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Copy-paste ignore lines for specific packages or a group of one kind with a note on what research you did to deem it safe. @SocketSecurity ignore npm/PACKAGE@VERSION
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Suggestion: Packages should remove all network access that is functionally unnecessary. Consumers should audit network access to ensure legitimate use.
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@SocketSecurity ignore npm/[email protected]. You can
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Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert
above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential
risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're
unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket
team for help at [email protected].
Suggestion: Packages should remove all network access that is functionally unnecessary. Consumers should audit network access to ensure legitimate use.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/[email protected]. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
change the triage state of this alert.
Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert
above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential
risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're
unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket
team for help at [email protected].
Suggestion: Packages should remove all network access that is functionally unnecessary. Consumers should audit network access to ensure legitimate use.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/[email protected]. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
change the triage state of this alert.
Notes: The script is a standard post-install installer for native bindings: it downloads a prebuilt native binary and patches index.js to prefer the native implementation. I found no direct evidence of malicious intent in this file (no obfuscation, no data exfiltration, no eval). However, the behavior of downloading and executing a remote native binary and honoring an environment variable that can point to an arbitrary repository introduces a supply-chain risk. If an attacker can control the release artifacts, the BLAKE3_REPO_URL environment variable, or DNS/redirects for the download URL, they could cause arbitrary native code execution during install. Recommend verifying release integrity (checksums/signatures) and protecting environment variables in CI/deployment to reduce risk.
Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert
above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential
risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're
unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket
team for help at [email protected].
Suggestion: An AI system found a low-risk anomaly in this package. It may still be fine to use, but you should check that it is safe before proceeding.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/[email protected]. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
change the triage state of this alert.
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playing around with running on a Cloudflare Worker. got the kernel working but died by a thousand cuts fighting tooling.
also its pretty much all machine slop (gpt5 + claude-4.5-sonnet)
kernel-store/src/write-behind.tsmight be useful, it does an in-memory store and then writes asyncly to a dbim sure im holding things wrong.
yarn buildfails for some reason, including ts-link failing to rm dist dirs (??).