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.
CodeX Academy is expanding to keep up with the evolving job market. Here are the two new products its offerings and how they ...
MoneyFlare, a leading crypto trading platform, has officially launched its fully automated crypto trading bot, aiming to ...
Just-released Version 1.113 of Microsoft’s Visual Studio Code editor emphasizes improvements ranging from chat customizations ...
Claude extension flaw enabled silent prompt injection via XSS and weak allowlist, risking data theft and impersonation until ...
Fewer than 5 percent of the more than 10,000 known rare diseases have an approved treatment. A UNC-led consortium is changing ...
When schema is injected via Google Tag Manager (GTM), it often doesn’t exist in the initial (raw) HTML. It only appears after ...
SAN FRANCISCO, CA / ACCESS Newswire / March 30, 2026 / Bluwhale, the AI-powered financial intelligence platform, today introduced 'Bluprint', a no-code tool that allows anyone to design and deploy ...
Generally, iOS can be updated in the Settings app by tapping General > Software Update. However, Apple has a separate method ...
Computer security boffins have conducted an analysis of 10 million websites and found almost 2,000 API credentials strewn across 10,000 webpages.
DeepLoad exploits ClickFix and WMI persistence to steal credentials, enabling stealth reinfection after three days.