Microsoft researchers found a ClickFix campaign that uses the nslookup tool to have users infect their own system with a Remote Access Trojan.
Threat actors are now abusing DNS queries as part of ClickFix social engineering attacks to deliver malware, making this the first known use of DNS as a channel in these campaigns.
XDA Developers on MSN
I deployed Windows 11 in a Proxmox VM with GPU passthrough, and most games run well
It may not deliver the same performance as a bare-metal setup, but it's good enough for most titles ...
This article was created by StackCommerce. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through our links on this page.
These early adopters suggest that the future of AI in the workplace may not be found in banning powerful tools, but in ...
Back in the 1980s, your options for writing your own code and games were rather more limited than today. This also mostly depended on what home computer you could get your hands on, which was a ...
If you have a Google AI Studio subscription ($300/mo), Gemini CLI uses that instead of charging per-token API costs.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results