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Clockwise from top left: Can’t Hardly Wait (Screenshot); Lady Bird (Screenshot); To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before (Photo: Netflix); The Artist (Screenshot); The Lovebirds (Photo: Netflix); The Little Hours (Photo: Gunpowder & Sky); The Incredible Jessica James (Photo: Netflix)
Streaming libraries expand and contract. Algorithms are imperfect. Those damn thumbnail images are always changing. But you know what you can always rely on? The expert opinions and knowledgeable commentary of
The A.V. Club. That’s why we’re scouring both the menus of the most popular services and our own archives to bring you these guides to the best viewing options, broken down by streamer, medium, and genre. Want to know why we’re so keen on a particular movie? Click the title at the top of each slide for some in-depth coverage from
The best action movies on Netflix
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Watch This o
ffers movie recommendations inspired by new releases, premieres, current events, or occasionally just our own inscrutable whims. This week: movies in space copy. This week: WithVoyagers
now in theaters and Stowaway
on Netflix next week, we’re looking to the stars for five days of space movies.
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The Wandering Earth (2019)
“You might say that each and every one of us is a crew member, here on Spaceship Earth.” So declares the astrophysicist played by David Hyde Pierce in
Wet Hot American Summer, a man of science succinctly capturing both the basic premise and deeper appeal of
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Clockwise from top left: Blue Jay (Photo: The Orchard); Howards End (Screenshot); Always Be My Maybe (Photo: Netflix); She’s Gotta Have It (Screenshot); Stardust (Screenshot); Kicking And Screaming (Screenshot); Safety Not Guaranteed (Screenshot)
Streaming libraries expand and contract. Algorithms are imperfect. Those damn thumbnail images are always changing. But you know what you can always rely on? The expert opinions and knowledgeable commentary of
The A.V. Club. That’s why we’re scouring both the menus of the most popular services and our own archives to bring you these guides to the best viewing options, broken down by streamer, medium, and genre. Want to know why we’re so keen on a particular movie? Click the title at the top of each slide for some in-depth coverage from
Photo: THOMAS SAMSON/AFP (Getty Images)
Alex Birsan, a Romanian threat researcher, recently made over $130,000 by virtuously breaking into IT systems at dozens of major tech companies.
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Birsan used a single innovative supply chain attack to compromise Tesla, Netflix, Microsoft, Apple, Paypal, Uber, Yelp, and at least 30 other firms. In the process, the researcher exposed a major vulnerability and earned large sums via multiple bug bounties the fees companies pay “white hat” hackers who successfully test their online defenses.
How Birsan did it is pretty interesting. It involves the manipulation of code in development projects, specifically dependencies certain augmentative code that is used to successfully run a program. Threatpost notes that the attack would inject malicious code “into common tools for installing dependencies in developer projects which typically use public depositories from sites like GitHub. The malicious code then uses these dependencies to
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