I hereby claim:
- I am yhoungdev on github.
- I am sudo_whoami (https://keybase.io/sudo_whoami) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is DCC8 EDB3 BB52 7191 8994 A27A 6206 5FA7 9325 7DCB
To claim this, I am signing this object:
{ | |
"name": "Obibo", | |
"symbol": "WHOAMI", | |
"description": "Obiabo's cNFT", | |
"image": "https://bronze-total-galliform-271.mypinata.cloud/ipfs/QmP9Rku2JNAuBfdcqzHqfNEJ7GHcjyD3KvrqB2KUPWRc2r", | |
"attributes": [ | |
{ "trait_type": "Full Name", "value": "Emmanuel Obiabo" }, | |
{ "trait_type": "Twitter", "value": "https://x.com/obiabo_immanuel" }, | |
{ "trait_type": "GitHub", "value": "https://github.com/yhoungdev" }, | |
{ "trait_type": "Discord", "value": "obiabo" }, |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
Cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) is a mechanism that allows restricted resources (e.g. fonts) on a web page to be requested from another domain outside the domain from which the first resource was served. This is set on the server-side and there is nothing you can do from the client-side to change that setting, that is up to the server/API. There are some ways to get around it tho.
Sources : MDN - HTTP Access Control | Wiki - CORS
CORS is set server-side by supplying each request with additional headers which allow requests to be requested outside of the own domain, for example to your localhost
. This is primarily set by the header:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin