6 private links
draft-martin-http-carbon-emissions-scope-2-00 - HTTP Response Header Field: Carbon-Emissions-Scope-2
This document defines the "Carbon-Emissions-Scope-2" HTTP response header field for reporting the amount of carbon emissions associated with processing a given HTTP request, as calculated according to the Scope 2 protocol outlined in ISO 14064-1:2006.
Will new TLDs undo decades of work to stop malicious links?
Interoperability is one of the original design principles underpinning the internet, and largely responsible for its scale and unique properties. In recent years, it has also been increasingly seen as a policy measure that can introduce greater market competition and user choice. Important, and contentious interoperability proposals are included in key European digital regulations, including the Digital Markets Act and the Data Act.
On 22 March, we launched our new report, written together with the Commons Network, on “Generative Interoperability. Building online public and civic spaces”. For that, we organized an event, hosted by Sophie Bloemen (Commons Network) and Alek Tarkowski (Open Future). Our two guests were Amandine Le Pape (COO and co-founder of Element, co-founder and Guardian of the Matrix Foundation) and Ian Brown (visiting CyberBRICS Professor at FGV Law School).
Both of our guest experts have been advocating for strong interoperability measures. In conversation, we discussed the role that interoperability should play in the digital ecosystems that Europe is building and regulating. And we also explored different means, also non-regulatory, needed to achieve this.
Il est fréquent qu'une organisation utilise un sous-domaine de son domaine principal pour mettre une adresse IP qui est celle d'un hébergeur plus ou moins distant. Pas de problème avec cela. Sauf que, parfois, lorsqu'on arrête d'utiliser le serveur chez l'hébergeur, on oublie de supprimer le nom de domaine. Et cela peut ouvrir des failles de sécurité.