Browser-based editing programs like Zendocs offer many of the same features as standard PDF editing programs without the hassle that often comes with having to frequently transfer files across ...
JavaScript is the foundation of the modern web. From simple button clicks to complex web applications, almost everything ...
We're analysing videos from state celebrations in Iran where people are heard shouting 'death to the dictator' The team is ...
In brief: Age verification scanners usually require three-dimensional movement to confirm that users aren't attempting to bypass them with photos. However, animated ...
Browser-based version back on the menu, reopening questions about TDF's relationship with Collabora The Document Foundation ...
The thick client is making a comeback. Here’s how next-generation local databases like PGlite and RxDB are bringing ...
Introduction: The Evolution of Browser Security For two decades, the web browser served as the primary security frontier for digital interactions. The logic was clear: the browser represented the lens ...
TL;DR: Titus is an open source secret scanner from Praetorian that detects and validates leaked credentials across source code, binary files, and HTTP traffic. It ships with 450+ detection rules and ...
Browser-based image editors are typically considered compromises, and often they are. Many of them are slow and incapable of handling anything beyond the basics. I’ve tried a ton of browser-based ...
A developer-targeting campaign leveraged malicious Next.js repositories to trigger a covert RCE-to-C2 chain through standard ...
Just like algae blooms in the ocean and pollen in the spring, there’s been an explosion in the past year or two of new software, related tools and lingo from the IT and mainstream/consumer side. Some ...