Compromised dYdX npm and PyPI packages delivered wallet-stealing malware and a RAT via poisoned updates in a software supply chain attack.
CrashFix crashes browsers to coerce users into executing commands that deploy a Python RAT, abusing finger.exe and portable Python to evade detection and persist on high‑value systems.
Some accusations stemmed from an FBI interview with a unidentified man. There was no credible evidence to support them.
A python mistook dog toys for food in a Queensland home recently, swallowing one toy whole and chomping down on a second ...
Oh, sure, I can “code.” That is, I can flail my way through a block of (relatively simple) pseudocode and follow the flow. I ...
Versions installed via Snap don't delete files when users empty system trash Linux users who installed Microsoft's Visual ...
How modern infostealers target macOS systems, leverage Python‑based stealers, and abuse trusted platforms and utilities to ...
Two malware campaigns weaponize open-source software to target executives and cloud systems, combining social engineering ...
ChatGPT has quietly gained bash support and multi-language capabilities, enabling users to run commands and install packages in containers without official announcements.
Two fake spellchecker packages on PyPI hid a Python RAT in dictionary files, activating malware on import in version 1.2.0.
JIT compiler stack up against PyPy? We ran side-by-side benchmarks to find out, and the answers may surprise you.