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Web Server IIS/Apache » Post your website addresses in the reply section.... Also your name » 4/29/2019 8:19 am |
134.39.158.33
www.wahhappen.cts
www.wahhappen2.cts
-antonio
Exchange Server » Exchange Server 2016 Instructions » 4/08/2019 9:26 am |
Linux Class » Article #6 - Due 19th - No school Monday! » 2/13/2019 10:32 am |
Great link to finding themes, applets, desklets, and extensions for linux mint. There are 270 different "spices" for linux mint which can be found here. The website also gives an in depth description to what each download does and an image of how it looks and works.
-Antonio Gomez
Linux Class » Article #4 --- Due by February 4th » 1/31/2019 9:44 am |
link to great website on useful apps and how to install them. Apps include stacer (system memory and disk usage), Git book editor (notes) and twenty others.
Security Class » Security Class Article #6 - Due Monday December 3rd » 1/27/2019 10:39 pm |
link to helpful tips to customize Linux installations, topics include gnome tweaking, and gimp to edit images
Linux Class » fine tuning linux installation » 1/27/2019 10:32 pm |
link to tips for customizing Linux installation includes topics like, gnome tweak tools, and gimp to edit images
Security Class » Security Class Article #5 - Due 11/19/18 » 11/19/2018 9:53 am |
Hackers use new techniques to see users browsing history threw the internet
The researchers' four attacks target flaws in relatively new browser features. For example, one attack takes advantage of a feature added to Chrome in 2017, dubbed the "CSS Paint API," which lets web pages provide custom code for drawing parts of their visual appearance. Using this feature, the attack measures when Chrome re-renders a picture linked to a particular target website URL, in a way invisible to the user. When a re-render is detected, it indicates that the user has previously visited the target URL. "This attack would let an attacker check around 6,000 URLs a second and develop a profile of a user's browsing habits at an alarming rate,"
Security Class » Hackers use new techniques to expose internet users browsing history » 11/19/2018 9:51 am |
The researchers' four attacks target flaws in relatively new browser features. For example, one attack takes advantage of a feature added to Chrome in 2017, dubbed the "CSS Paint API," which lets web pages provide custom code for drawing parts of their visual appearance. Using this feature, the attack measures when Chrome re-renders a picture linked to a particular target website URL, in a way invisible to the user. When a re-render is detected, it indicates that the user has previously visited the target URL. "This attack would let an attacker check around 6,000 URLs a second and develop a profile of a user's browsing habits at an alarming rate,"
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