Binary DB insertion using PHP
Grok Headline matches for Binary DB insertion using PHP
Saturn Orbit Insertion
Saturn Orbit Insertion
07/01/2004 05:17 PM
"Standard orbit, aye, sir." Following a nail-biting
ring-plane crossing and 96-minute engine burn,
Cassini has
arrived, and is now in orbit around Saturn, 84 light-minutes away,
sending in
the first closeup pictures of the planet's rings. Also see
the Planetary Society's
detai
ls on the Orbit Insertion, Spaceflight Now's
mission updates
in weblog-like format, and
raw
images from the spacecraft as they come. Kudos, JPL! (Aside: the
press has yet to tire of
Lord of the Rings references.)
lostbook Script Insertion Vulnerability
lostbook Script Insertion Vulnerability
08/01/2004 10:04 AMDirect and Related Links for
'lostbook Script Insertion Vulnerability'
“r3d5pik3 has reported a vulnerability in lostBook, which can
be exploited by malicious people to conduct script insertion
attacks….The vulnerability has been reported in version 1.1 and
prior. Solution: Edit the source code to ensure that input is properly
sanitised.”…
Code insertion in Blogger comments
Code insertion in Blogger comments
03/29/2005 06:00 PMAntone Roundy (Mar 29 2005)
Hastymail Script Insertion Vulnerability
Hastymail Script Insertion Vulnerability
08/27/2004 01:44 PMDirect and Related Links for
'Hastymail Script Insertion Vulnerability'
“The vendor has reported a vulnerability in Hastymail,
allowing malicious people to conduct script insertion attacks. The
problem is that HTML parts are loaded inline instead of being
downloaded by the client browser, because Hastymail fails to return
the proper header. This can be exploited to execute arbitrary HTML and
script code in a user’s browser session in context of a
vulnerable site when a user chooses to download an attachment. This
has been reported…
Network Everywhere NR041 Router DHCP
Script Insertion
Network Everywhere NR041 Router DHCP
Script Insertion
08/27/2004 05:41 PMDirect and Related
Links for 'Network Everywhere NR041 Router DHCP Script
Insertion'
Mathieu Lacroix has reported a vulnerability in Network Everywhere
Cable/DSL 4-Port Router NR041, allowing malicious people to conduct
script insertion attacks….
Sympa Create List Script Insertion
Vulnerability
Sympa Create List Script Insertion
Vulnerability
08/27/2004 09:14 PMDirect and Related
Links for 'Sympa Create List Script Insertion Vulnerability'
“Joxean Koret has reported a vulnerability in Sympa, which
can be exploited by malicious, authenticated users to conduct script
insertion attacks. Input passed to the “description” field
is not sanitised before being included in the profile for a mailing
list. This can be exploited to execute arbitrary script code in a
user’s browser session in context of an affected site when a
malicious mailing list profile is viewed. The vulnerability has been
reported in version…
Cassini-Huygens Saturn Orbit Insertion
Imminent
Cassini-Huygens Saturn Orbit Insertion
Imminent
06/29/2004 10:45 AMCrafty Syntax Live Help Script Insertion
Vulnerabilities
Crafty Syntax Live Help Script Insertion
Vulnerabilities
06/21/2004 10:37 AM“John C. Hennessy has reported two vulnerabilities in Crafty
Syntax Live Help, which can be exploited by malicious people to
conduct script insertion attacks.”
Binary XML
Binary XML
10/28/2003 11:07 PMMig
uel comments on the "Binary XML" postings from Omri and Dare,
pointing out that only two standards would probably be needed (one for
size, one for speed) to cover the majority of scenarios. I think
this is correct, but in my opinion it's not the number of encodings
that is a problem, but simply the existence of any "standard"
encoding beyond XML 1.0.
If you can remember just five short years ago, it was
once a major decision for IT developers to choose what encoding
to persist and send their data:
- Should it be fixed-width or delimited?
- Should it be delimited with tabs or commas? What about
quotes?
- Should it be binary or text? ASN.1? DXF? IGES?
