WSJ’s Kate Clark demonstrates how Anthropic’s new Cowork tool can help non-coders automate their lives–or at least attempt to. Photo: Claire Hogan/WSJ Anthropic is racing to contain the fallout after ...
Anthropic PBC inadvertently released internal source code behind its popular artificial intelligence-powered Claude coding assistant, raising questions about the security of an AI model developer that ...
Anthropic accidentally leaked some source code for Claude Code, its AI-powered coding assistant. The company said the leak did not include sensitive customer data or credentials. Anthropic recently ...
On Tuesday, a security researcher named Chaofan Shou revealed on X that he had found a 59.8MB JavaScript source map file in a public release of Anthropic's Claude Code. This file is intended for ...
Anthropic just cannot keep a lid on its business. After details of a yet-to-be-announced model were revealed due to the company leaving unpublished drafts of documents and blog posts in a publicly ...
A version of the AI coding tool in Anthropic's npm registry included a source map file, which leads to the full proprietary source code. An Anthropic employee accidentally exposed the entire ...
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Computer engineers and programmers have long relied on reverse engineering as a way to copy the functionality of a computer program without copying that program’s copyright-protected code directly.
Scientists created a tiny matrix that stores data by etching its grid into a thin ceramic film with a focused ion beam. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission ...