The campaign spans npm, Packagist, Go, and Chrome, using obfuscated JavaScript loaders and VS Code tasks to deliver malware.
I cannot fully describe what I saw a week or so ago. Driving on a two-lane road toward my house at sunset right after a storm ...
Lucas Glover chipped in for eagle early and made a birdie late, his only two sub-par holes Saturday for a 2-under 69 that was just enough for ...
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have tied the knot at Madison Square Garden. Adam Sandler officiated the star-studded event, ...
'GH' boss Frank Valentini and star Laura Wright give the inside scoop on how the cast reacted to Oliver's debut as WSB head Z ...
The traditionalist Catholics who defied Pope Leo XIV and caused a schism are defending their actions. The Society of St. Pius ...
Chalkbeat reports that while skipping college for jobs can lead to decent pay, opportunities for high earnings without a ...
XDA Developers on MSN
Kage makes it stupid simple to archive websites before they disappear, and it has become my ...
Kage can package entire websites into single files ...
The Supreme Court has upheld a broad conception of birthright citizenship, rejecting President Donald Trump’s executive order ...
FROM ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION ...
Gen Z is worried that using artificial intelligence will make them dumber — but they're going all in, anyways.
JFrog says six malicious npm packages used hidden install-time execution, JSONKeeper fetches, and sandbox checks to enable remote access.
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