Many Apache Web servers, including those hosting some popular websites, expose information about the internal structure of the sites they host, the IP (Internet Protocol) addresses of their visitors, ...
A vast number of websites ranging from obscure to quite popular have left an Apache Web server functionality called ‘server-status’ enabled and publically accessible. The care-less implementation of ...
thanks guys... so commenting these particular lines out of the apache .conf will not effect anything except that information being world-viewable on port-80? we heavily rely on the mod-rewrite system ...
Ask.com’s Apache server status page is open to the public at ask.com/server-status. That technically means that any queries and user actions done on that server on ...
How to secure your Apache 2 server in four steps Your email has been sent If you're concerned about the security of your Apache server, these four tips will go a long way to keeping that system secure ...
The Ask.com search engine went through some sort of technical issue late last night, as its servers were exposing the internal Apache server status page, revealing ...
Ask.com, last week, "inadvertently" was exposing their searcher query data to the whole world by not locking down their Apache server status page. It was pretty insane actually for this to happen and ...