As we’ve seen with hacking cases time and again, the Javascript in Web apps can be vulnerable to attacks that, as a developer, you want to do your best to avoid. Jscrambler, a tool for making your code harder to read and manipulate, has today been updated with a self-protection feature. “It is a combination of anti-tampering and anti-debugging,” says Jscrambler’s Pedro Fortuna. “The former transforms the JavaScript into a form where if someone tries to change it – which is usually the case with most attacks – even if is just a single character, the code will detect that...

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