> Mostly because the employer had enough money to keep a lot of staff and make them do bullshit projects, half of which wouldn't reach production. This is incredibly common, and not just at big companies. I bet half my…
Sophistry's worse than snark.
> I'll almost certainly have it only allowed in headers irregardless of the HTTP verb used. This does mean you won't be able to use your browser to test GET's, There is very probably a way to (ab)use HTTP Auth for this…
> Mostly because the employer had enough money to keep a lot of staff and make them do bullshit projects, half of which wouldn't reach production. This is incredibly common, and not just at big companies. I bet half my…
Sophistry's worse than snark.
> I'll almost certainly have it only allowed in headers irregardless of the HTTP verb used. This does mean you won't be able to use your browser to test GET's, There is very probably a way to (ab)use HTTP Auth for this…