The Wikimedia Foundation suffered a security incident today after a self-propagating JavaScript worm began vandalizing pages and modifying user scripts across multiple wikis.
Security researchers have disclosed a high-severity vulnerability dubbed "ClawJacked" in the popular AI agent OpenClaw that allowed a malicious website to silently bruteforce access to a locally ...
Browser-based version back on the menu, reopening questions about TDF's relationship with Collabora The Document Foundation (TDF) has pulled LibreOffice Online out of its "attic" – its term for ...
Readers asked about what’s different for 2025, how to best manage accounts for tax purposes, and changes at the Canada ...
The circuit court now expects the Trump administration to file a brief by March 20 explaining why it appealed the district court’s ruling and for Kelly’s legal team to file its reply brief by April 27 ...
Distributed through over 100 GitHub repositories, the BoryptGrab stealer targets browser, wallet, system, and other user data ...
This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology.
Scott Shambaugh didn’t think twice when he denied an AI agent’s request to contribute to matplotlib, a software library he ...
Indonesia has become the latest, and most populous, country to say it will ban social media for under-16s.
Sophie Koonin discusses the realities of large-scale technical migrations, using Monzo’s shift to TypeScript as a roadmap. She explains how to handle "bends in the road," from documentation and ...
A compromised Chrome extension with 7,000 users was updated to deploy malware, strip security headers, and steal cryptocurrency wallet seed phrases.
Millions installed 'productivity' Chrome extensions that became malware after acquisition. Here's how browser extensions became enterprise security's weakest link.