Mobile CSP 7.5 introduces a set of refinements designed to tighten security while keeping modern mobile app development workflows practical and performant. Below I explain the key enhancements, why they matter, and practical implications for developers and security teams. 1. More granular source controls CSP 7.5 adds finer-grained directives and source expression options for mobile-specific resource types (e.g., app-originated webviews, bundled assets, and native-to-web bridges). This lets developers explicitly permit or deny narrowly scoped origins and mechanisms rather than using broad wildcards.
Mobile CSP 7.5 introduces a set of refinements designed to tighten security while keeping modern mobile app development workflows practical and performant. Below I explain the key enhancements, why they matter, and practical implications for developers and security teams. 1. More granular source controls CSP 7.5 adds finer-grained directives and source expression options for mobile-specific resource types (e.g., app-originated webviews, bundled assets, and native-to-web bridges). This lets developers explicitly permit or deny narrowly scoped origins and mechanisms rather than using broad wildcards.
Shotcut was originally conceived in November, 2004 by Charlie Yates, an MLT co-founder and the original lead developer (see the original website). The current version of Shotcut is a complete rewrite by Dan Dennedy, another MLT co-founder and its current lead. Dan wanted to create a new editor based on MLT and he chose to reuse the Shotcut name since he liked it so much. He wanted to make something to exercise the new cross-platform capabilities of MLT especially in conjunction with the WebVfx and Movit plugins.
Lead Developer of Shotcut and MLT