The campaign spans npm, Packagist, Go, and Chrome, using obfuscated JavaScript loaders and VS Code tasks to deliver malware.
Customizing your browser to hide often makes it easier to recognize.
If it isn’t published, it doesn’t exist. Anything you want a search engine, an AI system or a journalist to know about your brand has to live on the site in readable form. Schema markup, semantic HTML ...
With the advent of AI-mediated APIs, the era of manually hard-coding every integration between every microservice may be ...
Chrome's next update will kill your adblocker - and make the web less safe ...
Estonian web traffic security company Blackwall announces its first publicly disclosed Southeast Asia partnership, bringing integrated traffic security to Vietnam's digital infrastructure market throu ...
A company rolls out an AI customer service assistant. The model behind it is current and capable enough for the job. The assistant goes live. Within a week, support tickets are getting worse, not ...
A five-character fix turned a failing Lighthouse Agentic Browsing audit into a clean pass. What that reveals about what the audit actually measures.
You can minimize the degree to which your browser spies on you, but potential hackers can use your own SSD against you and ...
The word deadline has a dark origin, the Merriam-Webster dictionary’s website says, dating back to prisons in the U.S. Civil ...
JFrog says six malicious npm packages used hidden install-time execution, JSONKeeper fetches, and sandbox checks to enable remote access.