The campaign spans npm, Packagist, Go, and Chrome, using obfuscated JavaScript loaders and VS Code tasks to deliver malware.
Tom's Hardware on MSN
Half-Life 2 can now run in your browser at over 100 FPS with save states & console support
It's not Half-Life 3 but it's something.
VS Code 1.26 prevents automatic code execution for new project folders, lets users configure whether code can be executed ...
Claude Code dynamic workflows are now generally available on all paid plans, including Pro for the first time. The feature writes its own orchestration scripts and coordinates up to 1,000 parallel ...
The video game has been part of tech culture since it launched in 1993, with its signature view of a gun centered of the ...
XDA Developers on MSN
Kage makes it stupid simple to archive websites before they disappear, and it has become my favorite read-it-later app
Kage can package entire websites into single files ...
Installing a piece of code from NPM will no longer auto-run malware on the system, and won’t quietly pull malicious code from external repos unless the developer explicitly allows it. But this won’t ...
A Labour politician wants people to take "short training courses" before they can own a rabbit as part of animal welfare ...
From jam-packed fan festivals, sports bars and living rooms, under relentless Texas heat and drizzling Ontario rain, ...
Researchers found attackers using fake CAPTCHA pages. Users should never run PowerShell or Windows commands requested by ...
JFrog says six malicious npm packages used hidden install-time execution, JSONKeeper fetches, and sandbox checks to enable remote access.
With apologies for adding another food metaphor to the endless food metaphors that pepper (sorry!) reviews of The Bear: ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results