The security firm gave vulnerability assessments of 30,000 websites under its management with the goal of measuring the security performance of their underlying programming languages and frameworks. The following are some key highlights of its findings.
First, a disclaimer: as with any independent study, one must take the scope of the research into consideration before making any judgements regarding a languageās security (or lack thereof). In terms of the WhiteHat Security report, the 30,000 websites used in the study belong to WhiteHat customers and seem to represent the old pantheon of web programming languages: ASP/.NET
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