Caroline’s Reviews > Foundations of Security: What Every Programmer Needs to Know > Status Update
Caroline
is on page 77 of 319
Chapter 3 - I am getting a little bored with this book and not sure how much it will cover that is new to me.
— Dec 21, 2018 04:04PM
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Caroline’s Previous Updates
Caroline
is on page 251 of 319
Chapter 15 - Again, this chapter included a bit of info I didn't know before, but not in enough detail to feel like I learned much.
— Jun 11, 2019 04:46PM
Caroline
is on page 227 of 319
Chapter 13 - There were some topics in this chapter I'm not familiar with. e.g. elliptic curve cryptography and identity-based encryption. They weren't covered in enough detail for me to feel like I learned anything, though. I guess I could treat it as a list of topics to learn more about. :/
— Jun 05, 2019 02:37PM
Caroline
is on page 221 of 319
Chapter 12 - Again I've heard most of this before, but good review.
— Jun 03, 2019 02:50PM
Caroline
is on page 197 of 319
Chapter 10 - This chapter was very valuable to me. I had of course heard of cross-site scripting attacks before, but I did not understand them in the detail they are presented with here.
— Feb 22, 2019 12:51PM
Caroline
is on page 139 of 319
Chapter 8 - I definitely knew about SQL injection already, but reviewing the details was helpful.
— Jan 25, 2019 04:16PM
Caroline
is on page 123 of 319
Chapter 7 - You can't trust data provided by the client. I knew this.
— Jan 25, 2019 03:41PM
Caroline
is on page 107 of 319
The integer overflow vulnerability example didn't make much sense to me. Why can the attacker make offset a larger number than fits in an int, but they can't (otherwise) make the offset negative?
— Jan 15, 2019 06:18PM
Caroline
is on page 104 of 319
Ooh, I vaguely knew printf could be unsafe, but wasn't familiar with the details. The linked paper on format string vulnerabilities is really good! (So far - I'm still reading)
— Jan 10, 2019 06:10PM

