In 2025, something unexpected happened. The programming language most notorious for its difficulty became the go-to choice for the laziest form of programming imaginable.
A Chrome vulnerability allowed malicious extensions to hijack the browser’s Gemini Live assistant to spy on users and ...
A developer-targeting campaign leveraged malicious Next.js repositories to trigger a covert RCE-to-C2 chain through standard ...
Chrome CVE-2026-0628 let malicious extensions hijack Gemini panel for privilege escalation, local file access, and ...
The Detroit project envisioned using JavaScript as an extension language for Java applications. Now it’s being revived with ...
An OpenClaw vulnerability allowed malicious websites to take over AI agents, exposing sensitive information and enabling data ...
The Microsoft Defender team has discovered a coordinated campaign targeting software developers through malicious repositories posing as legitimate Next.js projects and technical assessment materials, ...
AI browsing agent left local files open for the taking If you wanted to steal local files from someone using Perplexity's ...
UTSA: ~20% of AI-suggested packages don't exist. Slopsquatting could let attackers slip malicious libs into projects.
Linked to North Korean fake job-recruitment campaigns, the poisoned repositories are aimed at establishing persistent C2 ...
Research reveals 2,863 public Google API keys can access Gemini endpoints, enabling data exposure and massive billing abuse.
A bug in Google Chrome's Gemini AI feature could expose your data or allow attackers to monitor you. Here's how to stay protected.