Sir Ryan Bemrose on Nostr: Web-1.0 had pages: Static blobs of information. No code, just data for the browser to ...
Web-1.0 had pages: Static blobs of information. No code, just data for the browser to display as it sees fit.
Web-2.0 has sites. Dynamic content that runs code every time a user clicks on something. Data is tied to presentation.
Web-3.0 has apps. Active, fully-interactive programs that are running code constantly, some in response to user action. Some on behalf of the site owner. We don't know.
In security circles, "Remote Code Execution" is a dirty word. In webdev circles, it's progress.
Web-2.0 has sites. Dynamic content that runs code every time a user clicks on something. Data is tied to presentation.
Web-3.0 has apps. Active, fully-interactive programs that are running code constantly, some in response to user action. Some on behalf of the site owner. We don't know.
In security circles, "Remote Code Execution" is a dirty word. In webdev circles, it's progress.