Three popular plugins served malicious JavaScript through a compromised CDN.
In a supply chain attack, attackers install backdoors through the WordPress plugins OptinMonster, TrustPulse, and PushEngage.
The biggest question now is which workflow will help you get something into production fast, not which cloud provider to use.
Attackers have hijacked the code behind several popular WordPress plugins to plant hidden backdoors and rogue administrator accounts on as many as 1.2 million sites. The supply-chain attack, detailed ...
The military said efforts are continuing to rescue the remaining abducted victim and apprehend those responsible for the ...
Vimeo’s native Framer component has responsiveness limitations in full-bleed contexts. Works via Embed component with direct ...
An attacker tampered with trusted JavaScript files used by WordPress sites running PushEngage, OptinMonster, and TrustPulse, turning those files into a way to break into the sites. When a site ...
In the previous article"Face Recognition and Audio Effect Processing Entirely in a Web Browser: Using MediaPipe / Web Audio API" I explained an interactive audio processing application that runs ...
Google tightened the "Good" LCP threshold from 2.5 to 2.0 seconds in March 2026, and promoted INP from supplementary to a ...
NovaTech Solutions is a responsive business website built as a portfolio project for a tech startup concept. The website is designed with modern UX/UI principles, mobile-first responsiveness, and ...