FROST uses JavaScript and OPFS SSD timing to identify websites at 88.95% F1, exposing cross-browser privacy leaks.
Now sites have a new way to spy on their visitors: measuring subtle interactions with their solid-state drives. The technique, named FROST (fingerprinting remotely using OPFS-based SSD timing), allows ...
SVG phishing email attacks are bypassing enterprise email security gateways by hiding JavaScript inside image files and ...
The Miasma supply chain campaign has sparked a fresh attack wave called Hades, this time involving 37 malicious wheel ...
July 2026, blocking install scripts, Git dependencies, and remote URL sources by default. Every team running npm install in ...
The real difference lies deeper – because where should a web office suite run in the first place? All answers are legitimate: ...
Its launch raises the question of what impact a new format will have on human workers, as well as on governance and ...
As search becomes increasingly dominated by AI summaries and commercial content, people are experimenting and coming up with ways to make the web feel more human like it used to, building everything ...
How AI-enabled deception, open-source software dependencies, and social engineering are reshaping enterprise cybersecurity ...
D Yet another aggrieved bug hunter has leaked a vulnerability affecting a Microsoft product after becoming disillusioned with ...
A sneaky IAB operation uses a malicious traffic distribution system (TDS) to redirect visitors of trusted websites to ones ...
To reach protected secrets, the macOS and Linux versions show a fake password dialog, then reuse the captured password to ...