Today’s Open Source Friday Focus is on Google’s Skipfish web application vulnerability scanner. Google recently released Skipfish to combat one of the biggest problems in information security today, ...
Cyber-attacks and breaches are now in the headlines every day. Attacks can come from anywhere, at any time, against companies of any size. According to a global study by PwC, the volume of ...
Software moves fast. With so many Web applications and APIs being built and modified in increasingly complex IT environments, securing your attack surface — which can change hourly or multiple times a ...
https://www.pcworld.com/tags/Google+Inc..html has released for free one of its internal tools used for testing the security of Web-based applications. Ratproxy ...
In an increasingly interconnected digital world, web applications are the backbone of online services. With this ubiquity comes a significant risk: web applications are prime targets for cyberattacks.
Chances are your security team has devoted a lot of thought, effort and money to security issues in the past year or two. You’ve plugged holes in the operating systems. You’ve done virus and spyware ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
LLM-based web application scanner recognizes tasks and workflows
A new automated web application scanner autonomously understands and executes tasks and workflows on web applications. The ...
A security researcher has found a way hackers can make PCs of unsuspecting Web surfers do their dirty work, without having to actually commandeer the systems. That's possible with a new security tool ...
Ninety-nine percent of applications have one or more vulnerabilities, according to the 2013 Application Vulnerability Trends Report issued by Campbell, Calif.-based application security firm Cenzic.
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