Source Defense is an essential element of web safety that protects data at the point where it is entered. Source Defense Platform is a simple, yet effective solution to data security and privacy compliance. It addresses threats and risks that arise from the increased use JavaScript, third party vendors, and open source code in your web properties. The Platform offers options for securing code as well as addressing an ubiquitous gap in managing third-party digital supply chains risk - controlling actions of third-party, forth-party and nth-party JavaScript that powers your website experience.
Source Defense Platform provides protection against all types of client-side security incidents, including keylogging, formjacking and digital skimming. Magecart is also protected. - by extending the web security beyond the browser to the server.
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Apify provides the infrastructure developers need to build, deploy, and monetize web automation tools. The platform centers on Apify Store, a marketplace featuring 10,000+ community-built Actors. These are serverless programs that scrape websites, automate browser tasks, and power AI agents.
Developers create Actors using JavaScript, Python, or Crawlee (Apify's open-source crawling library), then publish them to the Store. When other users run your Actor, you earn money. Apify manages the infrastructure, handles payments, and processes monthly payouts to thousands of active developers.
Apify Store offers ready-to-use solutions for common use cases: extracting data from Amazon, Google Maps, and social platforms; monitoring prices; generating leads; and much more.
Under the hood, Actors automatically manage proxy rotation, CAPTCHA solving, JavaScript-heavy pages, and headless browser orchestration. The platform scales on demand with 99.95% uptime and maintains SOC2, GDPR, and CCPA compliance.
For workflow automation, Apify connects to Zapier, Make, n8n, and LangChain. The platform also offers an MCP server, enabling AI assistants like Claude to discover and invoke Actors programmatically.
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AppleScript
AppleScript is a scripting language developed by Apple that empowers users to control both scriptable Macintosh applications and various components of macOS directly. It enables the creation of scripts, which are sets of written instructions designed to automate repetitive tasks, merge features from different scriptable applications, and construct intricate workflows. The 2.0 version of AppleScript is compatible with scripts created for any earlier version from 1.1 to 1.10.7, as well as any scripting addition made for AppleScript 1.5 or newer in macOS and any scriptable application from Mac OS v7.1 onward. A scriptable application is defined as one that can be manipulated through a script, meaning it can respond to inter-application messages, known as Apple events, that are sent when a script command is aimed at it. Although AppleScript itself offers a limited set of commands, it establishes a framework that allows the integration of numerous task-specific commands supplied by both scriptable applications and the scriptable components of macOS. This flexibility makes AppleScript a valuable tool for enhancing productivity and streamlining various computing tasks.
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TypeScript
TypeScript introduces enhanced syntax to JavaScript, facilitating a more seamless connection with your development environment. This allows for early detection of errors within the editor. The code written in TypeScript is ultimately transformed into JavaScript, making it executable in various environments, including web browsers, Node.js, Deno, and mobile applications. With its capability to comprehend JavaScript, TypeScript employs type inference, enabling excellent tooling while minimizing the need for additional coding. In the 2020 State of JS survey, 78% of respondents reported using TypeScript, with a remarkable 93% expressing their intention to continue its use. The prevalent type of mistakes made by developers are often categorized as type errors, where an unexpected value type is encountered in a given context. Such errors can stem from trivial mistakes like typos, misunderstandings of a library's API, incorrect assumptions regarding runtime behavior, or other forms of oversight. Ultimately, utilizing TypeScript can significantly enhance code quality and developer productivity by reducing these common pitfalls.
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