What was actually inside the leaked AI code — and what does it tell us?
On Tuesday we covered how Anthropic accidentally leaked the source code of Claude Code, and how criminals immediately used that leak as a lure to spread malware. But that story
Plain English. No jargon. Just what you need to know.
On Tuesday we covered how Anthropic accidentally leaked the source code of Claude Code, and how criminals immediately used that leak as a lure to spread malware. But that story
A routine software release accidentally included a debug file that exposed the entire source code of Claude Code, the company's popular AI coding tool
Imagine you are a builder, and you trust your supplier completely. You have been using them for years
The tool was litellm. The update was versions 1.82.7 and 1.82.8. And the damage was done before anyone knew it had started.
Someone calls your IT helpdesk. They sound calm, professional, and helpful. They know the name of an employee. They say there's been a problem with a login and they need a password reset.
On the morning of 11 March 2026, staff at medical equipment manufacturer Stryker arrived at work to find a message on their screens. They were told not to turn on company devices and to disconnect from all networks immediately.
You log in to your bank. You enter your password. Then your phone buzzes with a six-digit code, and the website asks you to type it in. You've done this a hundred times. But do you know what that code actually is — and why handing it to the wrong person would open your account to a stranger?
Category: Cyber News Tags: Data Breaches, Privacy, Human Error Reading time: 5 minutes Early on Thursday morning, customers of three major UK high street banks opened their mobile banking apps
In late February 2026, a developer working late into the night made a series of decisions that seemed reasonable in the moment — and ended with two and a half years
What is a data breach, should you be worried, and what should you actually do? Plain English answers with no scaremongering.