JFrog says six malicious npm packages used hidden install-time execution, JSONKeeper fetches, and sandbox checks to enable remote access.
Every Python developer knows some or all of these libraries, because they’re stable, reliable, and excellent at what they do.
JFrog found malicious npm packages that deploy a Windows RAT to steal Chrome credentials, run commands, and transfer files.
I ditched my terminal for Claude's built-in code executor, and I'm not going back.
py-sec-edgar transforms complex SEC filing data into accessible, structured information with enterprise-grade reliability and ease of use: ...
An exercise-driven course on Advanced Python Programming that was battle-tested several hundred times on the corporate-training circuit for more than a decade. Written by David Beazley, author of the ...
Abstract: Syntactic parsing is a highly linguistic processing task whose parser requires training on treebanks from the expensive human annotation. As it is unlikely to obtain a treebank for every ...