Every system used a different encoding technique, and every time
you wanted to interop you had to write a parser. Most of
us have written at least a few parsers for formats like
IGES, W3C Log File, and so on. How much money was wasted by
people writing parsers?
Now fast-forward to 2003. When a system developer thinks
about persisting and sharing data, she automatically thinks
"XML". In 90% of cases, XML is the obvious choice and no debate
occurs. Do you think that this happens because XML is a superior
format based on size, speed, or any othe technical criteria compared
to the options available in 1998? Of course not! XML is
the obvious choice because programmers are lazy, many parsers are
freely available, and it's "good enough" for most uses. The fact
that XML is ubiquitous leads to plenty of parsing options being
available, and more parsing options and tools leads to greater
ubiquity. Developers can use XML in most cases and be confident
that everyone else in the world will be able to parse out their data
with trivial effort. Developers can argue about data schemas now
instead of wasting time bickering about parser code and
syntaxes. This is a huge contribution!
The thing that many people fail to understand, though, is that none
of this virtuous cycle could exist if XML parsers were not
trustworthy. XML depends on the fact that well-formed XML can be
processed by any parser, and non-wellformed XML can be processed by
none. People deploy XML because they know it will "just work" no
matter which parser is being used. People deploy XML because
they know it will work no matter whether it is IBM or Microsoft in
favor that week. Nothing about XML matters more than this
promise matters.
So, consider what happens when we introduce some new encodings
which are not wellformed XML 1.0, but we call them "XML" anyway.
When Jane in the IT department configures her EDI software to send an
"XML" file to a partner, and the partner's machine rejects it, who is
to blame? Jane will claim that "my vendor says that XML
1.0bin is a W3C spec, so your vendor is non-standard", while the
partner will claim "my vendor accepts XML 1.0 so your
vendor is non-standard". In fact, it is quite likely
that vendors with multiple XML-enabled products would end up in
situations where their own products failed to communicate with one
another. Note that this danger exists with any
variations from XML 1.0, and not just "binary XML".
Reasonable people might argue that this is OK, and that IT pros
will simply have to learn to distinguish between the four different
incompatible types of XML (XML 1.0, XML 1.1, XMLfast, XMLsmall) and
will have to manage the compatibility mismatches between all of their
systems. But that starts to look a lot like 1998 to me.
Developers will bicker about which XML to use, and will have
to switch parsers based on the choice of data format. Systems
will have to offer and consume multiple formats and negotiate formats
between one another. I have a good memory, and I remember how
badly things used to suck. Having a solid, reliable "obvious
choice" like XML 1.0 means freedom from pain for millions of
developers. Let's please don't mess with that too hastily.
Binary Boy v1.94
Binary Boy v1.94
05/17/2004 03:15 PMDownload files from multiple news servers or from other users.
Subject cache speeds up searches and preserves bandwidth. NZB support.
Browse manually or schedule a search to collect files while you sleep.
Hyper-Threading compatible. Search using single words, wildcards or
AND, OR and NOT logic. Apply custom search rules to each newsgroup.
Decode damaged or incomplete mpg movies for previewing. yEnc, MIME,
QP-Lite, etc. [Shareware $29.95 30 Days 768 KB]
Parse-Binary-0.03
Parse-Binary-0.03
02/14/2004 06:32 PMParse-Binary-0.01
Parse-Binary-0.01
02/13/2004 06:37 PMConvert-Binary-C-0.54
Convert-Binary-C-0.54
07/01/2004 05:43 AMParse-Binary-0.06
Parse-Binary-0.06
02/17/2004 06:25 PMParse-Binary-0.04
Parse-Binary-0.04
02/15/2004 11:45 PMParse-Binary-0.02
Parse-Binary-0.02
02/13/2004 06:37 PMConvert-Binary-C-0.52
Convert-Binary-C-0.52
05/25/2004 12:39 AMBinary Vortex v2.8
Binary Vortex v2.8
04/25/2004 07:17 PMBinaryVortex pulls down pictures from Usenet Newsgroups. It is fast,
efficient, reliable and easy to use. You can be up and running with
BinaryVortex after typing in only a few simple setup options.
