Python infostealers are spreading from Windows to macOS via Google Ads, ClickFix lures, and fake installers to steal credentials and financial data.
How modern infostealers target macOS systems, leverage Python‑based stealers, and abuse trusted platforms and utilities to distribute credential‑stealing payloads.
A malvertising campaign is using a fake ad-blocking Chrome and Edge extension named NexShield that intentionally crashes the ...
The GitHub Copilot SDK turns the Copilot CLI into a cross-platform agent host with Model Context Protocol support.
I used one simple script to remove AI from popular browsers (including Chrome and Firefox) ...
The attack consists of a NexShield malicious browser extension, a social engineering technique to crash the browser, and a ...
The update reflects Mozilla’s broader positioning as a user-first alternative in a browser market increasingly shaped by ...
Over three decades, the companies behind Web browsers have created a security stack to protect against abuses. Agentic browsers are undoing all that work.
Your browser has hidden superpowers and you can use them to automate boring work.
Two fake spellchecker packages on PyPI hid a Python RAT in dictionary files, activating malware on import in version 1.2.0.
With countless applications and a combination of approachability and power, Python is one of the most popular programming ...
What's Up Docker shows which Docker containers need updates, tracks versions, and lets you manage them safely through a ...