platforms SSL 2.0 (insecure) SSL 3.0 (insecure) TLS 1.0 (deprecated) TLS 1.1 (deprecated) TLS 1.2 TLS 1.3 EV certificate SHA-2 certificate ECDSA certificate BEAST CRIME POODLE (SSLv3) RC4 FREAK Logjam Protocol selection by user Microsoft Internet Explorer (1–10) [n 20] Windows Schannel: 1.x
Internet Explorer is built on the CryptoAPI of Windows and thus starting with version 7 on Windows Vista (not XP [14]) supports OCSP checking. [15] All versions of Mozilla Firefox support OCSP checking. Firefox 3 enables OCSP checking by default. [16] Safari on macOS supports OCSP checking. It is enabled by default as of Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion).
The current (as of November 2023) stable release of AngularJS is 1.8.3 [19] In January 2018, a schedule was announced for phasing-out AngularJS: after releasing 1.7.0, the active development on AngularJS would continue until June 30, 2018. Afterwards, 1.7 was supported until December 31, 2021 as long-term support. [4] [5]
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Chunked transfer encoding is a streaming data transfer mechanism available in Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) version 1.1, defined in RFC 9112 §7.1.In chunked transfer encoding, the data stream is divided into a series of non-overlapping "chunks".