The campaign spans npm, Packagist, Go, and Chrome, using obfuscated JavaScript loaders and VS Code tasks to deliver malware.
Discover the compelling story of Famous, a startup that raised $30 million on a bold idea for a new JavaScript framework.
The Fourth of July may just be the perfect excuse for you to make a stop at Rupena's Fine Foods in West Allis. Maybe it's the viral chicken salad or the new café serving lunch ...
Back for the 2026 season is the award-winning Westbury Bank Aquapark featuring over 50 inflatables including slides, obstacles, and a 27-foot-tall swing.All available tickets ...
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 ...
Jordan Walker homered and drove in four runs, Nathan Church hit a tying two-run homer in a seven-run seventh inning and the ...
Experimental ‘deno desktop’ feature in Deno 2.9 produces a native desktop application that compiles into a single ...
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have tied the knot at Madison Square Garden. Adam Sandler officiated the star-studded event, ...
The traditionalist Catholics who defied Pope Leo XIV and caused a schism are defending their actions. The Society of St. Pius ...
'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 ...
JFrog says six malicious npm packages used hidden install-time execution, JSONKeeper fetches, and sandbox checks to enable remote access.
The Microsoft Binlog MCP Server enables AI-powered build failure diagnosis, property tracing, performance analysis, and build ...