I like the tipfy wiki they use - web2py needs something clean like
that.

On Jun 30, 7:45 am, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
> WOW. Thank you. I tried fill the blank but I need to read it again
> tomorrow.
>
> Massimo
>
> On 29 Giu, 11:08, Craig Younkins <cyounk...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hello there! My name is Craig Younkins. I'm a summer intern at OWASP,
> > the Open Web Application Security Project. This summer I'm working
> > heavily on web security in Python.
>
> > First, I would like to praise Dr. Di Pierro and all the web2py
> > contributors for their focus on security. Examining the OWASP Top 10
> > (http://www.web2py.com/examples/default/security) is a great way to
> > start. Keep it up!
>
> > Second, I'd like to invite the web2py community over to a site I've
> > started about security in Python -http://www.pythonsecurity.org. The
> > site aims to be the central hub for security in Python, and right now
> > has a focus on web security. Inside there are articles specific to
> > software like frameworks as well as articles related to security
> > topics like cross-site scripting. We also have a Google Group (http://
> > groups.google.com/group/python-security/topics) which I encourage the
> > developers to join. There you can get answers to your Python security
> > questions. I hope you check it out!
>
> > Lastly, I'd like to encourage you to take a look at web2py's page on
> > PythonSecurity.org -http://www.pythonsecurity.org/wiki/web2py/. I
> > haven't had the time yet to examine web2py in detail, but on that page
> > there is a pretty well-defined template of questions to be answered.
> > Going through the list there will help the developers see areas in
> > web2py that could use improvement, as well as documenting the
> > strengths for other frameworks to model off of.
>
> > Thanks!
>
> > Craig Younkins

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