[Shareware $19.95 30 days 779 KB]
Parse-Binary-0.05
Parse-Binary-0.05
02/16/2004 06:41 PMTree-Binary-0.01
Tree-Binary-0.01
08/12/2004 06:18 AMSendDiff 1.0 (Binary)
SendDiff 1.0 (Binary)
08/18/2004 01:12 AMA script that provides notification about any change in a CVS
repository.
Convert-Binary-C-0.56
Convert-Binary-C-0.56
09/19/2004 05:41 AMBinary Search
Binary Search
02/21/2003 01:09 AMProgrammers can be so damned stupid sometimes. Take me for example.
I've been working to optimize and adjust some code at work. I can't
tell you what it does but I can tell you that it's too slow and
uses...
binary-clock 0.5
binary-clock 0.5
09/08/2004 12:30 PMA console-based binary clock.
SendDiff 1.3 (Binary)
SendDiff 1.3 (Binary)
09/08/2004 10:59 AMA script that provides notification about any change in a CVS
repository.
Parse-Binary-0.08
Parse-Binary-0.08
09/08/2004 10:35 AMConvert-Binary-C-0.53
Convert-Binary-C-0.53
05/25/2004 05:55 PMSendDiff 1.2 (Binary)
SendDiff 1.2 (Binary)
09/01/2004 09:55 AMA script that provides notification about any change in a CVS
repository.
Binary Converter
Binary Converter
01/05/2004 01:28 PMPardon my dust...
Convert-Binary-C-0.55
Convert-Binary-C-0.55
08/22/2004 05:23 PMConvert-Binary-C-0.48
Convert-Binary-C-0.48
11/02/2003 10:51 PMTree-Binary-0.04
Tree-Binary-0.04
08/31/2004 05:19 PMUse Cases: XML Binary Characterization
Use Cases: XML Binary Characterization
07/28/2004 04:28 PM2004-07-28: The XML Binary Characterization Working Group has released
the First Public Working Draft of XML Binary Characterization Use
Cases. Presenting documented examples, the draft will help to decide
if standardized and optimized serialization can be used to improve the
generation, parsing, transmission and storage of XML-based data.
Comments are welcome. Visit the XML home page. (News archive)
Binary distribution lost
Binary distribution lost
03/13/2003 10:15 AM
Due to a faulty script, the whole fink website, including our
binary distro, has been wiped! This means you can't use the binary
distro right now. I am working as quick as I can on uploading the new
Fink 0.3.2 binary distro. In addition, the package database is not
working for now. Please bear with us.
Scripting a Binary Tree Using Tcl
Scripting a Binary Tree Using Tcl
02/01/2005 09:17 PMMichael J. Norton: "But here's a thought that will surely make the
pragmatic C programmer's head spin. I'm going to put the Tcl language
to work with managing binary trees. I hope that concept didn't give
any of you compiler pilots whiplash."
arbilyst - ARm BInary anaLYST
arbilyst - ARm BInary anaLYST
04/11/2005 03:23 AMTechnical Goal
"Iraq did not have such binary shells"
"Iraq did not have such binary shells"
05/23/2004 03:21 PMBinary Neurons For Dummies
Binary Neurons For Dummies
07/31/2004 10:33 PMBinary neurons are one of the most basic forms of computational
intelligence, so much so that they are quite often described as being
logic systems, and not intelligent at all. Either way, I will now
teach you how to building and use a neuron in a simple environment.
Binary Killed the XML Star?
Binary Killed the XML Star?
11/19/2003 08:11 PMThe results of the W3C's workshop on binary XML are less than
satisfactory, says Kendall Clark. He also covers a recent and
pertinent conversation on XML-DEV about SAX interfaces to binary
formats.
Grok Description matches for Binary DB insertion using PHP
GrokA matches for Binary DB insertion using PHP
Binary DB insertion using PHP