Computer security boffins have conducted an analysis of 10 million websites and found almost 2,000 API credentials strewn across 10,000 webpages.
A large-scale study has revealed that websites are unintentionally exposing API keys tied to services like AWS, Stripe, and OpenAI, with most leaks traced back to publicly accessible JavaScript files.
Claude extension flaw enabled silent prompt injection via XSS and weak allowlist, risking data theft and impersonation until ...
A government-grade iOS exploit kit called DarkSword has been leaked on GitHub, putting hundreds of millions of iPhones ...
Researchers have discovered a major security leak hiding in plain sight on the internet that could expose the personal data ...
We love a good novel here at AARP, but we really love to find one with a fascinating older person at its center. So we ...
AI agents struggle with modern, content heavy websites. It's slow and expensive to crawl. The markdown standard makes your ...
Microsoft today released TypeScript 6.0, a major release of its open source superset of the JavaScript web programming ...
Decide what you see, and how you see it, with the flick of a switch.
Attackers have hijacked 75 of 76 GitHub Actions tags for Aqua Security's Trivy scanner, distributing credential-stealing ...
Microsoft released TypeScript 6.0 on March 23, the last version built on the original JavaScript codebase, with three post-RC changes and a wave of deprecations designed to ready codebases for the ...
Why do individual web pages now require as much memory to run as an entire operating system did 30 years ago? Ad tech, baby.