Age HTTP Header - Original Server Response
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The Age header contains the time in seconds the object has been in a proxy cache.
Vary Header check for User-Agent
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When using the Vary: User-Agent header, caching servers should consider the user agent when deciding whether to serve the page from cache
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Vary Header Accept-Encoding
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The Accept-Encoding request HTTP header advertises which content encoding, usually a compression algorithm, the client is able to understand. Using content negotiation, the server selects one of the proposals, uses it and informs the client of its choice with the Content-Encoding response header.
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Private Cache-Control Header
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The Cache-Control general-header field is used to specify directives for caching mechanisms in both requests and responses. Caching directives are unidirectional, meaning that a given directive in a request is not implying that the same directive is to be given in the response.
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NO Store HTTP Cache-Control
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The cache should not store anything about the client request or server response.
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X-Cache HTTP Header
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The resource was not in the website cache, and was pulled from the origin server like Varnish servers.
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Block Content Sniffing
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The X-Content-Type-Options response HTTP header is a marker used by the server to indicate that the MIME types advertised in the Content-Type headers should not be changed and be followed. This allows to opt-out of MIME type sniffing, or, in other words, it is a way to say that the webmasters knew what they were doing.
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XSS-Protection Header
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The HTTP X-XSS-Protection response header is a feature of Internet Explorer, Chrome and Safari that stops pages from loading when they detect reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. Although these protections are largely unnecessary in modern browsers when sites implement a strong Content-Security-Policy that disables the use of inline JavaScript (`unsafe-inline`), they can still provide protections for users of older web browsers that don`t yet support CSP.
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