Description: Refer to this resource when completing the It's All About the HAT assignment. https://app.webinspector.com/ In this assignment, students will learn to use and identify tools that may be helpful in their navigation of security related events or incidents under investigation. Web Inspector is a cloud-based service that inspects a website for malware, detects vulnerabilities to being attacked, and protects the organizations through daily malware scanning, blacklist monitoring, and more. Use Web Inspector to scan a site; when you are done, capture a screenshot and investigate the results under Link Errors, Emails, Structure, and NetSpy. Make sure to provide the name and link to the website downloaded. Using your choice of hat color, in 750-1,250 words provide different hacking, security methods, and network security protections in the areas of cryptograph, denial of service, spoofing, and worms. Attach the screenshot, website name, and link to the website downloaded by Web Inspector. Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. You are required to submit this assignment to Turnitin. Social Work Research: Program Evaluation Major federal legislation was enacted in 1996 related to welfare reform. Financial assistance programs at the national level for low-income families have been in place since the mid-1960s through the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program. The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, or welfare reform, created TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families). Major components of the new TANF program were to limit new recipients of cash aid to no more than 2 years of TANF assistance at a time and to receive no more than 5 years of combined TANF assistance with other service programs during their lifetimes. The goal was to make public assistance a temporary, rather than a long-term, program for families with children. Beyond these general rules, each of the 50 states was given substantial latitude to adopt requirements to fit their own objectives. The new law also allowed states that reduced their public assistance expenses to keep whatever support was already being provided by the federal government for use at their own discretion. This was seen as a way to encourage states to reduce welfare dependency. In response, the state of California decided to call its new program CalWORKs, the California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids program. CalWORKs is California’s application of the new TANF federal law. Like most of the other states, CalWORKs provided its 58 counties with a fair amount of discretion in how to implement the new provisions. Some counties chose to develop strong upfront “employment-first” rules that mandated recipients be employed as soon as possible. Others chose a response that included testing and assessment and the provision of.