42% of developers use AI-generated code, but this technological revolution exposes businesses to new security risks. Are you ready to entrust your applications to artificial intelligence?
Category Archives: Security
Insidious malware infiltrates more than a dozen popular NPM packages, exposing millions of projects to an unprecedented NPM supply chain attack.
A worrying Google flaw made it possible to guess the phone number associated with any Gmail account: was your security unknowingly at risk?
The Feature-Policy
HTTP header (now renamed Permissions-Policy
) gives you granular control over browser APIs (geolocation, camera, microphone, payment, fullscreen, etc.). By limiting or disabling these features, you reduce the attack surface and protect your visitors’ privacy.
The HTTP Referrer-Policy header allows you to decide what referrer URL information the browser sends when navigating between your pages or to external sites. By adjusting this policy, you limit sensitive data leaks, enhance user privacy, and prevent certain attack scenarios.
Learn how the HTTP X-Content-Type-Options (nosniff) header prevents browsers from altering MIME types, protects against drive-by download and XSS attacks, and how Dimension Internet supports you in its deployment.
Discover how the HTTP X-Frame-Options header prevents clickjacking attacks, its directives (DENY, SAMEORIGIN, ALLOW-FROM), and how Dimension Internet assists you with its implementation.
Distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks are reaching record levels in 2025, and a worrying trend is emerging: cybercriminals are massively exploiting unpatched vulnerabilities, particularly in connected devices and poorly secured infrastructures. Here’s a look at the numbers, methods, and best practices to protect your WordPress site.
Starting in late May 2025, Meta (the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger) will begin using the public content of its adult European users to train its artificial intelligence, Meta AI. This collection concerns your posts, comments, photos, and videos shared publicly on these platforms. However, thanks to the GDPR, you can object via an official form, which must be completed before May 27, 2025.
Cybercrime reached unprecedented levels in the United States in 2024. According to the FBI’s latest annual report, online scammers stole a record $16.6 billion, a dramatic 33% increase over the previous year. This explosion in cyber scams was accompanied by an impressive number of complaints: nearly 860,000 reports were filed, averaging more than 2,000 per day.