This could have destroyed the entire web (the next one probably will)
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Top Comments (10)
Hi Theo, I'd like to correct you on a point that is close to me. You seem to think all the devs watching this channel are great devs but as a terrible dev I'd like to fiercly oppose this framing. Could you please amend your statements going forwards so that devs that ship bloated and vulnerable code like myself feel more part of the community ? Thank you sincerely
Can't get enough of your content dude, great great stuff especially the content on startup investing.
"AI is incredible at writing annoying code." is my favourite quote from this, since it can be true in more than one way.
This has been npm hacked in 100 seconds
We got lucky again this time because the payload is so laughably specific (hooking onto the fetch in the same context and rewriting crypto transactions done through the fetch in the same context to go to the attacker's address instead). Given that the payload actually reached libraries used by terminal apps, _running in an unsandboxed environment_, this could've easily been a large scale ransomware attack.
Now imagine if someone took those "utility packages" and published a breaking change that warns the consumer they don't need this package and suggests how to use built-in APIs to achieve the same. We are discussing what is effectively an educational problem. Unless we educate developers, packages like "is-even" will exist forever.
A code preview right at the top with a copy button on NPM for any package that is small enough could also be good
I really like the sense of humor you have, good job as always man.
I didn't know Prime Theo gave Emo Theo a medal! Good job broken arm Emo Theo!
In all the videos that were made on this topic, this is the most useful
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Top Comments (10)
Hi Theo, I'd like to correct you on a point that is close to me. You seem to think all the devs watching this channel are great devs but as a terrible dev I'd like to fiercly oppose this framing. Could you please amend your statements going forwards so that devs that ship bloated and vulnerable code like myself feel more part of the community ? Thank you sincerely
Can't get enough of your content dude, great great stuff especially the content on startup investing.
"AI is incredible at writing annoying code." is my favourite quote from this, since it can be true in more than one way.
This has been npm hacked in 100 seconds
We got lucky again this time because the payload is so laughably specific (hooking onto the fetch in the same context and rewriting crypto transactions done through the fetch in the same context to go to the attacker's address instead). Given that the payload actually reached libraries used by terminal apps, _running in an unsandboxed environment_, this could've easily been a large scale ransomware attack.
Now imagine if someone took those "utility packages" and published a breaking change that warns the consumer they don't need this package and suggests how to use built-in APIs to achieve the same. We are discussing what is effectively an educational problem. Unless we educate developers, packages like "is-even" will exist forever.
A code preview right at the top with a copy button on NPM for any package that is small enough could also be good
I really like the sense of humor you have, good job as always man.
I didn't know Prime Theo gave Emo Theo a medal! Good job broken arm Emo Theo!
In all the videos that were made on this topic, this is the most useful