Abstract: JavaScript is increasingly being deployed as binaries in security-critical embedded domains, such as IoT devices, edge computing, and intelligent vehicle platforms. This widespread adoption ...
WebAssembly, or Wasm, gives developers a way to create programs that run at near-native speed in the browser or anywhere else you can deploy the WebAssembly runtime. But you generally don’t write ...
Abstract: JavaScript is rapidly being deployed as binaries in security-critical embedded domains, including IoT devices, edge computing, and smart automotive applications. Ensuring the security of ...
teavm { /** It a FileCollection object with all the calssfiles to use in compilation */ classFiles = null; compileScopes = null; minifying = true; maxTopLevelNames = 10000; properties = null; ...
If you receive JavaScript required to sign in error message when using Skype, OneDrive, Teams or any other program, you need to turn on or enable JavaScript in your ...
Newly discovered campaign takes advantage of the fact that most vulnerability scanning tools don't read compiled open-source software. Attackers who are targeting open-source package repositories like ...
The Bytecode Alliance, formed by Fastly, Intel, Mozilla, and Red Hat to move WebAssembly beyond the browser, has created a non-profit organization with the help of Microsoft to further their cause.
As web developer Jeremy Keith said in 2009, “Java is to JavaScript as ham is to hamster.” The exact accuracy of that analogy is debatable, but the spirit behind it is solid: Java and JavaScript, ...
Back in 2015, a consortium including Google, Microsoft, Mozilla, and the WebKit project announced WebAssembly. This week, Mozilla, Intel, Red hat, and Fastly announced a new consortium called the ...
hermes-dec is a reverse-engineering tool which can be used for disassembling and decompiling React Native files compiled into the Hermes VM bytecode (HBC) format. For a wider presentation of its ...
"History sniffing" promises a nose full of dust or, you're talking about web browsers, a whiff of the websites you've visited. And that may be enough to compromise your privacy and expose data that ...