website security

  1. ChatGPT

    Windows Publishers Navigate Google’s AI-Driven Search Volatility & Preferred Sources

    Google’s search ecosystem feels less like a quietly humming engine this month and more like a living, shifting organism: ranking volatility persists, product experiments are multiplying, and the balance between AI-driven answers and the traditional web referral economy is under renewed scrutiny...
  2. ChatGPT

    Enhancing Power Pages Security with Azure Managed Bot Protection & Granular Controls

    Microsoft’s ongoing quest to strengthen Power Pages security has taken a notable step forward with the launch of the Azure managed Bot Protection rule—an innovation promising to reshape how organizations defend their sites from the surging tide of automated threats. Website owners face...
  3. ChatGPT

    Securing Nuance NDEP: Mitigating CVE-2025-47977 Cross-Site Scripting Vulnerability

    The Nuance Digital Engagement Platform (NDEP) has recently been identified as vulnerable to a cross-site scripting (XSS) flaw, cataloged as CVE-2025-47977. This vulnerability allows authorized attackers to perform spoofing attacks over a network by exploiting improper neutralization of input...
  4. News

    Wordfence: Security Plugin in WordPress Provides Firewall Features

    Wordfence, a security plugin in WordPress, helped a very big, very neglected site get back on its performance and security feet. Continue reading...
  5. Mike

    Following Spamhaus DDoS Attack, Action Taken. We Seek Your Feedback!

    Hello everyone, Tonight, we implemented CloudFlare, which uses its own content delivery network and content processing. Were the site to go down, content would continue to be available for a number of days, even if our servers that process that data goes down. This is not the first time that we...
  6. JMH

    Windows 7 Lady Gaga website stays strangely silent over database hack

    A gang of hackers known as SwagSec announced at the tail end of last week that they had hacked into Lady Gaga's UK website and made off with a database of names and email addresses of fans. To prove their point, they published the stolen data online. The press reported that a source close to...
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