HTML5 belongs to the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), an organization that provides standards for the entire Internet community, and the resulting protocols can be used around the world. In November 2016, the W3C updated the long-standing HTML 5 standard, its first minor update in 2 years. Many of the features originally proposed for HTML 5.1 were removed due to design flaws and lack of support from browser vendors.
Although there are some elements and feature improvements that have been brought into HTML 5.1, it is still a small update. Some of the new elements include combination tags, which now include
The W3C has begun developing the HTML 5.2 draft, which is expected to be released by the end of 2017. What we are here to present are the new features and improvements introduced in version 5.1. You don't need to use JavaScript to take advantage of these features. Not all browsers support these features, so it's a good idea to check browser support before using them in a production environment.
14. Prevent phishing attacks Most people who use target ='_ blank' don't know an interesting fact - newly opened tabs can change window.opener.location to some phishing pages. It will execute some malicious JavaScript code on your behalf on the open page. Because users trust that the page they open is safe, they have no doubts. To completely eliminate this problem, HTML 5.1 has standardized the use of the rel="noopener" attribute by isolating the browser context. rel="noopener" can be used in and tags.<a href="#" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> The link won't make trouble anymore </a>