Must Revalidate HTTP Cache-Control
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Indicates that once a resource has become stale (e.g. max-age has expired), a cache must not use the response to satisfy subsequent requests for this resource without successful validation on the origin server.
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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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No Cache Content
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Forces caches to submit the request to the origin server for validation before releasing a cached copy.
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Pragma Header - backwards compatibility with HTTP/1.0
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The Pragma HTTP/1.0 general header is an implementation-specific header that may have various effects along the request-response chain. It is used for backwards compatibility with HTTP/1.0 caches where the Cache-Control HTTP/1.1 header is not yet present.
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HTTP Upgrade Header - HTTP/2
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The HTTP Upgrade mechanism is used to establish HTTP/2 starting from plain HTTP. The client starts an HTTP/1.1 connection and sends an Upgrade: h2c header. If the server supports HTTP/2, it replies with HTTP 101 Switching Protocol status code. The HTTP Upgrade mechanism is used only for cleartext HTTP2 (h2c). In the case of HTTP2 over TLS (h2), the ALPN TLS protocol extension is used instead.
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Cache-Control Header Max-Age
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Specifies the maximum amount of time a resource will be considered fresh. Contrary to Expires, this directive is relative to the time of the request. this website is having max-age=0 secs.
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HSTS - Browser HTTPS Only for domain and subdomains
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The HTTP Strict-Transport-Security response header (often abbreviated as HSTS) lets a web site tell browsers that it should only be accessed using HTTPS, instead of using HTTP for domain and subdomains browsers will never connect to your domain using an insecure connection. While the service is hosted by Googlefor 31536000 seconds
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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