From 4e4ca61a6c513138d58b898122f3112080b69411 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: PPPDUD <107440101+PPPDUD@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 1 Mar 2025 10:48:22 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 1/2] Update cors.md --- docs/website/cors.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/docs/website/cors.md b/docs/website/cors.md index 98d85b3..cf0a470 100644 --- a/docs/website/cors.md +++ b/docs/website/cors.md @@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ CORS is the way that a website declares whether they want other websites to be a It depends on what the URL is for. - **Switch to a different URL:** If the URL is just being used to host static files, find another host that supports direct downloads and CORS. If one API doesn't support CORS, check if a competitor's API does. - - **Use a CORS proxy:** Instead of asking your browser to access a website directly, you can ask another server (called a CORS proxy) to access that website on your behalf and then send back the response but allowing CORS. There are many public CORS proxies that you can find online, but they tend to be short lived as they are expensive to operate and heavily abused. TurboWarp does not currently run its own CORS proxy. + - **Use a CORS proxy:** Instead of asking your browser to access a website directly, you can ask another server (called a CORS proxy) to access that website on your behalf and then send back the response but allowing CORS. There are many public CORS proxies that you can find online, but they tend to be short lived as they are expensive to operate and heavily abused. CORS proxies can also spy on your project's web requests, which can often be problematic. TurboWarp does not currently run its own CORS proxy. - **Switch to TurboWarp Desktop:** The desktop app has an option to bypass CORS. See below. ## Desktop app {#desktop} From 9baf6ac79f6d759ead0d1ca378c091800eac5d1d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: PPPDUD <107440101+PPPDUD@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 1 Mar 2025 11:12:17 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 2/2] Update cors.md --- docs/website/cors.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/docs/website/cors.md b/docs/website/cors.md index cf0a470..85eb269 100644 --- a/docs/website/cors.md +++ b/docs/website/cors.md @@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ CORS is the way that a website declares whether they want other websites to be a It depends on what the URL is for. - **Switch to a different URL:** If the URL is just being used to host static files, find another host that supports direct downloads and CORS. If one API doesn't support CORS, check if a competitor's API does. - - **Use a CORS proxy:** Instead of asking your browser to access a website directly, you can ask another server (called a CORS proxy) to access that website on your behalf and then send back the response but allowing CORS. There are many public CORS proxies that you can find online, but they tend to be short lived as they are expensive to operate and heavily abused. CORS proxies can also spy on your project's web requests, which can often be problematic. TurboWarp does not currently run its own CORS proxy. + - **Use a CORS proxy:** Instead of asking your browser to access a website directly, you can ask another server (called a CORS proxy) to access that website on your behalf and then send back the response but allowing CORS. There are many public CORS proxies that you can find online, but they tend to be short lived as they are expensive to operate and heavily abused. CORS proxies can also spy on your project's web requests, as well as tamper with them. This can often be problematic. TurboWarp does not currently run its own CORS proxy. - **Switch to TurboWarp Desktop:** The desktop app has an option to bypass CORS. See below. ## Desktop app {#desktop}