
Niloooy focused on strengthening authentication and developer experience across the zepben/ewb-sdk-python and zepben/ewb-sdk-jvm repositories. They implemented token-based authentication and enforced TLS for secure Personal Access Token usage, using Python and Java to update SDK connection methods and internal logic. Their work included adding access_token support to the EAS Python client, ensuring secure integration with external services. Niloooy also improved documentation by clarifying asynchronous and synchronous client usage and network data traversal, reducing onboarding friction and misconfiguration risk. The depth of their contributions reflects a strong grasp of API design, backend development, and security best practices in SDK engineering.

February 2025: Documentation improvements for zepben/ewb-sdk-python, updating consumer.mdx connection examples to reflect correct asynchronous and synchronous client usage and clarifying retrieval and traversal of network hierarchy data. This work enhances developer onboarding, reduces ambiguity in connecting to services, and lowers the risk of misconfiguration, backed by a targeted commit addressing connection examples.
February 2025: Documentation improvements for zepben/ewb-sdk-python, updating consumer.mdx connection examples to reflect correct asynchronous and synchronous client usage and clarifying retrieval and traversal of network hierarchy data. This work enhances developer onboarding, reduces ambiguity in connecting to services, and lowers the risk of misconfiguration, backed by a targeted commit addressing connection examples.
November 2024 focused on strengthening authentication security and expanding token-based auth across SDKs. Key features include token-based authentication for the Python SDK, TLS enforcement by removing insecure token connections, PAT-based authentication in the JVM SDK, and EAS access_token support in the Python client. Updated documentation and unit tests accompany each change to improve developer experience and reduce security risk. These changes enable safer, more flexible integrations with PAT-based services and EAS, delivering measurable business value by tightening security posture and streamlining onboarding for client applications.
November 2024 focused on strengthening authentication security and expanding token-based auth across SDKs. Key features include token-based authentication for the Python SDK, TLS enforcement by removing insecure token connections, PAT-based authentication in the JVM SDK, and EAS access_token support in the Python client. Updated documentation and unit tests accompany each change to improve developer experience and reduce security risk. These changes enable safer, more flexible integrations with PAT-based services and EAS, delivering measurable business value by tightening security posture and streamlining onboarding for client applications.
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