Early last fall, I started working on a project called js.js with two other graduate students, Naga Katta and Stephen Beard. We started using a public Github repository from the start, and at the beginning of January, the author of three.js found and tweeted a link to our repository to his many followers. Soon after, a post wound up on Hacker News. Unfortunately, we weren’t very far along in the p
![JavaScript in JavaScript (js.js): Sandboxing Third-Party Scripts | Princeton SNS Group](https://cdn-ak-scissors.b.st-hatena.com/image/square/213db6a4953f03d093ac7326ca8b3fda5f405068/height=288;version=1;width=512/http%3A%2F%2Fsns.cs.princeton.edu%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2012%2F04%2Fcombined_times_thumb.png)