No more waiting on slow-loading modules or wasting time on ad hoc workarounds: Python 3.15’s new ‘lazy imports’ mechanism has ...
Supply chain attacks feel like they're becoming more and more common.
Malicious LiteLLM 1.82.7–1.82.8 via Trivy compromise deploys backdoor and steals credentials, enabling Kubernetes-wide persistence and lateral spread.
You don't need to be a developer to build your own crypto bot. Here's how traders are doing it in 30 minutes, for free.
Use Playerctl, Python, and Conky timer to create a 'now playing' Spotify desktop widget.
You don't need the newest GPUs to save money on AI; simple tweaks like "smoke tests" and fixing data bottlenecks can slash ...
Gesture control robotics replaces traditional buttons and joysticks with natural hand movements. This approach improves user ...
Qualys reports the discovery by their threat research unit of vulnerabilities in the Linux AppArmor system used by SUSE, Debian, Ubuntu, and ...
Trivy attack force-pushed 75 tags via GitHub Actions, exposing CI/CD secrets, enabling data theft and persistence across developer systems.
Explore Andrej Karpathy’s Autoresearch project, how it automates model experiments on a single GPU, why program.md matters, and what this means for the future of autonomous AI research.
Learn how to detect compromise, assess your exposure to the LiteLLM supply chain attack, and use GitGuardian to orchestrate rapid incident response and secret remediation.
LiteLLM, a massively popular Python library, was compromised via a supply chain attack, resulting in the delivery of credential-harvesting malware to thousands of AI developers.