For security reasons, web browsers prevent what are called cross-origin or cross-site requests from one domain to another. JavaScript `XMLHTTPRequests` (commonly called “AJAX” requests) inherit all the authentication context of the logged in user, so a malicious web page could try to make malicious requests that cross domain contexts and cause trouble. Historically, that has made it difficult for web developers to build web applications making use of third-party APIs.
`CORS` is the recommended standard for allowing your web browser and a web server to negotiate and allow requests to be made across domain contexts. `CORS` is supported in modern Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Internet Explorer (10+) web browsers. It became an official W3C Recommendation on the 16th January 2014.
You don’t need to do anything special to use `CORS` with JavaScript in a modern browser. Your web browser and our servers will automatically negotiate the cross-origin request. For example, to make a `CORS` request with `jQuery`, you’d make your request like you were performing it within the context of your own domain.
Also called “JSON with Padding”, `JSONP` is a technique for fooling a web browser into performing cross-origin requests using a special `<script>` tag that uses the `src` attribute that to make a special API request.
Instead of responding with a `JSON` object, the server responds with JavaScript code that calls a client-declared callback function, passing the data as that function’s first parameter.
If you are having any issues implementing `CORS` with Mapzen Search, open an issue in the [main Pelias GitHub repository](https://github.com/pelias/pelias/issues). Please include the name of any frameworks you are using and some example code.
This content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Some content adapted from the [Socrata Documentation](http://dev.socrata.com/docs/cors-and-jsonp.html).