Securonix uncovers the Veil#Drop malware framework, which abuses compromised websites and Google Blogspot to deploy the PureLog information stealer.
JFrog says six malicious npm packages used hidden install-time execution, JSONKeeper fetches, and sandbox checks to enable remote access.
A tutorial with examples of various access and display types can be seen at crotwell.github.io/seisplotjs. Also see the wiki. Install with npm i --save seisplotjs.
Chalkbeat reports that while skipping college for jobs can lead to decent pay, opportunities for high earnings without a ...
PureLogs Stealer uses fake PDF JavaScript files and Google's Blogger pages in the VEIL#DROP campaign, enabling fileless ...
The Peosta City Council agreed to set monthly work sessions for the city’s data center ordinance. In the meantime, the ...
The Adobe Client Data Layer aims to reduce the effort to instrument websites by providing a standardized method to expose and access any kind of data for any script. The best way to try out the Adobe ...
The Bluekit phishing-as-a-service platform continues to evolve with nearly 70 new hostnames identified over the past week and ...
Island found dormant JavaScript injection paths in Adblock for YouTube, a Chrome extension with 10M+ installs, raising ...
Dubuque County and surrounding municipalities are increasingly responding to interest in data centers. In rural Dubuque ...
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres is calling on artificial intelligence companies to release information about the carbon, water and land used to power their systems.