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 ...
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.