Close Menu
    DevStackTipsDevStackTips
    • Home
    • News & Updates
      1. Tech & Work
      2. View All

      Designing For TV: Principles, Patterns And Practical Guidance (Part 2)

      September 5, 2025

      Neo4j introduces new graph architecture that allows operational and analytics workloads to be run together

      September 5, 2025

      Beyond the benchmarks: Understanding the coding personalities of different LLMs

      September 5, 2025

      Top 10 Use Cases of Vibe Coding in Large-Scale Node.js Applications

      September 3, 2025

      Building smarter interactions with MCP elicitation: From clunky tool calls to seamless user experiences

      September 4, 2025

      From Zero to MCP: Simplifying AI Integrations with xmcp

      September 4, 2025

      Distribution Release: Linux Mint 22.2

      September 4, 2025

      Coded Smorgasbord: Basically, a Smorgasbord

      September 4, 2025
    • Development
      1. Algorithms & Data Structures
      2. Artificial Intelligence
      3. Back-End Development
      4. Databases
      5. Front-End Development
      6. Libraries & Frameworks
      7. Machine Learning
      8. Security
      9. Software Engineering
      10. Tools & IDEs
      11. Web Design
      12. Web Development
      13. Web Security
      14. Programming Languages
        • PHP
        • JavaScript
      Featured

      Drupal 11’s AI Features: What They Actually Mean for Your Team

      September 5, 2025
      Recent

      Drupal 11’s AI Features: What They Actually Mean for Your Team

      September 5, 2025

      Why Data Governance Matters More Than Ever in 2025?

      September 5, 2025

      Perficient Included in the IDC Market Glance for Digital Business Professional Services, 3Q25

      September 5, 2025
    • Operating Systems
      1. Windows
      2. Linux
      3. macOS
      Featured

      How DevOps Teams Are Redefining Reliability with NixOS and OSTree-Powered Linux

      September 5, 2025
      Recent

      How DevOps Teams Are Redefining Reliability with NixOS and OSTree-Powered Linux

      September 5, 2025

      Distribution Release: Linux Mint 22.2

      September 4, 2025

      ‘Cronos: The New Dawn’ was by far my favorite experience at Gamescom 2025 — Bloober might have cooked an Xbox / PC horror masterpiece

      September 4, 2025
    • Learning Resources
      • Books
      • Cheatsheets
      • Tutorials & Guides
    Home»Development»Malware Injected into 5 npm Packages After Maintainer Tokens Stolen in Phishing Attack

    Malware Injected into 5 npm Packages After Maintainer Tokens Stolen in Phishing Attack

    July 20, 2025

    Cybersecurity researchers have alerted to a supply chain attack that has targeted popular npm packages via a phishing campaign designed to steal the project maintainers’ npm tokens.
    The captured tokens were then used to publish malicious versions of the packages directly to the registry without any source code commits or pull requests on their respective GitHub repositories.
    The list of affected

    Source: Read More

    Facebook Twitter Reddit Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleCritical Unpatched SharePoint Zero-Day Actively Exploited, Breaches 75+ Company Servers
    Next Article Hackers Exploit Critical CrushFTP Flaw to Gain Admin Access on Unpatched Servers

    Related Posts

    Development

    How to Fine-Tune Large Language Models

    September 5, 2025
    Artificial Intelligence

    Scaling Up Reinforcement Learning for Traffic Smoothing: A 100-AV Highway Deployment

    September 5, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

    Continue Reading

    CVE-2025-6090 – H3C GR-5400AX Critical Buffer Overflow in UpdateWanparamsMulti/UpdateIpv6params

    Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs)

    CVE-2025-48882 – PHPOffice Math XML External Entity (XXE) Vulnerability

    Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs)

    This AI Paper Introduces Differentiable MCMC Layers: A New AI Framework for Learning with Inexact Combinatorial Solvers in Neural Networks

    Machine Learning

    Urgent Firefox Alert: Critical Memory Corruption Flaws (CVSS 9.8) Allow Remote Code Execution

    Security

    Highlights

    CVE-2025-5236 – NinjaTeam Chat for Telegram WordPress Stored Cross-Site Scripting

    May 30, 2025

    CVE ID : CVE-2025-5236

    Published : May 30, 2025, 8:15 a.m. | 1 hour, 21 minutes ago

    Description : The NinjaTeam Chat for Telegram plugin for WordPress is vulnerable to Stored Cross-Site Scripting via the ‘username’ parameter in all versions up to, and including, 1.1 due to insufficient input sanitization and output escaping. This makes it possible for authenticated attackers, with Contributor-level access and above, to inject arbitrary web scripts in pages that will execute whenever a user accesses an injected page.

    Severity: 6.4 | MEDIUM

    Visit the link for more details, such as CVSS details, affected products, timeline, and more…

    CVE-2025-35941 – Apache Struts Password Exposure

    June 11, 2025

    Critical Craft CMS RCE 0-Day Vulnerability Exploited in Attacks to Steal Data

    April 26, 2025

    CVE-2025-31198 – Apple macOS Symlink Path Handling Vulnerability

    May 29, 2025
    © DevStackTips 2025. All rights reserved.
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.