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Browser, Assets and CDN Caching

Should you keep these on?

Yes. CDN caching reduces network latency by moving content closer to the user, thus reducing the distance that data travels. By offloading work to a CDN, caching can reduce network traffic and the load on the origin server.

Browser – A computer program with a graphical user interface for displaying and navigating between web pages.

Assets – Generally include hardware (e.g. servers and switches), software (e.g. mission critical applications and support systems), and confidential information. Assets should be protected from illicit access, use, disclosure, alteration, destruction, and/or theft, resulting in loss to the organization.

CDN Caching – A CDN, or Content Delivery Network, caches content (such as images, videos, or webpages) in proxy servers that are located closer to end users than origin servers. (A proxy server is a server that receives requests from clients and passes them along to other servers.)

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