A weakness in the Cursor code editor exposes developers to the risk of automatically executing tasks in a malicious repository as soon as it's opened.
Cursor is an AI-powered fork of Visual Studio Code, which supports a feature called Workspace Trust to allow developers to safely browse and edit code regardless of where it came from or who wrote it.
A new study has determined that 55 heat waves over the past quarter-century would not have happened without human-caused ...
Pre-integrated storage pods eliminate months-long AI deployment cycles. Learn how turnkey solutions help enterprises scale AI ...

FAQs

The Uploader is a tool that allows you to upload your own tracks to your BBC Introducing profile, and in turn distributes ...
Ctrl + Space (or Cmd + Space on Mac) is your go-to for basic code completion. Start typing a variable or function name, hit ...
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access ...
Using open-source intelligence, news reports and Russian government documents, as well as satellite imagery, the Yale report ...
Perry High School head coach Keith Wakefield talks with quarterback Bob Perez during a 2002 playoff game at Dublin Scioto. St. Vincent-St. Mary football coach Keith Wakefield directs a drill in ...
Microsoft has published a new post explaining GitHub Spec Kit, clarifying its experimental approach to spec-driven ...
Discover how to automatically detect secrets in GitLab CI logs using ggshield and GitGuardian's Bring Your Own Source ...
Allan Leinwand, Webflow's CTO, shares how his development team is leveraging AI in their workflows and why it’s so important.