DESC definition

DESC means Dominion Energy South Carolina, Inc. (f/k/a South Carolina Electric & Gas Company), a South Carolina corporation, and its successors and permitted assigns.
DESC means the Department of Education, Sport and Culture;4 “DfE” means the Department for Enterprise;5
DESC shall have the meaning provided in the introduction, including any permitted successors and assigns.

Examples of DESC in a sentence

  • You can set the way of sorting records by right-clicking a field on the Diagram pane and selecting Add Field To -> ORDER BY -> ASC or DESC.

  • In the case of DESC, DESC shall not, nor shall it permit any of its Material Subsidiaries to, create, incur, assume or suffer to exist any Lien upon any of its property, assets or revenues, whether now owned or hereafter acquired, except for (i) Liens permitted by the DESC Indenture, (ii) Liens that do not secure Indebtedness for borrowed money or that is evidenced by bonds, debentures, notes or similar instruments and (iii) Liens created in the ordinary course of business.

  • This rate is not intended for services provided at DESC, Seattle Housing Authority, or other low-income housing settings where Full Life Care is providing Private Pay services at a discounted rate.

  • In those situations, an HCA’s regular rate of pay would apply or, in the case of DESC, the special DESC wage rate would apply.

  • Receipt by the Administrative Agent of opinions, satisfactory in form and content to the Administrative Agent and the Lenders, addressed to the Administrative Agent and each of the Lenders and dated as of the Restatement Effective Date, from McGuireWoods LLP, legal counsel to the Borrowers, Stoel Rives LLP, Utah counsel to Questar Gas, and ▇▇▇▇ & ▇▇▇▇▇▇ LLP, South Carolina counsel to DESC.


More Definitions of DESC

DESC has the meaning set forth in the preamble to this Agreement.
DESC has the meaning set forth in the preamble.
DESC. Distributed Energy Systems Corp., a Delaware corporation.
DESC means Desc, S.A. de C.V.
DESC. Frame-Options header is not included in the HTTP response to protect against 'ClickJacking' attacks.\n\t", "reference": "https://▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇/index.php/List_of_useful_HTTP_headers\n\t", "risk_level": "Information", "short_desc": "X-Content-Type-Options Header Missing ", "solution": " The software properly neutralizes certain special elements, but it improperly neutralizes equivalent special elements.\n\t", "source_pentest": "W3af", "w_risk_level": 20 }, { "desc": "The whole target has no protection (X-Frame-Options header) against Click- Jacking attacks", "risk_level": "Medium", "short_desc": "Click-Jacking vulnerability", "solution": "Clickjacking (User Interface redress attack, UI redress attack, UI redressing) is a malicious technique of tricking a Web user into clicking on something different from what the user perceives they are clicking on, thus potentially revealing confidential information or taking control of their computer while clicking on seemingly innocuous web pages.\n\nThe server didn't return an `X-Frame-Options` header which means that this website could be at risk of a clickjacking attack. The `X-Frame-Options` HTTP response header can be used to indicate whether or not a browser should be allowed to render a page inside a frame or iframe. Sites can use this to avoid clickjacking attacks, by ensuring that their content is not embedded into other sites.", "source_pentest": "W3af", "w_risk_level": 75 } The example shows a result from the vulnerability test. There are three vulnerabilities identified: • Click-Jacking vulnerability. • X-Content-Type-Options Header Missing. • ▇▇▇▇() code execution.
DESC. The whole target has no protection (X-Frame-Options header) against Click-Jacking "risk_level": "Medium",
DESC shall have the meaning set forth in the Preamble.