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1208 points jamesberthoty | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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kelnos ◴[] No.45266878[source]
As a user of npm-hosted packages in my own projects, I'm not really sure what to do to protect myself. It's not feasible for me to audit every single one of my dependencies, and every one of my dependencies' dependencies, and so on. Even if I had the time to do that, I'm not a typescript/javascript expert, and I'm certain there are a lot of obfuscated things that an attacker could do that I wouldn't realize was embedded malware.

One thing I was thinking of was sort of a "delayed" mode to updating my own dependencies. The idea is that when I want to update my dependencies, instead of updating to the absolute latest version available of everything, it updates to versions that were released no more than some configurable amount of time ago. As a maintainer, I could decide that a package that's been out in the wild for at least 6 weeks is less likely to have unnoticed malware in it than one that was released just yesterday.

Obviously this is not a perfect fix, as there's no guarantee that the delay time I specify is enough for any particular package. And I'd want the tool to present me with options sometimes: e.g. if my current version of a dep has a vulnerability, and the fix for it came out a few days ago, I might choose to update to it (better eliminate the known vulnerability than refuse to update for fear of an unknown one) rather than wait until it's older than my threshold.

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skybrian ◴[] No.45267489[source]
When using Go, you don't get updated indirect dependencies until you update a direct dependency. It seems like a good system, though it depends on your direct dependencies not updating too quickly.
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1. silverwind ◴[] No.45270538[source]
The auto-updating behaviour dependencies because of the `^` version prefix is the root problem.

It's best to never use `^` and always specify exact version, but many maintainers apparently can't be bothered with updating their dependencies themselves so it became the default.