Who left open the cookie jar? - TOM VAN GOETHEM
👉 Link Dowload: https://best-product-deals.com/go/brave Brave Crosses the 4 Million Active USER Mark!
You like the idea of earning money just by surfing the web?
And by that using a browser that is faster and more secure than any other browser around?
Well, the Brave browser and the crypto called Basic Attention Token make it possible.
Ever since Bitcoin had appeared in 2009, the blockchain economy has entered almost every other relevant industry. And with Brave there is a new, crypto-enabled webbrowser available, which is aiming to disrupt nothing less than the webs advertizing industry. And the great thing about that: You can already use it and make a profit.
By Default, the brave browser is one of the fastest and securest around. That is simply because it blocks all ads and all trackers.
There are two ways of earning crypto via the Brave Browser:
1️⃣ . earn BAT By Publishing.
All you need to do is register your blog, website or youtube channel on https://publishers.basicattentiontoken.org – this will enable you to receive BAT from your viewers using the brave browser.
2️⃣ . earn BAT By Browsing.
Enabling Ads will activate the function of Brave Bwoser to earn you rewards for browsing. This feature is planned to get rolled out in 2018.
So that was how to earn BAT
Withdraw by linking with Uphold wallet, register at: https://uphold.com
Any questions or remarks?
OWASP Global AppSec Tel Aviv https://telaviv.appsecglobal.org/ Nowadays, cookies are the most prominent mechanism to identify and authenticate users on the Internet. Although facilitating important usability advances, they also opened the door to cross-site attacks and third-party tracking. Various countermeasures have been developed as a reaction to these threats, such as built-in browser policies and extensions that block undesirable requests and cookies. However, these countermeasures are rarely questioned on their effectiveness. Motivated by this, we developed a framework to evaluate these countermeasures in an automated manner, spanning 8 browsers, and 46 ad blockers and privacy extensions. Unfortunately, our comprehensive evaluation uncovered that virtually every policy can be bypassed. In this talk, we explore various interesting bypasses to built-in browser policies and extensions. Furthermore, we argue that our framework is a much-needed tool for evaluating browser policies. We illustrate that our framework can be expanded to evaluate other policy implementations such as Content Security Policy and private browsing mode. Tom Van Goethem imec-DistriNet - KU Leuven Tom Van Goethem is a PhD student at the University of Leuven with a keen interest in web security and privacy. In his research, Tom likes performing large-scale security experiments, whether to analyze the presence of good and bad practices on the web, or to demystify security claims. - Managed by the official OWASP Media Project https://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_Media_Project